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Le prisonnier

Original title: The Prisoner
  • TV Series
  • 1967–1968
  • Tous publics
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
8.4/10
16K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,181
214
Le prisonnier (1967)
The Prisoner: Free For All
Play trailer1:09
3 Videos
99+ Photos
DramaMysterySci-Fi

A former secret agent is abducted and taken to what looks like an idyllic village, but is actually a bizarre prison. He refuses to give his warders information while attempting to escape.A former secret agent is abducted and taken to what looks like an idyllic village, but is actually a bizarre prison. He refuses to give his warders information while attempting to escape.A former secret agent is abducted and taken to what looks like an idyllic village, but is actually a bizarre prison. He refuses to give his warders information while attempting to escape.

  • Creator
    • Patrick McGoohan
  • Stars
    • Patrick McGoohan
    • Angelo Muscat
    • Peter Swanwick
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.4/10
    16K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,181
    214
    • Creator
      • Patrick McGoohan
    • Stars
      • Patrick McGoohan
      • Angelo Muscat
      • Peter Swanwick
    • 150User reviews
    • 53Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Episodes17

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season

    Videos3

    The Prisoner: Free For All
    Trailer 1:09
    The Prisoner: Free For All
    The Prisoner: The Complete Series
    Trailer 1:04
    The Prisoner: The Complete Series
    The Prisoner: The Complete Series
    Trailer 1:04
    The Prisoner: The Complete Series
    Prisoner, The: The Arrival
    Trailer 1:14
    Prisoner, The: The Arrival

    Photos333

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    + 327
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Patrick McGoohan
    Patrick McGoohan
    • Number Six…
    • 1967–1968
    Angelo Muscat
    Angelo Muscat
    • The Butler
    • 1967–1968
    Peter Swanwick
    Peter Swanwick
    • Supervisor…
    • 1967–1968
    Peter Brace
    Peter Brace
    • 1st Guardian…
    • 1967–1968
    Leo McKern
    Leo McKern
    • Number Two…
    • 1967–1968
    Christopher Benjamin
    Christopher Benjamin
    • Labour Exchange Manager…
    • 1967–1968
    Michael Miller
    Michael Miller
    • Man in Buggy…
    • 1967–1968
    Alexis Kanner
    Alexis Kanner
    • Chief's voice…
    • 1968
    Bill Cummings
    Bill Cummings
    • Henchman…
    • 1967–1968
    Frank Maher
    • Number Six…
    • 1967–1968
    Patrick Cargill
    Patrick Cargill
    • Number Two…
    • 1967
    Colin Gordon
    Colin Gordon
    • Number Two
    • 1967
    Kenneth Griffith
    Kenneth Griffith
    • Schnipps…
    • 1968
    Georgina Cookson
    Georgina Cookson
    • Blonde Lady…
    • 1967
    Harold Berens
    • Boxing M.C.…
    • 1967–1968
    John Cazabon
    John Cazabon
    • Man in Cave…
    • 1967–1968
    Bee Duffell
    • 2nd Psychiatrist…
    • 1967
    Larry Taylor
    Larry Taylor
    • Gypsy Man…
    • 1967–1968
    • Creator
      • Patrick McGoohan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews150

    8.415.7K
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    Featured reviews

    10janemerrow

    I find more in it, and it in more, every time I see it....

    This has become by far my favorite series of all time, so much so I have given up watching television altogether and turned to DVD's instead. That's not to say it's the best show ever, but it's one of those things you can watch as fluff action-adventure entertainment one day, or chew down to its bones, if you like, the next. That is, it doesn't require intelligence and concentration or an easy day at the office to enjoy, but if you've read a few books or have philosophical leanings you can amuse yourself by wringing quite a bit out of it.

    On that note, it's especially fun to watch this series in conjunction with Danger Man/ Secret Agent. Although it isn't uncommon to have the same actors work together on different series, there is a town full of spies in DM/SA

    referred to as the Village in the episode "Colony Three" which is the center of a debate on whether Number 6 and John Drake are the same. (McGoohan categorically denies this, but Markstein says it's true. Perhaps there is a legal hurdle involved? We will probably never get that information.)

    I recommend watching them in order, so you can see Number 6 gradually abandon his open desperation and anger ("Arrival" to "The Chimes of Big Ben") for a cool and calculated needling of the system from within ("A, B and C" to "Hammer Into Anvil"). They try drugs, brainwashing, torture, virtual reality, letting him escape, and even babysitting to get him to talk. Each episode will appeal to someone different, some funny, some aggravating, but they all fit together by "Fall Out"; I have never met anyone who was not surprised at the final episode. It's truly extraordinary!

    You will find references to the Prisoner are made constantly in other shows and movies, especially Sci Fi. The character Bester uses the Village greeting on Babylon 5; I have seen Village interrogation methods on the Pretender, John Doe and Farscape (whose leading man has an acting style similar to McGoohan's and a character similar to Number 6, IMHO, especially if you watch "A, B and C"); Number 2's trademark sphere chair is used on everything from Austin Powers to ads for American Idol.

    The Village itself has appeared in tribute episodes of the Invisible Man and, of all things, the Simpsons ("The Computer Wore Menace Shoes"). Rover has actually appeared on the Simpsons twice!

    I believe it's a classic that shouldn't be missed for anyone who ever feels trapped by rules that make little sense. If you like quoting Brazil and Office Space you'll find plenty of quotes to add to your collection here. My friends and I have even started referring to each other by number at work!

    Be Seeing You!
    darienwerfhorst

    The coolest show of 2004

    Who would think that the coolest show of 2004 would have been the rebroadcast of this 1960's British classic?

    When I lived in the U.K. I heard about this show a lot, and when I went to Wales was told about the town where it was filmed, but I had no idea why people were so durned excited about it.

    It can be murky and deliberately obscure, but I'm not sure I've ever seen a show as creative and bizarre....and you have to love the fact that No. 6 always looks so dammed serious!

    Seriously, it's worth watching, if only to remember how important good writing and unique ideas used to be in television!
    9miloc

    Want answers? Take a number...

    Montage: a secret agent (Patrick McGoohan) storms into his superior's office and angrily resigns his post, for reasons unknown. A machine files away his Xed-out photo; he speeds away to his home. He enters his house and begins packing for a journey. Outside, a hearse pulls up to the curb. A pallbearer strides to the door. Knockout gas comes pouring in through the keyhole. When our hero awakes the room is the same... but the world outside is not.

    We are in the Village, a picturesque nightmare co-fashioned by Orwell, Kafka, and Carroll. The unnamed agent has become Number Six in a population of equally nameless, creepily cheerful residents, headed by a shifting, and shifty, Number Two. Who is Number One? Well, that's the question, isn't it... In one direction are impassable mountains, in the other the sea -- and on patrol is a bizarre, lethal white balloon that hunts down those unwise enough to dare them.

    Viewed today, "The Prisoner" seems so strikingly ahead of its time that one can only regard it as either a visionary masterpiece or a dazzling failure. Either way it is compulsive viewing. Co-creators McGoohan and George Markstein were seemingly at odds about what to make of it all, with McGoohan eschewing conventional James Bondisms for a more surreal, allegorical approach. (He himself wrote and directed some of the series' best and most bewildering episodes.) And truly "The Prisoner" works best when at its least explanatory and most hallucinatory. Not until "Twin Peaks" would another television show dabble this heavily in the logic of dreams.

    McGoohan also believed the premise would only hold up over a limited run, and his concern seems justified. A few of the later of the seventeen episodes show desperation: low points include the feebly whimsical "The Girl Who Was Death," the plodding "It's Your Funeral," and "The General," which might as well be -- and nearly is -- an episode of Star Trek.

    Yet at its best, in episodes like "Arrival," "Free For All," "Dance of Death," "Many Happy Returns," and the finale (one of the most astonishing hours ever programmed for television), the series achieves something extraordinary. Its influence reaches beyond such obvious successors as "Lost" and "The League of Gentlemen" -- and could you imagine "Brazil" or "The Matrix" without it? "The Prisoner" catches at a thread in our subconscious and pulls it loose; it tells us that something is genuinely wrong somewhere with the Great Big Picture. Its true antecedents are Chesterton's "The Man Who Was Thursday" and O'Brien's "The Third Policeman": nonsense that bleeds into spiritual unease.

    It's not hard to understand why the series has a cult following, or why, love it or hate it, it still packs a punch. We are in the Village. Be seeing you...
    Infofreak

    Absolutely essential viewing!

    'The Prisoner' is one of those things that inspires either absolute devotion or utter confusion. There are no halfway reactions to this TV series. Many consider it to be the most imaginative and original TV show ever, and I'm inclined to agree with them. Nothing until 'Twin Peaks' came close to competing with it. However unlike 'Twin Peaks', 'The Prisoner' knew when to stop. There is hardly a bad episode in the whole series, and the final show is perfect. Patrick McGoohan will always have an important place in not only television history, but pop culture as a whole, from his involvement with this stunning and unforgettable show. To me it gets better and better as the years go by. If you haven't ever seen it make sure you do so! You don't know what you're missing!
    roarshock

    Still unique, alas.

    Unfortunately, when you see see The Prisoner for the first time at an early age it tends to spoil television for the rest of your life. I was thirteen when I saw it in 1968, and for more than thirty years I keep hoping to find TV shows (and movies and books) that will give me the same rush of seeing vast, unexpected and unexplained vistas for the very first time. Too, too rare. Virtually non-existent. For The Prisoner didn't just present a new 'twist' (rare enough), it was a whole new world, with a wildly different culture, environment and rules, only gradually comprehended, if at all. And yet, strangely, it is more like the "real" world than any other television program, even the news, because The Prisoner doesn't explain itself, it just happens. If YOU want to know what's going on, figure it out for yourself... if you can. You might be right, you might be wrong, but if simplistic explanations are your comfort, you almost certainly WILL be wrong. Just like explorers of old. Just like real life. Though with the increasing homogenization of the world, real life is becoming, alas, more like television.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The Prisoner was filmed in the North Wales resort village of Portmeirion over the course of a year. Patrick McGoohan was inspired to film his series there after filming a couple of Destination danger (1960) episodes in the village.
    • Goofs
      In the opening sequence, the letter X is typed across the prisoner's photograph, but the typewriter typebar for the letter H is moving. The typebar for the letter X is at the far right of the frame.
    • Quotes

      Number 6: I will not make any deals with you. I've resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.

    • Crazy credits
      Portmeirion, Wales is not identified as the location for filming in all but the final episode. Instead the closing credits in these episodes simply say "Filmed on location."
    • Alternate versions
      In the recent re-run of the series on the Horror channel in the U.K. whenever anyone is attacked by Rover, the screen simply changes to a swirling vortex. When shown originally, the victim's face was pressed into Rover's 'skin'
    • Connections
      Edited into Derrick contre Superman (1992)

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    FAQ21

    • How many seasons does The Prisoner have?Powered by Alexa
    • What's written on the envelope Number Six slaps down on the desk?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 18, 1968 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Prisoner
    • Filming locations
      • Abingdon Street, London, England, UK(underground carpark in title sequence)
    • Production companies
      • Everyman Films
      • Incorporated Television Company (ITC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 4:3

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