The Prisoner – Dance of the Dead

November 17, 1967 Season 1 Episode 8

If you want to see where we are…HERE is a list of the episodes.

The dance macabre, or the dance of death, was an allegorical motif in medieval art to remind us that death is everywhere and unexpected. In this one, we have Mary Morris playing Number 2. The Village is trying to extract information from Number 6, who is under electronic hypnosis. They have an older colleague (number 42) of Number 6 asking him for information, but it doesn’t work. Number 2 makes it clear she doesn’t want Number 6 broken, but for him to agree voluntarily. This episode feels like it should have been earlier in the series.

Following a seemingly impromptu yet half-hearted escape attempt that leaves him collapsed on the beach, Number Six awakes to find that a dead man has washed up on the shore. This Number Six uses some kind of radio on the body in an attempt to contact the outside world about his plight. Of course, though, the Village knows about it already.

While all of this is going on, preparations are underway for a strange Carnival celebration, complete with masks, costumes, and a sense that the entire Village is waiting for some kind of performance. The episode never fully explains every detail, which gives it a dreamlike quality, as though Number Six has stepped into a ritual that has happened many times before. Number 6 does some spy work before that, exploring some rooms. He finds the man who washed ashore, whose info the village has altered the dead man’s info so when he is “found,” they will think it’s Number 6.

As the celebration begins, the atmosphere turns darker. The Carnival becomes a public trial, with Number Six placed in front of the crowd and forced into a role he never agreed to play. The villagers act as spectators and participants at the same time, blurring the line between justice and entertainment. He does call his old friend (dressed as a court jester) as a witness, but the village has destroyed him completely. He looks more like a living dead man. Like many episodes of The Prisoner, this one is less about plot and more about mood, control, and the way the Village tries to rewrite a person’s sense of reality. Be Seeing You!

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Author: Badfinger (Max)

Power Pop fan, Baseball, Beatles, Alternative music, old movies, and tv show fan. Also anything to do with pop culture in the 60s and 70s... I'm also a songwriter, bass and guitar player. Not the slightest bit interested in politics at all.

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