List of The Prisoner episodes

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The Prisoner logo.

The Prisoner is an allegorical British science fiction television series starring Patrick McGoohan. A single season of 17 episodes was filmed between September 1966 and January 1968. The first episode in the UK aired in September 1967 but the series first premiered in Canada before the UK release. The series was released in June 1968 in the US.

Episode list

Episode orders
  • Prod: The studio production order. This is not an intended viewing order.[1]
  • ITC: "Official" ITC sequence. This is the sequence in which the episodes were originally scheduled to be broadcast in the UK, and—aside from the exclusion of "Living in Harmony"—the sequence in which they were originally aired in the USA. This is the order used in the 2009 A&E Home Video Blu-ray release.[2]
  • KTEH: Arranged by Scott Apel for KTEH channel 54 (PBS affiliate in San Jose, California)
  • 6 of 1: Endorsed by Six of One, The Prisoner Appreciation Society, and used in the A&E DVDs.[3] The UK Sci Fi Channel marathon used a similar order, but with "Dance of the Dead" preceding "Free for All", and "The General" preceding "A. B. and C.".
  • AV Club: After viewing in the KTEH order, the personal arrangement of Zack Handlen of the website The A.V. Club.[4]

The list below follows the ITC ordering, but can be sorted into any of the other orders.

Title Original UK airdate[5] Number Two played by Prod ITC KTEH 6of1 AVC
"Arrival" 29 September 1967 Guy Doleman
George Baker
1 1 1 1 1
After waking up in the Village and discovering his captivity there, Number Six encounters a friend from the outside who may have a possible escape.
"The Chimes of Big Ben" 6 October 1967 Leo McKern 5 2 4 5 5
A new prisoner, Nadia, may have information about the Village that makes an escape attempt possible.
"A. B. and C." 13 October 1967 Colin Gordon 11 3 9 6 8
A desperate Number Two tampers with Number Six's dreams to discover where his loyalties lie.
"Free for All" 20 October 1967 Eric Portman
Rachel Herbert
Patrick McGoohan
2 4 5 2 3
Presented with the opportunity, Number Six runs for election to the post of Number Two.
"The Schizoid Man" 27 October 1967 Anton Rodgers 7 5 7 8 6
Number Two replaces Number Six with a duplicate to weaken the real Six's sense of identity.
"The General" 3 November 1967 Colin Gordon 10 6 8 7 7
An important prisoner's new speed-teaching machine poses perhaps the greatest threat to Number Six's independence.
"Many Happy Returns" 10 November 1967 Georgina Cookson 13 7 6 9 10
After waking to find the Village deserted, Number Six returns to England but does not know whom he can trust there.
"Dance of the Dead" 17 November 1967 Mary Morris 4 8 2 3 2
Number Six tries to save an old friend who is headed for destruction at the hands of the Village.
"Checkmate" 24 November 1967 Peter Wyngarde 3 11 3 4 4
Number Six thinks he has a means to tell the prisoners from the warders.
"Hammer into Anvil" 1 December 1967 Patrick Cargill 12 14 14 12 12
Number Six takes revenge on a sadistic Number Two for the death of another prisoner.
"It's Your Funeral" 8 December 1967 Derren Nesbitt
Andre Van Gyseghem
uncredited bearded male actor
uncredited female actress
8 10 11 10 9
To save the prisoner who is being set up to take the fall, Number Six must intervene in a Village power struggle and prevent the assassination of a Number Two.
"A Change of Mind" 15 December 1967 John Sharp 9 13 13 11 11
Number Two stirs the Village to ostracize Number Six, and then takes even more drastic measures to cure Six's "unmutuality".
"Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darling" 22 December 1967 Clifford Evans 14 9 12 13 14
Deprived of his memory and placed in another man's body, Number Six travels back to England to seek a missing scientist. Nigel Stock portrays Six for most of this episode.
"Living in Harmony" 29 December 1967 David Bauer 15 12 10 14 13
In an Old West setting, a lawman who resigned is trapped in a town called Harmony where the Judge wants him to be the new sheriff — by hook or by crook.
"The Girl Who Was Death" 18 January 1968 Kenneth Griffith 16 15 15 15 15
Number Six avoids the assassination attempts of a beautiful woman while foiling the plots of her megalomaniac father.
"Once Upon a Time" 25 January 1968 Leo McKern 6 16 16 16 16
Number Two subjects Number Six to a desperate, last-ditch effort to subdue him, Degree Absolute — an ordeal that will not end until it breaks one of them.
"Fall Out" 1 February 1968 Leo McKern 17 17 17 17 17
Number Six encounters the forces behind the Village, but can he finally escape?

Alternative versions

Alternative versions of two episodes exist and have been commercially released. An early edit of "Arrival", with a different music score and additional dialogue and scenes not in the broadcast version, was located in the 2000s and released to DVD in the UK and in 2009 in the A&E Home Video DVD and Blu-ray box sets. This alternative version was located on a near-pristine 35mm print and has been transferred in high-definition along with the 17 episodes for the Blu-ray release. An early edit of "The Chimes of Big Ben", again with an unbroadcast music score and additional scenes and dialogue not in the broadcast version, was located in the 1980s and initially released on VHS videotape by MPI Home Video. It was later included as a bonus feature on the A&E Home Video DVD release of the series in the early 2000s. In 2009 it was also included in the expanded A&E Home Video box set, but owing to the low quality of the print it was not upgraded to high definition as was "Arrival", and was instead included as a bonus on the set's standard DVD extras disc, which was included in both the DVD and Blu-ray editions.

Episode viewing order

General agreement exists on the first episode and the last two episodes of the 17 produced shows, extensive debate has taken place among dedicated fans regarding a "correct" order for the intermediate 14 episodes. The order in which the episodes were originally broadcast in Britain differs from the order in which they were produced. Even the broadcast order is not that originally intended by series star and co-creator Patrick McGoohan. Many have analysed the series line-by-line for time references, which in many cases provide different—sometimes radically different—episode orders compared to the broadcast order.[6]

Ian Rakoff (assistant editor on two episodes and co-writer of "Living in Harmony") authored a book in 1998 on his experience working on the series,[7] wherein the appendices include a numbered episode guide which reflects the original UK broadcast order, as do the nine-volume Laserdisc releases of the series, also released in 1998. However, the 2006 40th Anniversary DVD Boxed Set released in association with American television's Arts & Entertainment Channel (A&E) uses a different order. The set goes so far as to include a guidebook with justifications for their version, citing—among other reasons—the aforementioned "time references", such as Number Six telling other members of the Village that he is "new here".

The first UK transmission of each of the first 14 episodes was made by ATV (Midlands) and Grampian Television. The final three episodes were first shown in the UK by Scottish Television.

Unproduced episodes

Story lines and scripts that the series did not use are known to exist, several of which were published in a two-volume collection - The Prisoner: The Original Scripts - Volume 1 & 2 edited by Robert Fairclough and published by Reynolds and Hearn in 2005 and 2006. The scripts and story outlines were also included in PDF form as a DVD-ROM bonus feature on the 2007 and 2009 DVD box set issues of The Prisoner by Network Distrubuting.

  • "The Outsider" by Moris Farhi (complete script included in Volume 1)
  • "Ticket to Eternity" by Eric Mival (synopsis included in Volume 1)
  • "Friend or Foe" by Mival (synopsis included in Volume 1)
  • "Don't Get Yourself Killed" by Gerald Kelsey (complete script included in Volume 2)

Documentary

In 2007 a documentary entitled Don't Knock Yourself Out was produced containing behind-the-scenes footage, and archival and newly recorded interviews with the cast and production staff. It is narrated by Neil Pearson[8] and runs approximately 90 minutes.

References

  1. ^ "Frequently-Asked Questions (FAQ) and resource guide for alt.tv.prisoner". Archived from the original on 1 May 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ Amazon.com: The Prisoner: The Complete Series
  3. ^ Amazon.com: The Prisoner - Complete Series Megaset
  4. ^ A.V. Club: TV Club - The Prisoner
  5. ^ Fairclough, Robert. The Prisoner: The Official Companion. London: Carlton Books. p. 140. ISBN 978-0743452564.
  6. ^ White, Matthew (1988). The Official Prisoner Companion. London: Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 132. ISBN 0-283-99598-X.
  7. ^ Rakoff, Ian (1998). INSIDE THE PRISONER SIGNED EDITION: Radical Television and Film in the 1960s. Batsford Ltd. ISBN 978-0713484137.
  8. ^ "Internet Movie Database". Retrieved 31 May 2016.