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The Prisoner: A Televisionary Masterpiece
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The Prisoner: A Televisionary Masterpiece (edition 1995)

Series: The Prisoner (9.2)

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1422192,106 (3.67)4
Of all the ground-breaking television programmes made in the 1960s, some are fondly remembered, a few received critical acclaim and one or two created scandal. The Prisoner, probably the only programme to insite all three reactions, included a total of 17 episodes. This book provides a complete history of the series, with an analysis of all 17 episodes and interviews with key personnel. It also looks at the difficulties of making the programmes, personality clashes and the unparalleled following the programme enjoys today.… (more)
Member:gaukler
Title:The Prisoner: A Televisionary Masterpiece
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Info:Barnes & Noble Books (1995), Hardcover
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The Prisoner: A Televisionary Masterpiece by Alain Carrazé

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The Internet has mainly made this sort of book obsolete; and as an early example of the type (1989), there are some instances where the delivery is a bit flawed - the episode summaries, for instance, lack the sort of analysis and insight that many later fan/professional crossover works for other shows offer. There are also fairly gross production errors - sentences or blocks of text either missing or duplicated.

But there is interesting detail of the actual production process, such as the division of filming for blocks of episodes between Portmeirion and the studio; and the background to the show's genesis, coming out of the earlier Danger Man* series, is illuminating. It was never directly stated that The Prisoner was a direct sequel to Danger Man, but it seems that everyone connected with the shows, including Patrick McGoohan himself, worked on that assumption. The show certainly started out as a thematic sequel, putting a prime-time family entertainment spy story on tv screens; but as time went by, McGoohan pushed the allegorical and philosophical sides of the show further into the foreground.

The show was actually cancelled as from episode 13, but for contractual reasons four more episodes were commissioned, including McGoohan's controversial final episodes, Once Upon a Time and Fall Out. In retrospect, revealing Number One to be some fiendish James Bond-style villain who we had never previously seen would have been a cop-out. Number One had to be someone closely connected with the story of the Prisoner himself; ultimately, finding out that Number Six's captor is Number Six is the only possible ending.

*Secret Agent in the USA. ( )
  RobertDay | Mar 3, 2023 |
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1217101.html

I'm still looking for the perfect book about The Prisoner, but this is not bad at all: originally published in French (but translated fairly smoothly) it includes the usual episode guide, but lavishly illustrated and recounting each plot in great detail; it has one thing I really did want, a narrative of the production history (which puts script editor George Marksteiner's side of the story as well as McGoohan's version of events); and also a fascinating interview with McGoohan, where he says that actually he would have been happy if only seven episodes had been made; there are only seven that he finds true to the concept and the rest are padding. (We may now try and identify which they were.) Recommended. ( )
  nwhyte | May 9, 2009 |
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» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Alain Carrazéprimary authorall editionscalculated
Oswald, HélèneAuthormain authorall editionsconfirmed
Donougher, ChristineTranslatormain authorsome editionsconfirmed
Asimov, Isaac"Theodore Prisoner"secondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Baudou, Jacques"Danger Man"secondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Durante, Christian"We Are Living in the Village"secondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Langley, Roger"Prisoner of The Prisoner"secondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Philibert, Jean-Michel"Six of One"secondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Rivière, François"'Why?'"secondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Sternberg, Jacques"The Prisoner, Pioneer Without Heirs"secondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Topor, Roland"The Greatest Science Fiction Film of All Time"secondary authorall editionsconfirmed

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Of all the ground-breaking television programmes made in the 1960s, some are fondly remembered, a few received critical acclaim and one or two created scandal. The Prisoner, probably the only programme to insite all three reactions, included a total of 17 episodes. This book provides a complete history of the series, with an analysis of all 17 episodes and interviews with key personnel. It also looks at the difficulties of making the programmes, personality clashes and the unparalleled following the programme enjoys today.

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Book description
Of the many excellent television series made in the 1960s, some have received critical acclaim; others are fondly remembered; a few created scandal. Only The Prisoner produced all three reactions; and it generated a world-wide following that is still growing. In addition to an episode-by-episode breakdown of the entire series, this book contains an interview with Patrick McGoohan, the programme's creator; essays about McGoohan's career, the making of The Prisoner, the real 'Village' – Portmeirion in Wales, and the Six of One Club: and critical reviews of the series by Roland Topor, Roger Langley, Jacques Sternberg, Isaac Asimov, Christian Durante, and François Rivière.
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