The Prisoner Review - Choose The Village

Written By

November 15th, 2009 - (818 days ago)

Follow Me

Email Me

  • Sharebar

jim-rover-789-premiere

We have seen AMC's The Prisoner.  You should too.

Welcome To Your Home From Home

Patrick McGoohan's "The Prisoner" is the grand-daddy of intellectual TV.  A bold anti-establishment experiment in surreal story telling, The Prisoner taunted the mind with all sorts of existential pondering, while effectively delivering a unique tale of adventure and intrigue.   The setup is simple: a spy(McGoohan) angrily resigns from his post and is subsequently kidnapped and taken to 'The Village,' a bizarre mash-up of architectural motifs from around the world, and around history.  Instead of names, everyone in The Village has a number - McGoohan's is 6.  Number 1 is in charge of The Village, but we never see who he is - we only see the Number 2's, a new one every week.  A psychological game of cat and mouse plays out as the masters of The Village attempt to find out why 6 resigned. The episodes bordered on science fiction as the wardens of The Village employed seemingly otherworldly technology in an attempt to pry this information from 6's head, and contain him - one of the show's most enduring images being Rover, a flexible white sphere that served as village sentry.

The Prisoner has since crossed into the realm of classics, and has served as inspiration for numerous shows like Nowhere Man, Babylon 5, and LOST.  Several attempts were made to bring The Prisoner to the big screen, including a few initiated by McGoohan himself, but none came to fruition until now.

AMC's six part mini-series 'The Prisoner' premieres tonight, and runs marathon style for the following two days.  It is NOT a remake of McGoohan's series, but rather a new story made with the Kafkaesque story telling conventions of the original.  Some aspects will be familiar, there is a number 6 (Played by Jim Caviezel) but this time he is an amnesiac.  In the original, 6 awakes in a mock up of his own apartment - fully aware of who he is, but with no clue of where he is.

Arrival

AMC's The Prisoner opens with Caviezel awakening in a craggy desert, disoriented.  He ambles about and eventually comes upon an ailing elderly man, suffering from exhaustion and exposure, who tells him to let the others know that he escaped.  Fans of the original will be thrilled to know this guy is dressed in a suit very reminiscent of McGoohan's wardrobe.  Caviezal's 6 wanders into the oasis-like civilization of "The Village" and is shocked to find that the residents are unaware of any world outside of the strangely uniform complex.  Like 6, these people do not seem to have a memory of life before The Village - unlike him, they have long ago surrendered to the notion of The Village's ruler Number 2, played by Ian McKellen, that there is nothing outside of The Village.

ian_gandalf_steepleNumber 2 wastes no time in establishing his Machiavellian tact, obsessively badgering 6 to accept his life in The Village with increasingly harrowing psychological mind games.   6, however, remains buoyed by a secret class of Village-dwellers called 'dreamers,' who see flashes of their previous lives and puzzle over their meaning.  As 2 becomes more and more intent on breaking him, 6 becomes more and more determined to break free - and only one of them can win.  For 6, it becomes a challenge of human spirit, while 2's motivation seems imbued with secret knowledge and secret advantages.

The Prisoner is a fitting tribute to the original.  The original transcended its own concept and became an almost introspective experience.  As 6 challenged the diminishment of his identity, the audience too became engaged in his existential dilemma.  This sort of 'psychological softening up' made the paranoia and starkness of 6's losses seem strangely transcendent.

AMC's The Prisoner is truly a modernized take on McGoohan's motif.  Where McGoohan was writing a show that seemed targeted to 'movement' generation of the late 60's, when folks were so easily throwing themselves at whatever label seemed to fit, AMC's new The Prisoner seems more to be twanging the collective neurosis of the post-9/11 world - complete with a ghostly visage of twin towers that hang ubiquitously on the horizon .  Instead of guarding his identity, this time 6 is determined to prove that 'he' exists - the him that is not Number 6, that is -  and the proof is in revealing that the world that percolates in his subconscious is more than just fantasy.

NEXT: "Who Is Number One?" - Final Thoughts on AMC's The Prisoner

About
TVOvermind Editor in Chief Jon Lachonis is the creator of the popular LOST blogs TheTailsection and DocArzt & Friends Lost Blog. Since then his writing has appeared on CraveOnline, UGO, BuddyTV, and many others. Jon is also a charter member of the Broadcast Television Journalists of America. Follow him at @DocArzt.
opinions powered by SendLove.to

(32) Comments - Add Yours!

  1. Ben says:

    I liked The Prisoner better when it was Lost and, for that matter, I liked Lost better when it was The Prisoner.

    • Jon Lachonis says:

      Lol, fair enough. I think the writer here had an interesting dilemma: draw enough from the original to be familiar, but avoid any interim interpretations of the narrative style.

  2. Ben says:

    I liked The Prisoner better when it was Lost and, for that matter, I liked Lost better when it was The Prisoner.

    • Jon Lachonis says:

      Lol, fair enough. I think the writer here had an interesting dilemma: draw enough from the original to be familiar, but avoid any interim interpretations of the narrative style.

  3. Tim says:

    Did this reviewer actually watch the original? I thought this re-imagined version was soap opery and dull. I am not going to watch the whole thing. You really cannot improve on the original.

    • Jon Lachonis says:

      Ha! Probably more times than is sane. I agree, the original will never be topped – and I don’t think I put forward the idea that it was. Rather, what I see in the new “The Prisoner” is as good a tribute you could make to the original without treading on the spawn it has produced over the years. Tonight’s first episode is the best, and more like the original than any of the others: 6 goes to work for number 2.

  4. Tim says:

    Did this reviewer actually watch the original? I thought this re-imagined version was soap opery and dull. I am not going to watch the whole thing. You really cannot improve on the original.

    • Jon Lachonis says:

      Ha! Probably more times than is sane. I agree, the original will never be topped – and I don't think I put forward the idea that it was. Rather, what I see in the new "The Prisoner" is as good a tribute you could make to the original without treading on the spawn it has produced over the years. Tonight's first episode is the best, and more like the original than any of the others: 6 goes to work for number 2.

  5. Grant says:

    The absurdity of the “escape attempts” ruined the entire experience for me.

    Give me any 6 year old and let me present them with only the following information:

    You’re in the middle of a big hot dry desert. You want to cross it. Give me your plan.

    And I guarantee that at a minimum they come up with “BRING FOOD AND WATER.”

    So someone explain to me why this never occured to 6 on THREE CONSECUTIVE dashes he made into the desert with nothing but the clothes on his back supposedly expecting to “escape” to the other side?

    I could accept, maybe, the idea that he was just so flustered and disoriented on the first attempt that such an incredibly basic thing slipped his mind. But then after ending up lying in the sand and having to be retreived and hauled back to town by the doctor to come up with “escape plan #2″ and have it once again consist of “I’m going to run off into the desert with no food or water or supplies and just hope I get across to something eventually”???

    And then after that fails, to do it AGAIN with those two other doofuses trying to find the ocean? (Although in that last attempt the lady did, brilliantly, bring *her purse*. Chock full no doubt of desert survival supplies like lipstick and tissues and probably her little village ID card.)

    Gah.

  6. Grant says:

    The absurdity of the "escape attempts" ruined the entire experience for me.

    Give me any 6 year old and let me present them with only the following information:

    You're in the middle of a big hot dry desert. You want to cross it. Give me your plan.

    And I guarantee that at a minimum they come up with "BRING FOOD AND WATER."

    So someone explain to me why this never occured to 6 on THREE CONSECUTIVE dashes he made into the desert with nothing but the clothes on his back supposedly expecting to "escape" to the other side?

    I could accept, maybe, the idea that he was just so flustered and disoriented on the first attempt that such an incredibly basic thing slipped his mind. But then after ending up lying in the sand and having to be retreived and hauled back to town by the doctor to come up with "escape plan #2" and have it once again consist of "I'm going to run off into the desert with no food or water or supplies and just hope I get across to something eventually"???

    And then after that fails, to do it AGAIN with those two other doofuses trying to find the ocean? (Although in that last attempt the lady did, brilliantly, bring *her purse*. Chock full no doubt of desert survival supplies like lipstick and tissues and probably her little village ID card.)

    Gah.

  7. JaneyD says:

    This ponderous and glacially slow remake, to quote another reviewer, “sucked sand.”

    Whoever got the idea they could possibly top the original version, even with those two amazing actors?

    Well, they didn’t, and it was pointless to even try.

  8. Pixie Wings says:

    I tried, I really did, but…no. Forced myself to watch entire first hour, struggled to stay awake thru hour #2. Not bothering tonight.

    No water? What? Caviezel musn’t have been a Boy Scout. ;)

  9. JaneyD says:

    This ponderous and glacially slow remake, to quote another reviewer, "sucked sand."

    Whoever got the idea they could possibly top the original version, even with those two amazing actors?

    Well, they didn't, and it was pointless to even try.

  10. Featherlite says:

    Despite both Gandalf and Jesus, I too threw in the towel after less than an episode. My willing suspension of disbelief snapped a cable. Nobody in the village has a name or nickname, just a title? Not even a “Lefty” or a “Fartsalot”? I can’t believe that any kind of mental manipulation would be that total.

    And those houses were creepy. The tour – the whole thing – reminded me of “Pleasantville”.

  11. Pixie Wings says:

    I tried, I really did, but…no. Forced myself to watch entire first hour, struggled to stay awake thru hour #2. Not bothering tonight.

    No water? What? Caviezel musn't have been a Boy Scout. ;)

  12. Featherlite says:

    Despite both Gandalf and Jesus, I too threw in the towel after less than an episode. My willing suspension of disbelief snapped a cable. Nobody in the village has a name or nickname, just a title? Not even a "Lefty" or a "Fartsalot"? I can't believe that any kind of mental manipulation would be that total.

    And those houses were creepy. The tour – the whole thing – reminded me of "Pleasantville".

  13. Eric Six says:

    I have to chime in with the people giving this remake a thumbs down.

    The original was something of an allegory about man against an ever more technological society. Patick Magoohan was a number, becuase his identity was meaningless to the village. His fight was to maintain that identity against their efforts to minimize that identity. In the end, he won the right to his identity–but anyone who has seen the original and sat through the two episode ending will recall that winning his identity ultimately did not change his life. He simply returned to London in a final scene that suggested he had simply returned to his original “village.”

    This remake is simply a surealistic who dunnit. There is no great message. There is no hidden meaning. This is a pathetic homage written by someone who needed a pay check in these hard times. Whoever wrote this is definitely NOT a freeman.

    The smart move is to turn off this show. Otherwise, stand by while we issue you your number.

    Be seeing you

  14. Eric Six says:

    I have to chime in with the people giving this remake a thumbs down.

    The original was something of an allegory about man against an ever more technological society. Patick Magoohan was a number, becuase his identity was meaningless to the village. His fight was to maintain that identity against their efforts to minimize that identity. In the end, he won the right to his identity–but anyone who has seen the original and sat through the two episode ending will recall that winning his identity ultimately did not change his life. He simply returned to London in a final scene that suggested he had simply returned to his original "village."

    This remake is simply a surealistic who dunnit. There is no great message. There is no hidden meaning. This is a pathetic homage written by someone who needed a pay check in these hard times. Whoever wrote this is definitely NOT a freeman.

    The smart move is to turn off this show. Otherwise, stand by while we issue you your number.

    Be seeing you

  15. The Idiot Box says:

    I’ve never seen the original Prisoner series, so I started watching this without the bias of comparing this show to something else.

    While this Prisoner does not exactly copy the original, I would suspect that it shouldn’t need ot copy the original. It’s a remake. 40 years later. It’s not going to be the same.

    It’s a TV show. Entertainment. Is there supposed to be a message in there somewhere? Or, can we just watch it in all it’s weirdness and be entertained?

    Yeah, he doesn’t pack a suitcase or backpack and head off into the desert. Like he knows where he is. To awaken in some strange surreal world, what would any normal person do? Are we over analyzing just a tad bit? Why yes we are.

    Ok, so he doesn’t take water or supplies on his escape attempts. Big deal! There’s a freakin gigantic white ball that appears out of nowhere and captures anyone who tries to escape! And you’re all worried about him not taking water with him? Wow.

    Shoulda kept watching there ol’ Grant. They did find the ocean, only to have the giant white ball take 6′s brother away. A subsequent visit to the same spot the next day, only revealed endless desert to 6. Stick that in your pipe and smoke it.

    Ian McKellen plays 2 very well. He is polite, yet you sense there is some evil hidden in there. Likewise Caviezel plays the revised part of 6 very well. Loved 313, would love to be her “prisoner”. LOL!

    An excellent show that is quirky enough to keep you interested in what will happen next.

  16. The Idiot Box says:

    I've never seen the original Prisoner series, so I started watching this without the bias of comparing this show to something else.

    While this Prisoner does not exactly copy the original, I would suspect that it shouldn't need ot copy the original. It's a remake. 40 years later. It's not going to be the same.

    It's a TV show. Entertainment. Is there supposed to be a message in there somewhere? Or, can we just watch it in all it's weirdness and be entertained?

    Yeah, he doesn't pack a suitcase or backpack and head off into the desert. Like he knows where he is. To awaken in some strange surreal world, what would any normal person do? Are we over analyzing just a tad bit? Why yes we are.

    Ok, so he doesn't take water or supplies on his escape attempts. Big deal! There's a freakin gigantic white ball that appears out of nowhere and captures anyone who tries to escape! And you're all worried about him not taking water with him? Wow.

    Shoulda kept watching there ol' Grant. They did find the ocean, only to have the giant white ball take 6's brother away. A subsequent visit to the same spot the next day, only revealed endless desert to 6. Stick that in your pipe and smoke it.

    Ian McKellen plays 2 very well. He is polite, yet you sense there is some evil hidden in there. Likewise Caviezel plays the revised part of 6 very well. Loved 313, would love to be her "prisoner". LOL!

    An excellent show that is quirky enough to keep you interested in what will happen next.

  17. Gage says:

    I enjoyed the series alot, though keep in mind i never saw the 17 of the what was supposed to be a 36 episode long original series. the only problem i had was understanding the ending…

    6 goes and spends all of his time trying his hardest to get back to the real world… then at the end… 2 blows his freaking head off with a grenade and gives “The Village” to 6 and he takes it… then 313 who is substituting for the late wife of 2 lets out a single tear… thats what i dont understand. why the tear????? any response is helpful.

    6′s escapes werent too hard to accept for me by the way. he runs into the dessert without packing food or water (no doubt because it would only weigh him down… yeah right lol) but really… he made it to the two giant towers without food and water during the first escape and was stopped by rover so im not very skeptical of why he didnt bring essencials the second and third time he tried to escape ;)

  18. Gage says:

    I enjoyed the series alot, though keep in mind i never saw the 17 of the what was supposed to be a 36 episode long original series. the only problem i had was understanding the ending…

    6 goes and spends all of his time trying his hardest to get back to the real world… then at the end… 2 blows his freaking head off with a grenade and gives "The Village" to 6 and he takes it… then 313 who is substituting for the late wife of 2 lets out a single tear… thats what i dont understand. why the tear????? any response is helpful.

    6's escapes werent too hard to accept for me by the way. he runs into the dessert without packing food or water (no doubt because it would only weigh him down… yeah right lol) but really… he made it to the two giant towers without food and water during the first escape and was stopped by rover so im not very skeptical of why he didnt bring essencials the second and third time he tried to escape ;)

  19. angry J says:

    This was inexcusably bad. The writer & director should have been replaced. I don’t mind remakes & re-imaginings, but you should at least make an effort to present something intelligent & credible. None of the spirit & fun of the original are present in this rip-off.

  20. angry J says:

    This was inexcusably bad. The writer & director should have been replaced. I don't mind remakes & re-imaginings, but you should at least make an effort to present something intelligent & credible. None of the spirit & fun of the original are present in this rip-off.

  21. cress says:

    I was looking forward to this. I never made it to the second night, because I thought it was horrible. Great idea for a remake, but terrible execution.

  22. cress says:

    I was looking forward to this. I never made it to the second night, because I thought it was horrible. Great idea for a remake, but terrible execution.

  23. bob says:

    like the show

  24. bob says:

    like the show

  25. Jack's Beard says:

    I agree with you Doc, this show’s a new take on the classic, but i thought that the storyline was so jammed with stuff, like the holes, the dreamers, the towers and the “other places” that it simply wasn’t enough to have 6 episodes. The way the story was told had a depressive pace and a lot of the scene were of 6 waking up dizzy by all the drugging going on around him. I’d could’ve been better, i’ve see worst do-overs (if you can call it that), but i’d could’ve been a lot better. The final episode was the highlight of the show, and not because it provided some answers, but because Jim and Sir Ian kicked some serios acting ass!

  26. Jack's Beard says:

    I agree with you Doc, this show's a new take on the classic, but i thought that the storyline was so jammed with stuff, like the holes, the dreamers, the towers and the "other places" that it simply wasn't enough to have 6 episodes. The way the story was told had a depressive pace and a lot of the scene were of 6 waking up dizzy by all the drugging going on around him. I'd could've been better, i've see worst do-overs (if you can call it that), but i'd could've been a lot better. The final episode was the highlight of the show, and not because it provided some answers, but because Jim and Sir Ian kicked some serios acting ass!

  27. air jordan says:

    I am quite agreen with the write's says about the experiencial knowledge of better living.For home improvement I have glance those sits.I found they benifit for life. I want to buy something to home see for use. Hope you give me a good views

  28. Elaine says:

    I found the story predictable.

Leave a Reply

© 2009 TVOvermind, all rights reserved. - Comcast Internet - sattellite tv special offers - Comcast Cable Deals - Zap2it Partner - Terms of Use