Prisoner how many episodes




















Heavy stuff, and important to mention here that The Prisoner is droll and endlessly inventive. One episode is, simply, a Western: McGoohan in a cowboy outfit arrives in a frontier town, is somehow a Wild West Sheriff who refuses to carry a gun.

Westworld also composes a maze of narratives that all connect together. McGoohan is playing a hero, I think, and you root for him throughout. A lapsed Catholic can worship a devoted one. But what makes The Prisoner timelessly now is how the show approaches his rebellion from all sides, how it seeks to explain yet finds so many explanations that the truth becomes fuzzy. The Village itself could be an island or it could be a mountain, seems large enough to encompass an open-world-videogame of climate zones yet small enough to ensure that you always run into the people you least want to talk to.

There are 17 episodes. They are weird, wild, druggy, trippy, clever, sorrowful, goofy, gorgeous. Through it all there is McGoohan, who somehow becomes less knowable as the series progresses. The incredible final episode is talk-y and speech-y, was written by McGoohan and directed by McGoohan and features McGoohan stepping onstage to offer some kind of final summation. We like to imagine ourselves as the hero of our stories, and so we relate naturally to the onscreen protagonists, to the rebels and the outsiders.

But when you watch The Prisoner , you realize that the real mystery is the man in the title. Who is Number Six? Prisoner Cell Block H Disc 2. Prisoner Cell Block H: Episode 3. Prisoner Cell Block H Set 2. Photos Top cast Edit. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. This Australian series has, after episodes, received cult status all over the world. The series takes place in Wentworth, a prison in Australia.

Wentworth is a high-security female prison. The women are there for all sorts of crimes. We get to follow how they got there, their life in the prison and what becomes of them afterwards.

We also get to follow the staff, their work in the prison and their personal relationships. The cult phenomenon from down under. Did you know Edit.

Trivia After episode was shown in Sweden in early , fans demonstrated outside the building of TV 4 which had shown the series , demanding a rerun. It was the first time in Sweden this had happened, and the demonstration convinced the company to air the show again. Goofs Once the Wentworth staff adopt khaki uniforms, the female officers have the option of wearing skirts or trousers.

Invariably a skirt-wearer, Joan's arrival for work in trousers always signifies that her character will be taking part in an action sequence. Quotes Bea Smith : I'm going Freak-hunting. Top Top-rated. Trailer The Prisoner: Free For All.

The Prisoner: The Complete Series. Prisoner, The: The Arrival. Photos Top cast Edit. Peter Swanwick Supervisor as Supervisor …. Peter Brace 1st Guardian as 1st Guardian …. Alexis Kanner Chief's voice as Chief's voice ….

Bill Cummings Henchman as Henchman …. Harold Berens Boxing M. Bee Duffell 2nd Psychiatrist as 2nd Psychiatrist …. Patrick McGoohan. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. It addresses issues such as personal identity and freedom, democracy, education, scientific progress, art and technology, while still remaining an entertaining drama series.

Over seventeen episodes we witness a war of attrition between the faceless forces behind 'The Village' a Kafkaesque community somewhere between Butlins and Alcatraz and its most strong willed inmate, No. To be sure, it's been surreal since the beginning, but made some sense in a pretty straightforward way.

Not so here. The dissolution of the council involves some shouting and revolving and nothing else. The test involves low level electricity and stupid questions. There's also some messing about with hypnosis and stuff and finally,it seems that being Number Two means you can press a load of buttons madly, but not achieve anything.

It's all just a step in the bigger plan to weaken Number 6's resolve. This is the weakest episode of the show so far, mainly because there is no sense to it at all. A double of No6 is substituted for the real thing who is programmed to think that he is Number 12 impersonating Number 6. It's all a plot of the new Number Two to destroy his sense of self-image and thus get the information that he needs.

This is an interesting episode, probably the best so far. The idea of challenging Number 6's identity and bringing him to the edge of insanity is all nicely played and, for once, a ploy by Number Two comes close to working.

Only a bruised fingernail gives the game away. Having two Patrick McGoohans could have been confusing for everyone, but the direction always assures that they are wearing slightly different clothes and the scenes in which McGoohan plays opposite himself is seamlessly woven together.

It's also interesting to see Number 6's escape plan thwarted with the same level of misfortune as Number Two's plot. Speedlearn is the newest breakthrough in education. Watch the TV for three minutes and a three year degree level course is imprinted on your mind. Of course, this could also be used for mass brainwashing. Number 6 gets involved with a renegade Number 12 and gets to meet the General, the brain behind the operation. There are some real weaknesses in the plotting of this episode, although the basis for it is quite interesting.

Education or brainwashing? That's a real science fiction dilemma and when the show was first shown, computers were not in every home, so the idea of a supercomputer was pretty much up to date. The question that Number 6 feeds into it to save Number 12 is, of course, ridiculous as any computer would simply come back with an error message saying something like 'please state precise search parameters'.

Number 6 wakes up to find the village deserted. Building a raft, he sails off and, fighting off gunrunners along the way, makes his way back to London and convinces his ex-colleagues to mount a search for the location of the village.

Someone clearly thought up the idea 'wouldn't it be great if Number 6 woke up and found that everyone had gone? To be fair, you can see why as it is the early sequences that make the impact. The plot, though, makes no sense in the real world because of the logistical problems of evacuating everyone in one night etc and precious little sense as allegory either.

Almost no effort is made to find out why Number 6 resigned, so what was the point of the ploy anyway? In all, a very unsatisfactory episode. It's carnival time and everyone is invited to the fancy dress party afterwards. Number 6 has found a dead body on the beach with a radio in it and an old colleague who has been broken by his time in the Village.

When he uses the party as a cover to snoop around in the Town Hall, he is hauled before the people to answer for his 'crimes'. Once again there is an elaborate plot involving attractive observers, equally attractive maids, dead bodies and radios and fancy dress parties, but to what end?

Once again, no attempt is made to get information from Number 6 except in the early, abortive mind control experiment , so really what was the point? It all looks fabulous and is intriguing right up until the end when you either accept that this is just more of the ongoing process of wearing down Number 6's self-possession or that it's all a bit meaningless really.

Taking part in a game of chess where people are the playing pieces, Number 6 comes into contact with two new acquaintances. The first is a woman who is brainwashed by Number 2 into falling madly in love with Number 6 so that she will betray him to the authorities rather than let him escape from her.

The other is an electronics expert who agrees that the way to tell the prisoners from the guards is all a matter of attitude. Soon, a prison break is under way. Number 6 falls foul of his own arrogant attitude in this episode. The guards won't obey him, but the prisoners will.



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