September 29, 1967 Season 1 Episode 1
If you want to see where we are…HERE is a list of the episodes.
I have covered The Twilight Zone, Star Trek, and Kolchak: The Night Stalker episode by episode, and I think The Prisoner will fit in perfectly. This will be my first British show episode by episode, although I’ve made posts on Fawlty Towers and Are You Being Served. I hope you will enjoy these.
What an opening! You resign from your workplace, and you are abducted by someone or some group and wake up in a pastel-looking village where individuality is a no-go. You are assigned a number, and that is now your name. There are so many symbolic images, and our Number 6 refuses to give in. Also, who would think a white weather balloon-looking device (Rover) could be so menacing?

This episode opens The Prisoner by throwing the viewer, like its hero, straight into disorientation. A government agent abruptly resigns, is abducted, and wakes up in the Village. It’s a bright seaside resort that feels pleasant until it doesn’t. Patrick McGoohan establishes the conflict immediately: individuality versus control and bureaucracy. The episode uses visuals and silence as much as dialogue, which pulls you in. As soon as he awakes from an unfamiliar pillow, the show is on.
The Village itself becomes the real star. Smiling residents, surveillance, and cheery announcements clash with the unspoken threat behind them. Authority is masked as friendliness, and rules are vague but absolute and must be followed. Trying to escape is treated as both foolish and dangerous. The balloon-like Rover makes its first appearance here, not explained, just accepted as the force it is. You will see it in action, and we are not sure why it attacked a Villager, and we are not told why. It reinforces the show’s refusal to reassure the audience that everything will be all right. Names are not used here; only numbers are used. Our spy is now Number 6. The Village is totally internal; no outside is mentioned or displayed. Any map is just of the Village, nothing of the world.
He meets a person who is the so-called leader…today. That would be Number 2. A different Number 2 every episode, with a few exceptions. They want to know why number 6 resigned. That is when our guy Number says I will not make any deals. I’ve resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered. My life is my own. Number 6 comes off as rude and impatient, but it makes sense. He is there against his will and doesn’t know who to trust. Throughout the series, he does find a few he does trust at the moment, at least partway.
By the end, this introductory episode has done its job. It defines the tone and the mystery. It also doesn’t resolve anything. Questions about identity, obedience, and yes, freedom are raised but not answered. That unease is the point and a big reason I kept on watching. As a first episode, it is bold and strange. You think everything will be explained, but it won’t. Beware of Rover!
In this episode, Number 6 is finding out the lay of the land, and the Village is getting to know him. He is looking to get out and give it a couple of shots. He does meet someone he knows, a spy, and he meets a lady with a chance to escape.
And so the trip to the bizarre begins, Be Seeing You!

I remember watching this with my older sister and was really freaked out at first but got hooked
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I think I got hooked because of how freaked out I got.
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The same happened with me. I didn’t know what to think and then yea…I got hooked as I watched.
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Excellent overview and introduction.
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Thanks Arthur!
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As I mentioned when you introduced this last week I had never heard of it. I started watching the first episode and when they take the helicopter ride it really starts to sink in. We’re not in Kansas anymore Toto!
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or maybe we are!!!
🙂
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May I call you No. 2?
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Oh thanks for trying it Randy. Yea…different world. At first I thought…he is somewhat rude…well there is a reason for that lol.
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Max, this is really a reply to Randy but WordPress has no Reply button on his reply to my reply…
Are we asking in terms of The Prisoner or potty training? Trust me, I’ve been called worse. 🙂
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Sounds intriguing and ahead of its time
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Dave you should give it a try.
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I think I might. And thank you Homer for giving me instructions on how to defeat that all-watching balloon should I find myself there…
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LOL… yea that was funny. Well I saw in another episode when someone actually shoots Rover…it just showed the holes and kept coming.
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I remember watching it but was never sure what it was about!
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Yea it can get that way Glyn…but it is entertaining.
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I watched E1 last night. I think the first few epis will be the most familiar. E1 had 2 #2s, wassup with that? The sanitized everything is unnerving to me. It’s too danged tidy for me, and the violent things going on contrast sharply with the looks of the place. The mind game symbology is everywhere. I would be setting up some nice booby traps for the orb, to puncture or burn it. The scene with the statues watching him was my favorite part.
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Lisa, you are definitely getting it. The sanitized everything is unnerving to me, you and everybody else. The Village is perfect. Too perfect.
Do you think you could set up booby traps for Rover? You see, you are fighting it. Rebellion. That’s why they show us Rover coming from different spots, so if you get one they can always regenerate another.
Yes!!!!
How’s the color for you? I get more of what Max is talking about on his posts than I remember or watching the You Tube episodes on my laptop.
Yes, Max, she is coming along nicely. (Said as sinister as I can manage.)
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Thank you for your entertaining comment.
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It’s so bizzare of a place and how the people act. It seems like the older people don’t really care…they are being looked after and are happy…like the man that plays chess…
They really go physiological in this show…and yes all the symbolism is pretty cool….you said it all there… “contrast” and there is a lot of it.
At first I wondered why he just didnt’ tell them why he resigned…then I thought about it…well he didn’t know which side they were on plus he was done with the spy business and wanted a real life.
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When he saw his buddy at the hospital I thought he would know which side “they” are on, and I think that’s what they wanted him to think, but the guy could easily be a double agent. It really messes with your mind.
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Oh yea…he is a double agent…I’m pretty sure of it. Some of these episodes get really deep in the way they mess with him…but he does mess back at times as well.
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It’s essential that he does. Can you imagine just accepting it? A person like him would go mad.
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He keeps them on their toes. The show makes you think…thats what I like about it. Although near the end it really becomes a puzzle.
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I’m busy today Max but will view tomorrow. Unless I wake up somewhere, someplace, disorientated and disconcerted.
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Well that sounds like fun! Ok obbverse.. wish you the best of luck!
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