"You are Number Six " "I am not a number, I am a free man "
Who runs the Village? Which side built it? Why did our hero really resign? And what on Earth was Patrick McGoohan thinking with that mind-bending series finale?
The Prisoner Series Guide dives deep into one of British television's most gloriously unresolved masterpieces and refuses to look away. Inside, you'll find a rigorous account of the creative war between Patrick McGoohan and script editor George Markstein, whose clashing visions produced a series more interesting than either man might have made alone. You'll find a systematic examination of the Village as a designed architecture of control: the surveillance, the rotating Number Twos, the philosophy behind Rover. And you'll find a clear-eyed study of what Number Six's resistance actually costs and actually means.
The book tackles the big philosophical readings head-on: libertarian polemic, Cold War allegory, Kafka, Orwell, the postmodern. It takes seriously McGoohan's own claim that the series is about balance, not triumph. It wrestles honestly with the production order versus broadcast order debate, traces the escalation patterns that tighten the series across its run, and asks what difference it makes that the series was supposed to be seven episodes and not seventeen.
There is no escaping this time. Just serious engagement with a series that has been arguing with its audience for nearly sixty years.
It hasn't finished yet.
Be seeing you.