January 25, 1968 Season 1 Episode 16
If you want to see where we are…HERE is a list of the episodes.
This episode is basically a two-person show. Some of the best acting happens in this episode, and it is a life-and-death match between Number 2 and 6. One thing about this episode. It was recorded much earlier; it was the 6th show filmed. That is why Leo McKern, who appears in this, has a slightly different look in the last one.
As the series nears its end, Number Two decides there is only one way left to break Number Six. He takes him deep beneath the Village and subjects him to a process called “Degree Absolute.” The method strips away layers of a person’s life and personality. Number Six is forced to relive stages of his past. He moves backward through adulthood, youth, childhood, and even infancy. Number Two hopes that somewhere along the way he will discover why Number Six resigned and finally make him reveal his secrets.
Some of the very best acting is in this episode between Patrick McGoohan and a return of Leo McKern as Number 2. It is one of my favorite episodes. I’ll drop a little trivia here before we continue. The strain of filming this episode caused Leo McKern to suffer either a nervous breakdown or a heart attack (accounts differ), forcing production to stop for a time. You can tell how tense it was by just watching.
Most of the episode takes place in a single room. There are few sets and very little action. Instead, it becomes a contest between the two men. Number Two pushes and tries very much to manipulate. Number Six resists every step of the way. It’s like an emotional chess or tennis match. At times the process seems to be working. At other times Number Six turns the tables on Number 6. The line between prisoner and interrogator begins to blur. Patrick McGoohan and Leo McKern carry nearly the entire episode by themselves.
By the end, the strain becomes too much for both men. Number Six refuses to surrender the one thing he has fought to protect throughout the series, his individuality. The contest leaves both men exhausted and broken. Rather than finding the answers he wants, Number Two finds himself trapped by the very process he hoped would beat Number Six. It is one of the most intense episodes of The Prisoner. Two powerful personalities locked in a struggle over freedom and control. There is more, but I’ll let you watch and find out.
This was originally going to be the final episode of the first season. When it was decided to end the series, McGoohan used it as the springboard for the final episode he filmed to sum up the story. McGoohan has said this was his favorite episode of the series. Be Seeing You!
