Was The Village The First 15 Minute City? | The Prisoner Puzzle

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  • Опубликовано: 19 фев 2024
  • Was The Village The First 15 Minute City? It is a question, not a statement. The Prisoner Puzzle, was filmed in 1977 with host, Warner Troyer. The Ontario Educational Communications Authority published this interview. The Prisoner was a 17 part series first shown in 1967 through to 1968. Published by ITC/ITV, over 17 million viewers tuned in to watch each episode. It featured one man's quest to retain his individuality in an enclosed village. Both literal and allegorical, the deep and dark series confused many on its release and has become one of the most popular shows ever broadcast. Often copied, parodied and even used in Iron Maiden's song, The Prisoner. The Prisoner series is available to buy as a DVD collection or through television download channels. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE to our new channel.
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Комментарии • 770

  • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
    @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +54

    Thank you for joining us on our new channel. We will be bringing you great guests and please subscribe here - www.youtube.com/@TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth

    • @stephenclarke2206
      @stephenclarke2206 Месяц назад +5

      Can think of much worse places to live than Portmeirion

    • @williamgraham1062
      @williamgraham1062 Месяц назад +3

      Yes, but try leaving the place, what with Rover & the liquid Cosh with a strap in bed .😅 I've been to the place, & want to revisit, it's approximately 170 miles away , Central Scotland to 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿. North Wales. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿.

    • @ianweniger6620
      @ianweniger6620 Месяц назад +5

      Thank you for this return to my teenage years.

    • @folkmoot36
      @folkmoot36 Месяц назад +2

      Freedom like madness, it's all in the mind.

  • @DanielWright-np3fq
    @DanielWright-np3fq Месяц назад +73

    I weep, remembering when television was like this. Intelligent and thoughtful and honest. I cry for this generation.

    • @nrs6956
      @nrs6956 26 дней назад +2

      So true!

    • @user-ek8gs4ij4r
      @user-ek8gs4ij4r 26 дней назад +5

      Well, some of it was. Some of it maybe not so much.

    • @yesferatu
      @yesferatu 26 дней назад +2

      Thank you, it is jarring to be presented with what we once knew, but now a lost memory…. It was taken from us. I cry for this generation as well.

    • @nrs6956
      @nrs6956 25 дней назад

      @@yesferatu You are so right. The best solution to practice is avoidance!

    • @jimhardiman3836
      @jimhardiman3836 25 дней назад

      Cry a little harder 😭

  • @josephselvaratnam3136
    @josephselvaratnam3136 29 дней назад +13

    I am not a number; I am a free man. I will not make any deals with you. I've resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered.

  • @martinheath5947
    @martinheath5947 Месяц назад +147

    Remarkable piece of history. The intellectual value of tv has declined ever since, possibly in an inverse proportion to screen size, brightness and picture quality.

    • @ikarus30449
      @ikarus30449 Месяц назад +12

      You are right.

    • @railgap
      @railgap Месяц назад +9

      High quality TV has always been rare, by definition. You have to winnow a lot of chaff to find the good stuff and as someone who's been watching TV since the 60s, I say this has not changed at all. Don't let yourself turn into one of those curmudgeons who talks about how there's no good music to be found these days... LOOK HARDER. ADAPT. CHANGE WITH THE TIMES... or find yourself miserable in your old age, it's your choice.

    • @peterkilbridge6523
      @peterkilbridge6523 Месяц назад +4

      ...and analogous to theatre/film. Some of the greatest theatre was in Ancient Greece, with the most basic of scenery and props. Ditto with Shakespeare's Globe. Now we've got Spiderman...5? (I've lost count). Kiddie-poo razzle-dazzle.

    • @Auqalungangler
      @Auqalungangler Месяц назад

      It's the intellectual value of the western world that is depreciating. Low quality t.v.for low intelligent people

    • @comentedonakeyboard
      @comentedonakeyboard Месяц назад +2

      brightness and picture quality are a bit iffy in modern TV

  • @bobparr4723
    @bobparr4723 Месяц назад +105

    The Prisoner was a true work of art, as much as any Picasso or Dali painting!!
    The message however, is only too real now!!

  • @markboomgaarden4679
    @markboomgaarden4679 Месяц назад +137

    “I think we’re progressing too fast”. And this was back in ‘77!

    • @CHDean
      @CHDean Месяц назад +12

      Solomon had it right - “There is nothing new under the sun.”

    • @southerneruk
      @southerneruk Месяц назад +19

      And he was right, we are still progressing too fast

    • @leftgrrl
      @leftgrrl Месяц назад +4

      The cry of those who have too much from time immemorial

    • @williamhenderson8371
      @williamhenderson8371 Месяц назад +2

      Too fast!

    • @David-sk9vv
      @David-sk9vv Месяц назад

      Incorrect! He said it in 1977, but was referring all the way back to The Prisoner's concept which was pre-1967, before he had started the script work for the series.

  • @jamesgibson3582
    @jamesgibson3582 Месяц назад +148

    This is the most intellectual interview about a TV show I have ever seen. Well dressed, articulate audience, insightful questions and interactions, no hype, the interviewer was as deadpan as could be, and it was all riveting. Anything around today like that?

  • @djgingecoldwell10
    @djgingecoldwell10 Месяц назад +148

    I've only seen this in 2024, I've been a fan of The Prisoner, since 1977, I'm 63. I was an original member of 6 of One the original Prisoner Fan Club, so now only now, everything that Patrick fore told is now a workable reality for those in power.

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +17

      An original member. Love it. Thank you for your comment.

    • @kbchaffin53
      @kbchaffin53 Месяц назад +17

      You'll wake up in the village tomorrow.

    • @curiouspenguin6887
      @curiouspenguin6887 Месяц назад +19

      Be seeing you!

    • @ianweniger6620
      @ianweniger6620 Месяц назад +12

      Hey DJ... I watched this programme a week after you did. I saw parts of the series as a teenager on the same Canadian channel (OECA, not yet TVO) that produced this interview. I had no overt context about the Cold War or spy shows: I just watched a lot of British reruns on CBC, PBS and OECA. THE PRISONER had a deep impact that lasts to this day and this interview brought me back to my foundations and not in a nostalgic way.
      The most important thing about this interview was McGoohan's response to the question about the future of Number Six. I think he was demoralized by the result of the 1960s. When I saw the ending for the first time, I thought Six was free. I remember the Butler during the getaway drive and nothing more.
      McGoohan says that the ending was a return to the beginning of the series and the lesson is that there is no escape from the world controlled by the Pentagon and Madison Avenue. He offers the Butler's presence in the escape, his entrance into Number Six's house and the door opening as if it were a door in the Village as proof of this loop. I agree with McGoohan that the Butler is a sinister character. I don't agree that the Butler's final appearance creates a loop back to the Village.
      Why does Six allow the Butler to join their escape or remain in the truck on the drive or escort him back home? I didn't do any research on this and I bet that more than a few people turned this topic into a master's thesis. I'd agree that the Butler represents inescapability hidden in plain sight. The dwarfism of the character make me realize the impoliteness of pointing out diversity. The serious demeanour of the Butler allows his character unparalleled surveillance options. His silence throughout the series draws attention to his difference and at the same time increases his stealth and my suspicion.
      Why do the escapees allow the Butler to come with? Why are they not suspicious? I wouldn't want the Butler along, even if he helped shoot the way out of the Village.
      Forty-Eight is young and full of piss'n'vinegar: maybe his very first mission to infiltrate an anti-war campaign went sideways and his anarchist tendencies are all he has to fight back. He has no reason to suspect the Butler and is just happy to get out.
      Two is fucked up: he's just been resurrected after Six got into his head and killed him and now he's in a show trial. He collaborated, enjoyed a level of authority and likely knows death is near. Even if Two knows the Butler can betray them, he won't convince Forty-Eight or Six.
      So why does Six allow the Butler to live? Simple: he's a secret agent to the end and will exploit every resource until it's spent. The Butler may want to escape as well or he may be working to ensure that these agents are no longer threats. Either way, he got Six to the truck. As long as he helps with the escape, he's an asset.
      Forty-Eight gets out midway and starts hitch-hiking. The Butler doesn't stop him. Maybe another team of interrogators will get him later. Maybe he prefers the open road wherever it takes him.
      Two heads for the House of Lords. That's the last place I'd go if I were him and the Butler didn't make him go there. Maybe it's the last place for old men of rank to enjoy their privilege until death.
      So why does Six go back to his house...and allow the Butler to stay with him? He's got no reason to believe that the money, cheques and passport are authentic or he won't be recaptured. I will admit that it's a bit of a stretch for Six to think his car will be out front of his house. He could inspect it for bombs and trackers and prolly ditch any tails.
      But why does Six need the Butler? In the event of an attack, the Butler might continue to defend the escape. If he hesitates, Six can use him as a human shield and a hostage. The Butler has value to the end.
      The Butler's entry into Six's house is a return...for the Butler. He knows the Villagers have been evacuated. He doesn't know that the rocket's exhaust has destroyed Rover. He knows that the Village is over and he has the receipts. He'll need protection if interrogators come for him. He can trust Six to have his back yet he doesn't ask for help.
      I have some reasons why the Butler's final scene works. Whether he's a collaborator like Two or recruited by the interrogators from the start, he's still a trained spy and can handle himself. His conservative attire and demeanor along with his domestic skills fit into the neighbourhood.
      The Butler knows Six would never live with an automatic front door. I think McGoohan wanted to show Six's freedom comes at the cost of insecurity. His housekey is useless now that anyone can walk in without it.
      Six is an individual who is not a number but a free man. The Butler doesn't even have a number: he's an anonymous generic domestic servant. An ending with the two of them driving away would be awkwardly intriguing at best. It would've also put pressure on McGoohan to consider a second season or sequel, something he didn't want at all.
      And now the punchline of the entire series:
      THE BUTLER DID IT.
      If you read this far, I'd like to hear from you!

    • @terencejay8845
      @terencejay8845 Месяц назад +17

      As a child, we went to Portmeirion in North Wales a couple of times before the series aired, so it was great to see it as the set for The Prisoner. Many years later, I had a girlfriend who had never seen the show, so we watched a couple of episodes then I took to see the place. She was wide-eyed walking around the place. It's still magical and you can see on Google Earth that the concrete boat is still there.

  • @drumstick74
    @drumstick74 Месяц назад +10

    I'm a long time fan of The Prisoner, which was *so* ahead of its time (made in _1967 to 1968_ )...!
    What McGoohan was trying to do was warn of us of the totalitarian system we are headed towards (with a Social Credit System on steroids).
    Thank you so much for sharing this gem of an interview ─ and R.I.P. Patrick McGoohan. 🕯
    _𝓑𝓮 𝓢𝓮𝓮𝓲𝓷𝓰 𝓨𝓸𝓾_ 👁

  • @Vinylathome
    @Vinylathome Месяц назад +121

    Two guys having a smoke and chat about a superb series now bedded in TV history. Great stuff

    • @24revealer
      @24revealer Месяц назад

      History? We are now living this nightmare. We are all secret agents. How do we escape this construct without being sent to the moon?

    • @mikeaugust
      @mikeaugust Месяц назад +8

      Notice the size of the ashtray!

    • @ardsley2239
      @ardsley2239 Месяц назад

      Reminds me of the interview of aldous Huxley and the interviewer a well known person smoking to beat the band..Huxley wasn't a smoker..Indeed g8 stuff here

  • @misterjaxon2559
    @misterjaxon2559 Месяц назад +86

    The Prisoner came out when I was 14. I watched it faithfully but could never really figure it out. It was the first time in my life that I realized that it was quite entertaining to be puzzled. It was much more interesting to walk away bewildered than to see a show where everything was resolved and tied up neatly at the end.

    • @dandare1001
      @dandare1001 Месяц назад +15

      Yes, something that makes one think is more valuable than giving all of the answers.

    • @mrsp3992
      @mrsp3992 Месяц назад +9

      I used to watch it of a evening while my mother did the ironing. I was hooked and like you couldn't really figure it out. It was the atmosphere which pulled me in, I think.

    • @ardsley2239
      @ardsley2239 Месяц назад +2

      Reminds me of the brother of the bell with Glenn Ford about the same time

  • @daveyvane9431
    @daveyvane9431 Месяц назад +102

    An amazing man. Turned down James Bond because he did not want his daughter to see him kissing another woman on screen. He wrote his wife a love poem every day of their marriage.

  • @fieryfredthebeaconlighter2259
    @fieryfredthebeaconlighter2259 Месяц назад +35

    I am so glad that this interview has been brought back into circulation; McGoohan was a superb artist, and to see him being interviewed and questioned in such a way is an exemplary piece of television.

  • @nobillismccaw7450
    @nobillismccaw7450 Месяц назад +25

    “The Prisoner” was a TV series decades ahead of it’s time.

  • @Williamottelucas
    @Williamottelucas 2 дня назад +2

    No lungs were harmed in the making of this interview.
    But seriously, what a fascinating piece of TV history.
    I watched it as a boy.

  • @enigmagenesis7341
    @enigmagenesis7341 22 дня назад +5

    What a fascinating, intelligent interview compared with modern drivel!

  • @fubkenste1n
    @fubkenste1n Месяц назад +48

    The beauty of the Prisoner is Patrick McGouhan's writing was so open on the themes that it allowed the viewer to insert their own meanings and encouraged people to actually think - That's why it's still talked about today. It's a masterpiece up there with Brave New World and 1984. I wrote my university dissertation on it.

  • @CheckFred
    @CheckFred Месяц назад +53

    At the time The Prisoner was launched in the UK I had been in 'Care' for nearly a year .. It felt like being in prison with all freedoms taken away .. Permissions had to be constantly sought for everything ... Then one day the Superintendant sat us ALL down in front of the TV and told us that the programme we were about to watch would be one of the most important shows we would ever see ..... We laughed and joked about it between ourselves, but in or own company it had a profound effect ... I was 14 at the time ... I STILL find it as important today as way back then ... Though it's a personal respect of the prophetic value ... Not a cause or cult to follow ... But today's circumstances certainy show JUST HOW Prophetic it WAS! .... I Mean! .. Lockdowns? - 15 minute cities? - The CBDC?? etc; etc: ...

    • @David-sk9vv
      @David-sk9vv Месяц назад +3

      People use the term 'ahead of its time' to describe shows and thoughts of this nature... what they should be saying is that... it is of its time and remains relevant as much today as it has ever done.

    • @trappedinroom1014
      @trappedinroom1014 15 дней назад +2

      Your supervisor was awesome. Just remember that everything you see happening outside of you in the exterior world is also happening within us all….there was a huge esoteric message within this series about our divided and mirrored brain hemispheres…just ponder the divided face masks and the seesaw/pendulum device in the control room, with two people sat on each side facing outwards (hijacking the central control and keeping the world/brain division in place).
      Your supervisor was clearly a very astute and aware chap who really did care about you. Avoid all the new age garbage and head straight to Gurdjieff and Ouspensky books….Ouspensky and the book ‘in search of the miraculous’ is probably a good place to start…followed by The Psychological Commentaries by Gurdjieff’s student called Maurice Nicol. The commentaries can be found read out chapter by chapter on the channel Invite the Light.
      The bottom line….your thoughts are not your own, they simply sound through you and you’ve come to believe they’re yours. How many times has a random unpleasant thought popped into your mind, seemingly out of nowhere, and is something you would never think? Try stopping all thpughtstreams for more than a minute….then you find out you are not even the master of your own mind…plus it can be hypnotised, brainwashed, and basically hacked.
      There’s far more to this series than 15 minute cities and a global village….theres a war on for control of your mind.
      Good luck and stay vigilant, hugs 🤗💕👍🏻

    • @David-sk9vv
      @David-sk9vv 15 дней назад

      @@trappedinroom1014 I'll have to read your post many times to remember it; may even quote from it if that's okay?
      Be Seeing You!

    • @trappedinroom1014
      @trappedinroom1014 15 дней назад

      @@David-sk9vv You’re more than welcome bab….people or messages often come to us at the most opportune timing, almost like there’s someone watching out for us and pointing us in the right direction…or leaving seeds and clues in our past that we never forget or that curiously become relevant many years later…and I’d hazard a very strong guess that your supervisor was one of the seeds/clues in your individual journey.
      Much love, be seeing you 🤗💕👍🏻

  • @mpetry912
    @mpetry912 Месяц назад +10

    yes it was the most important TV show ever made. Magoohan foresaw the rise of the surveillance state. A true visionary.

  • @ClassicTrialsChannel
    @ClassicTrialsChannel Месяц назад +8

    I still use. "I am not a number I am a free man" It stuck in my head that much. From watching the reruns of the series in the 70s as a kid.

  • @user-yg1rh3og2q
    @user-yg1rh3og2q Месяц назад +19

    A couple of days ago I was surfing the You Tube channel and clicked on the Prisoner only because of Patrick McGoohan. I'm 63 years old and had never heard of the Prisoner. I am so glad I watched the first episode. This interview with this host and an intelligent audience was a pleasure to watch. This is the only audience and format that I believe Mr. McGoohan would have tolerated. An extremely intelligent man and brilliant writer, director and actor, with little patience for "dumbing down". Also loved him the Columbo episodes. Thank you for posting this.

    • @Bigbadwhitecracker
      @Bigbadwhitecracker 25 дней назад

      Where have you been the last 50 odd years? I first saw it in the '70s late at night on local Miami channel 51.

  • @Russpng
    @Russpng Месяц назад +19

    Be seeing you Mr McGoohan. Thanks for your thoughts. RIP

  • @petejones879
    @petejones879 Месяц назад +16

    I can't think of Leo McKern without thinking of Rumpole of the bailey

    • @CarlosAlberto-ii1li
      @CarlosAlberto-ii1li Месяц назад +2

      Once we had Gentlemen actors..........

    • @Knight14649
      @Knight14649 Месяц назад +1

      Leo played the Eastern religious leader seeking the Red Ring, in the Beatles movie.. HELP..

  • @bradleylaford1526
    @bradleylaford1526 23 дня назад +3

    Great Actor - Great Range! Versatile & Charismatic... Watched him in the 70s on numerous Programs as a Child, & more recently in Braveheart

  • @richbailey8174
    @richbailey8174 Месяц назад +10

    What a thoughtful man! So much more sophisticated than the idiots we have to deal with today.

    • @dougaldouglas8842
      @dougaldouglas8842 Месяц назад +1

      He was indeed a thoughtful, deep thinker, unlike the shallow persons we have today, who think of nothing, but borrow from others and add a little of their own words

  • @johncopeland3826
    @johncopeland3826 Месяц назад +49

    The only actor in history who has won an Emmy award as a guest performer on the same show but on two separate episodes ! He was so good first time around they asked him back , but to play another different character on 'Columbo ' and picked up the award on two separate occasions ...quite astonishing achievement !

  • @flybobbie1449
    @flybobbie1449 Месяц назад +17

    As a child i had no idea what was going, but intrigued. As an adult, with life experience, having watched it again and i could see that No.1 was us, everyone.

  • @skunclep1938
    @skunclep1938 Месяц назад +7

    No, because back in the 60’s, every village & most towns in the UK could be traversed within 15 minutes. We hardly had a motorway network and the rail network was undergoing a massive downsizing. This idea only matters now because so many utilities & services have been centralised in regional capitals, the rise of the internet, and modern logistics.

  • @why3610
    @why3610 Месяц назад +96

    Portmeirion is a wonderful place to visit and looks very much the same today. If you ever find yourself in the north west of Wales maybe pay the village a visit.

    • @KevanRCraft
      @KevanRCraft Месяц назад +18

      Been, its an astonishing place but traditionally a lot of locals don't like the place. But it is great. Great to walk around like walking round a living film set.

    • @alexp3752
      @alexp3752 Месяц назад +7

      Yes! Be seeing you...

    • @andrewarthurmatthews6685
      @andrewarthurmatthews6685 Месяц назад +9

      Yes I recommend a visit to the truly wonderful and unique village of Portmerion

    • @wonderrob3225
      @wonderrob3225 Месяц назад +2

      I've always wanted to see that place

    • @HighWealder
      @HighWealder Месяц назад +7

      Portmerion was built by the architect Clough Williams-Ellis. Several old buildings rescued from other sites, some he designed himself, a few only facades and overall resembles a North Italian village. In the surrounding area are some of his other follys. The weather there is strangely mild and the setting perfect.
      I read the biography of him 'an Architect Errant' some time ago.

  • @BarryWolfeMusicPgh
    @BarryWolfeMusicPgh Месяц назад +64

    I rewatched the entire series just last summer. It's more relevant today than it was on its original release.

    • @dougaldouglas8842
      @dougaldouglas8842 Месяц назад +2

      It was the age that looked toward one world government, the flower power brigade saw this more than most

  • @babettesfeast6347
    @babettesfeast6347 Месяц назад +26

    He rarely gave interviews and this is fantastic

    • @David-sk9vv
      @David-sk9vv Месяц назад +2

      There is another interview on RUclips, he did on a UK Teen's Saturday morning tv show... so weird to have such an actor and interview on that type of show but... Patrick gave a precise account of who No.1 really was... in that he was asked by Mike Smith about why the ending was so confusing...
      Mike Smith: "... and who was No.1, is there ever going to be a conclusion to that?"
      Patrick McGoohan: "That was the conclusion what you saw, that's why it's still confusing!"
      Hilarious and yet, very real response!
      Here's the link... from the 2 minute mark onward you get who No.1 actually was. You may be surprised!
      ruclips.net/video/RhlS6kNT0pI/видео.html

    • @telbon8869
      @telbon8869 27 дней назад

      I find it ironic that although Patrick says we can fight back against Madison Ave. advertising and the (evil) corporations by not buying their products, yet throughout the entire interview both he and the host were chain smoking!!
      I grew up in a home where both my parents smoked constantly, as well as my aunts, uncles and other relatives. Even as a very young child I realized that their behavior was absolutely stupid. I had to resist the peer pressure in high school and college to be "cool" by smoking. And when I watched tv shows like "The Prisoner" I was bombarded by frequent cigarrette ads! Fortunately I had the good sense not to fall for it. (And most of those idiots who smoked also wasted their money and lives on drinking alcohol.

    • @johngooch8509
      @johngooch8509 9 дней назад

      @@telbon8869 Now I realise that sugar makes the same stuff that grows on teeth, grow in the veins. Diabetes, heart trouble, and Dementia. Yet sugar is hardly challenged. Same with the mind control and electronic money control of the world, with the threat of robot soldiers. Just as the Prisoner predicted.

  • @EdRushing-te3sc
    @EdRushing-te3sc 2 месяца назад +128

    Patrick was such a deep thinking artist. Every performance was different and very rewarding to watch.

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  2 месяца назад +13

      Great comment and many thanks for viewing.

    • @Diotima0fMantinea
      @Diotima0fMantinea Месяц назад +22

      I'm convinced they don't make men like this anymore. He was very perceptive, creative, introspective - really (tapped in) and responded accordingly, on his terms.

    • @Johnnycdrums
      @Johnnycdrums Месяц назад +17

      Loved him in "Danger Man" and "Secret Agent Man" TV series.
      He was fantastic as the jazz drummer in "All Night Long" (1962), lol, he rally made that movie tick, and in more than one way.
      The guy was genius, in my opinion.
      Patrick MaGoohan 1928-2009 (RIP).

    • @MsJackrussell2
      @MsJackrussell2 Месяц назад +14

      He was a class act--too intelligent for the average Hollywood crowd. I especially loved his performances in all of the Columbo episodes.

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +13

      Wasn't he in four episodes and directed others? I know he and Peter were good friends. Peter gave Pat one of his glass eyes, with a note saying, 'Be seeing you!'

  • @kamuelalee
    @kamuelalee Месяц назад +74

    Patrick broke the spy show mold with "The Prisoner." Great interview too of a classy, artistic man.

    • @Neville60001
      @Neville60001 Месяц назад +3

      I think it was a sci-fi show instead of a spy-fi one.

    • @andrewarthurmatthews6685
      @andrewarthurmatthews6685 Месяц назад +8

      As ‘clever ‘ as The Prisoner was I think it was just to radical to achieve a wide audience and an audience that that would have the attention span to be interested enough to see if No. 6 escaped!

    • @Fool3SufferingFools
      @Fool3SufferingFools Месяц назад +4

      A Sci-chodrama.

    • @TheGrumpyEnglishman
      @TheGrumpyEnglishman Месяц назад +1

      Danger Man was the catalyst for The Prisoner.

  • @gordmills1983
    @gordmills1983 Месяц назад +26

    ‘Questions are a burden to others, and answers are a prison for oneself’

  • @TheHypnotstCollector
    @TheHypnotstCollector Месяц назад +67

    I was 18 when this played in Calif.... I soaked it up like a sponge. The Chimes of Big Ben tells us "The Village is the template for a new world order." and everyone he encounters is a rat. Even the nice girls are rats. They inject him, pulse him with different frequencies, contol the radio/tv, manipulate language, there are rainibow people, men in black, people wear speacial facial protection, .....he owns nothing and he will be happy...you can't be too cynical

  • @quentinlargcoie
    @quentinlargcoie Месяц назад +14

    My god this is gold dust

    • @yesferatu
      @yesferatu 26 дней назад +1

      It really is…. My goodness.

  • @ostpimpom
    @ostpimpom 2 месяца назад +52

    As a Spanish person who didn't know anything about this series and whose age is less than the series... I am impressed by the quality of the plot, the scripts and the dialogues. Many movies and series made after this programme have been inspired by it.
    I know the fighting scenes, special effects and the way of acting can be demodé but once one sees one or two episodes, one is used to wacthing it and the rhythm and the story flows smoothely.
    The interview is fabulous! The presenter is superb, Patrick McGoohan as the interviewee is magnificent, and also the quality of the questions from the audience. What different from the programmes right now!
    Thank you for this video!

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  2 месяца назад +9

      Gracias! Thank you for your excellent comment. Great to know we have Spanish viewers and best wishes.

  • @Lyingleyen
    @Lyingleyen Месяц назад +12

    My late father was working in a top secret UK government job during the 60s and 70s so I found this an awesome programme to watch.

  • @jimp1646
    @jimp1646 Месяц назад +30

    The 1970's was a good time for interviews. Very little chance you would get this level of insight and analysis if you held a similar interview with an actor today. Even the audience members were asking interesting and meaningful questions.

    • @PeterWTaylor
      @PeterWTaylor Месяц назад +9

      -and it wouldn't be supported by advertisers.

    • @WillAH956
      @WillAH956 Месяц назад +6

      this generation wasn't as dumbed down
      Today you can sell them anything even if it hurts them

    • @leftgrrl
      @leftgrrl Месяц назад +1

      @@WillAH956 You say that of an interview where one of them was whilst chatting working on killing himself and his interlocutor with cancer. There was more time for thought than in the 24-hour-news-cycle era but also a lot of differently-stupid.

    • @WillAH956
      @WillAH956 Месяц назад

      @@leftgrrl I understand what you are saying however it's still clear to me a majority of people today have almost no critical thinking skills.

    • @Kieop
      @Kieop Месяц назад +1

      @@PeterWTaylor It wasn't supported by advertisers even then. This is Canadian public television.

  • @billywood2814
    @billywood2814 Месяц назад +5

    Funny thing is every episode says “who is number one” followed by “you are number six” so I always thought they knew from the off it was himself that was number one.

  • @mjmitz
    @mjmitz Месяц назад +6

    Very interesting prescient. Flew back home from vacation and sat next to a scientist on her way to a symposium where 15 minute cities were part of the program discussion.

  • @thewkovacs316
    @thewkovacs316 Месяц назад +47

    i will always hold that the prisoner was the most consequential tv show ever made

    • @davidotness6199
      @davidotness6199 24 дня назад +1

      Rod Serling's work deserves mention too.

  • @NRTSean
    @NRTSean Месяц назад +51

    Remarkable man. Everyone that knew him said he was a genius.

    • @alexp3752
      @alexp3752 Месяц назад +9

      Mr. McGoohan was a true genius, and a free thinker.

    • @jamesdrynan
      @jamesdrynan Месяц назад +8

      My favorite # 2 was Leo McKern, who actually had a breakdown during the filming of " The Chimes of Big Ben. " He did return for two more episodes.

    • @Mr.Goodkat
      @Mr.Goodkat Месяц назад +2

      @@jamesdrynan Why did he have a breakdown?

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +1

      Wasn't his breakdown during filming the two-header over 'Once upon a time' then he came back for 'Fall Out'? He was though in 'The Chimes of Big Ben' with that prophetic dialogue 'The whole world as the village'.

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +2

      The non-stop stress when he and Pat were basically shouting at each other in the penultimate episode. I think they were at it all day

  • @user-gx2yy1df6f
    @user-gx2yy1df6f Месяц назад +36

    in the 70.s i used to babysit my 3 year old niece and she was a handful, but when the prisoner came on pbs she'd sit still beside me on the couch and wouldn't say a word and watch it with me , as soon as the show was over she'd be up and at em ! i don't know why but she was mesmerized.

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +13

      Both of you have great taste then.

    • @rsjmd
      @rsjmd Месяц назад +4

      didn't you later ask her why he liked it or was fascinated with it, as that is a common stimulant for children at that age-something or someone different.

    • @user-gx2yy1df6f
      @user-gx2yy1df6f Месяц назад +4

      @@rsjmd Honestly i didn't want to ruin it , she was a bright child , it would got her thinking that maybe she shouldn't like it , i didn't want to take the risk, but i'd glance at her at times to try and figure out why, she'd just be watching, i just don't know, i was just glad for the reprieve.

    • @JubileeValence
      @JubileeValence Месяц назад +5

      @@user-gx2yy1df6f ...kinda had that effect on ALL of us!

    • @Woodman-Spare-that-tree
      @Woodman-Spare-that-tree 29 дней назад +4

      I think the architecture in the village, and the striped blazers and Rover the balloon were so eye-catching and special that even children were fascinated.

  • @mangobrother
    @mangobrother 3 дня назад +1

    I was only 8 when I first saw The Prisoner. Didn't really understand it but liked it, perhaps it was due to the mystery of the balloon Rover. As I got older, I re-watched it, several times over several decades. It got better each time. True mark of great art. Thank you, Mr McGoohan.

  • @Redmenace96
    @Redmenace96 Месяц назад +27

    Patrick McGoohan is such an unlikely, but undeniable, genius. I think he is gracious enough to realize the series was made with many open-minded producers, directors, writers who lent a hand to make it a work of art. Never mind the perfect time and place.

  • @adamfox9651
    @adamfox9651 Месяц назад +6

    I always thought little Angelo was the real Number One, especially with that last scene in the last episode.

  • @hansvonmannschaft9062
    @hansvonmannschaft9062 Месяц назад +6

    So all of a sudden, YT recommends me an interview where King Edward I "Longshanks" is comfortably having a smoke with the host, without any cigarrette stupidity, all natural, great conversation. Wow, just wow. Props to the channel for having acquired this fantastic piece of journalism, and huge thanks for having uploaded it!
    Edit: And almost forgot to add: Enthralling. And also... God! - The level of intelligence and knowledge of their art, this was fantastic!

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +1

      Many thanks and best wishes!

    • @Concreteowl
      @Concreteowl 27 дней назад

      Braveheart is a pile of cack. No idea how they got such a star to be in that dumb panto.

    • @trappedinroom1014
      @trappedinroom1014 18 дней назад

      If you’re here purely for his superb acting as Longshanks, and you haven’t actually watched the prisoner….I seriously, seriously recommend you watch it, it’s absolutely superb. It’s loaded with allegory, both exoteric and esoteric, and was clearly designed for curious minds.
      I only recently came across it, and I’m actually glad it took that long to appear on my radar, because I probably wouldn’t have recognised those allegories had I watched it when I was younger. Enjoy! 😁💕👍🏻

    • @hansvonmannschaft9062
      @hansvonmannschaft9062 17 дней назад

      @@trappedinroom1014 Thanks for the info! Sounds awesome, and I'm definitely intrigued now! Will try to find the series, have a great day!

  • @markrudman6271
    @markrudman6271 Месяц назад +5

    Love his Americanised accent which for me recalls that of his friend Peter Falk. Patrick's appearances in Columbo make several scarcely hidden references to the Prisoner.

  • @plunder1956
    @plunder1956 Месяц назад +5

    Wow - makes me want to watch it all again. When I was 15 or 16 I did not understand it.

  • @IbnBahtuta
    @IbnBahtuta 15 дней назад +2

    I remember when The Prisoner first aired here in Great Britain, I was about 15, which was a very long time ago. It was well received by everyone I knew back then. It looked like it was a lot of fun to act. The episodes on Columbo were the next time I saw him act and he was really good in those too. I didn't know he had dreamed The Prisoner up himself, he was really talented.

  • @billyjay4672
    @billyjay4672 Месяц назад +7

    Patrick did a great job with the prisoner every episode was different but to me it's about gov trying to break down the individual and to get all the information out of them but not to our no. 6. He is sadly missed and the prisoner was the best series ever.

  • @charleslayton9463
    @charleslayton9463 Месяц назад +6

    I'm currently binging on "Danger Man." If I recall correctly, in at least one other interview, Mr. McG denied that "The Prisoner" was a direct spinoff. Fairly difficult to swallow that after watching the Danger Man episode about Colony 3, a "village" operated very much like THE Village. It was for the purpose of training spies to be perfect English men and women, which was a different purpose than in "The Prisoner." But the running of the colony was very similar, even down to a sinister Interrogation Room. And, while the spies trained there did leave, some of the personnel such as teachers were doomed to stay there indefinitely. There are other lesser echoes as well, such as several party scenes in Danger Man that very much foreshadow the party scenes in the episode "One, Two, Three"

  • @paulfromdevon4707
    @paulfromdevon4707 Месяц назад +18

    Catch him in Helldrivers. Off the scale nuts and absolutely brilliant

    • @terrystevens5261
      @terrystevens5261 Месяц назад +3

      Loved the way they sped up the film of the trucks in that. i'm 70 now and have seen it countless times.

    • @paulfromdevon4707
      @paulfromdevon4707 Месяц назад +3

      @@terrystevens5261 Reckless speeds of over 30mph!!

  • @deydododontdedoh.5672
    @deydododontdedoh.5672 Месяц назад +4

    I was hooked when it was repeated in the UK in the 80's, I was a young teen in high school and this series had a profound effect and really woke me up. a bit of a matrix style mental awakening to indoctrination be it schooling, religious, governmental etc.
    The innate self being controlled by powerful institutions and yet, ultimately, by our own conditioned mental prison.
    Be seeing you 🧐

  • @mickeyfilmer5551
    @mickeyfilmer5551 Месяц назад +3

    I was seven and captivated by this series in the 60's- I was allowed to stay up to watch it because I used to explain it to my parents- and NOW I know I was spot on most of the time- however the Orange Alerts and red alerts baloons scared the shit out of me and I would hide behind the sofa! ( I read from morning til night every day any book I could- mostly the classics- and my parents couldn't understand why I preferred them to TV)

  • @TheNeonRabbit
    @TheNeonRabbit Месяц назад +5

    Be seeing you

  • @richiesimons4403
    @richiesimons4403 Месяц назад +5

    McGoohan was a genius and ahead of his time.
    The show is so 1960's but is also way ahead of it's time.
    Thank you for uploading such a thoroughly interesting interview. A fine audience too.

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад

      Thank you for your comment. Greatly appreciated. We will be posting another interview with Pat next week. We hope it is of interest to you.

  • @dpsamu2000
    @dpsamu2000 Месяц назад +3

    The dwarf was the Greek chorus. Like R2D2, and C3PO of Star Wars. They comment on the action taking place. The dwarf did it with a look or posture. It illustrates the action, guides the audience in how to feel about it, and illuminates the absurdity of it all. Here's a dwarf, or droid, seen as an underling of society. But he's the one above it all.

  • @shawncurtis3686
    @shawncurtis3686 2 месяца назад +27

    Thank you, Ministry of Truth, for posting this excellent interview.

  • @nuthinmuffins5073
    @nuthinmuffins5073 17 дней назад +2

    What an extraordinary man. “Be seeing you”👌makes total sense to me. Reminds me of that song by The Alan Parsons Project.

  • @jackjones8363
    @jackjones8363 Месяц назад +23

    The prisoner was a fantastic escape for the viewer!

    • @davidmcguerty8405
      @davidmcguerty8405 Месяц назад

      It still is. A refuge from the woke, ESG, DEI, tiring LGTBQ++ pronouns, the migrant invasion, smash 'n grab acceptance and all the other nonsense of today.

  • @KevinBerus
    @KevinBerus Месяц назад +6

    You are number 6. I am not a number I am a free man

  • @user-bl7oe2md4p
    @user-bl7oe2md4p 23 дня назад +3

    The many layers of meaning of the themes and symbols used in the tv show The Prisoner is so profound and is like a spiritual and religious allegory but concealed and disguised as a cold war era crime mystery and spy thriller. The question who is number 1 you are number 6, is like looking into a mirror and asking yourself who we really are. It also confronts us with the dilemma of being human and having a free will to live a good life under the conditions of a scientific technological modern age that reduces human beings to measurable quantities and numbers. Be seeing you is a not so subtle reminder that the village was a system of control and the bounds of freedom are severely constrained and that everyone will be constantly monitored and surveiled.

    • @amarshmuseconcepta6197
      @amarshmuseconcepta6197 5 дней назад

      🎯
      bulllsfuckineye
      we'reinit 😈🤡
      have taken over
      Thankfully
      *some* of *us*
      still have our
      resilient minds
      *If* ~ Kipling.
      ✊💖🙏

  • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
    @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +13

    Thank you all for your comments...looks like we've got a whole lot of thinkers and independant minds on this channel. Let's keep the discourse positive and helpful, as others may not be as far forward on their journey out of the village.

  • @mercurywoodrose
    @mercurywoodrose Месяц назад +7

    If you have Not watched the prisoner, you have not yet watched television

  • @PabloGarcia-sf7bn
    @PabloGarcia-sf7bn Месяц назад +7

    “I had to sign in to get into THIS joint!”. Greetings from New Mexico!

  • @johnphillips4228
    @johnphillips4228 Месяц назад +32

    Man! He had it nailed back then. Great interview. Love British T.V..

    • @alexp3752
      @alexp3752 Месяц назад +5

      Never forget... Mr. McGoohan was an American. After The Prisoner finished, he moved his family to LA where he spent the remainder of his life. He was good friends with the legendary Peter Falk. Mr. McGoohan was a veteran writer, producer and director.

  • @davidotness6199
    @davidotness6199 24 дня назад +2

    So interesting to hear him say so in so heartfelt a manner that tech was beginning to eat our bacon and was the inspiration for the series---and then so very passionately expressed in an outburst when describing getting into the studio.

  • @Tommii38
    @Tommii38 2 месяца назад +43

    “Who is Number One?”
    “You are, Number Six.”

    • @samsmom1491
      @samsmom1491 Месяц назад +3

      It just hit me...😮 I have to watch it again.

  • @davidlee6720
    @davidlee6720 Месяц назад +29

    Best tv prog ever made, well done Patrick and Lew Grade, verified all I had been thinking. They have tried to remake it, but nothing comes close . A unique work of art with endless interpretations, it still remains a mystery and an enigma. Was it all a dream?

  • @daytripperhd
    @daytripperhd 7 дней назад +1

    i love how he pauses b4 answering. He ponders first. i really need to do that 🧐

  • @jamesdrynan
    @jamesdrynan Месяц назад +26

    A passionate, intelligent man. I never missed an episode of The Prisoner in the sixties. A highly imaginative series, almost Machiavellian in its premise. The location, the uniforms, the sets were all colorful and striking. Also Rover, the roving balloon was unique to the show. Definitely a series that was a bubble off plumb.

    • @fubkenste1n
      @fubkenste1n Месяц назад +4

      Original Rover was a car borrowed from another movie but they sunk it in the estuary by accident. The balloon was a last minute improv!

    • @roberthorseman7432
      @roberthorseman7432 Месяц назад +3

      Portmeirion in north Wales a very pretty place to visit.

  • @SamPockerOfficial
    @SamPockerOfficial Месяц назад +5

    The 7:00 mark describes exactly how I feel when I go to get a haircut now and they insist on asking for my phone number. If you refuse they can't deal with it.

    • @Shifter-1040ST
      @Shifter-1040ST Месяц назад +1

      Lol, where on earth do they do that? I'd give them a fake number that's 25 digits long 😂

    • @SamPockerOfficial
      @SamPockerOfficial Месяц назад +1

      @@Shifter-1040ST Supercuts

    • @Shifter-1040ST
      @Shifter-1040ST Месяц назад +2

      ​@@SamPockerOfficialthat's in the US, I guess? I live in Germany. I do remember that in shops they kept asking for your regional postal code for a while. But when too many people refused or gave fake codes they gave up on that. People here are rather keen on their privacy.

    • @SamPockerOfficial
      @SamPockerOfficial Месяц назад +1

      @@Shifter-1040ST yes in USA

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 19 дней назад

      The thing that really put me off Netfliks is that when I went to their website, just to see what they were like, they required visitors to register.
      How many retail stores are you aware of that ask for your personal details just to be able to enter their store?

  • @David-rd3if
    @David-rd3if 27 дней назад +2

    I sat glued to the set for every episode of the prisoner. I didn't quite understand it at the time, I was quite young then. I still replay some of those episodes in my mind and they still fascinate me. I like to replay them when I can. I think that at 74, i'm starting to understand it's message. Great show.

  • @jasonbeard4713
    @jasonbeard4713 Месяц назад +18

    He possessed such cultured vocal abilities.

  • @rj8288
    @rj8288 Месяц назад +5

    The best part of this TV show is the Lotus Super 7. It was reality. The rest was an allegory.

  • @nrs6956
    @nrs6956 26 дней назад +1

    A superior series. Unequalled today.

  • @BrandochGarage
    @BrandochGarage 27 дней назад +2

    I loved the Prisoner. I was 'lucky' in that when I first saw it completely by accident I had actually seen the very last episode, which was quite 'far out,' and so intriguing, that I went back the next week and watched what I found out later of course was the very first episode. At the time they were playing on an independent station very late at night.

  • @davidrathbone6978
    @davidrathbone6978 Месяц назад +3

    Still the best concept / series that ever came on TV. I played as a child in Portmeirion just a few weeks after the filiming. The Village and Patrick McGouhan style will never grow old.

  • @garypowell1540
    @garypowell1540 Месяц назад +7

    I understood it as a place where the establishment particular secret agents and top civil servants are retired to or imprisoned within in order to keep them quiet. It is also implied rather then stated that this establishment rather than being British or American it is a world establishment controlling both sides of the Iron curtain. The concept that such a thing existed then and still exists today has been around a long time before The Prisoner was made. I believe that Patrick and the writers were well aware of this long standing theory, but it is hardly supprising that they all seaked to deny it. Remember that Washington, Disraeli, Lenin, Stalin, Hitler, Churchill and Zedong all claimed that some kind of powerful candestine force had infutrated their respective administrations, perhaps they were not as paranoid as they may have seemed at the time?
    Are we entirely sure that this world is actually run by human beings at all? If it is not, is it entirely beyound our imaginations to understand that these beings may perfer that we don't know that they are running the entire show from the very top? Surely we have all worked out by now that idiots like Rishi Sunak and Joe Biden are not running either the UK or the USA, ot have we not? So who is running the 5th and 1st largest economies in the world, plus all of the rest if it is not prime ministers or presidents? Could I take this oppotunity that the British PM earns less than £200,000 a year while just a top PL footballer can earn more than this a week? Does this not tell you something about where elected representatives are in the pecking order?

  • @rossdavies-hooper3602
    @rossdavies-hooper3602 Месяц назад +16

    Way ahead of his time, and boy, was he right about progress! Thank you.

  • @DW-indeed
    @DW-indeed Месяц назад +2

    I have a fading picture on my wall that i got from Portmerion in the 90s. Every morning Pat scowls at me as i get out if bed as if to say "when are you gonna get round to rewatching The Prisoner?"
    Soon...sooon. 👌

  • @davidreid8075
    @davidreid8075 Месяц назад +16

    It's peculiar there is no one like this of influence anymore. Something awful has happened to the West, which is a lack of thought.

    • @kamuelalee
      @kamuelalee Месяц назад +1

      Huh?

    • @sergioleone3583
      @sergioleone3583 Месяц назад +10

      @@kamuelalee

    • @kamuelalee
      @kamuelalee Месяц назад

      @@sergioleone3583 HHHwha?

    • @paulrudgley1682
      @paulrudgley1682 Месяц назад

      What is Americans favourite "ism", American exceptionalism?
      You are the "good guys" spreading freedom and democracy around the"world", leaders of the "freeworld", aren't you? lol
      So come November, will it be Freddy Krueger's son versus genocidal joe, the so-called leader of the free world?
      is it going to be tweedle dee or tweedle dum, probably partners in crime aren't they?
      here's some truth for you all, can you handle it.
      $100,000 worth of fibroblasts from a single foreskin which is Genetic theft, now YOU know Why YOU don't have a foreskin.
      is the male Circumcised penis, the mark of the slave,the mark of the beast
      the slave mark of yahweh?
      “You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time.” ― Abraham Lincoln

    • @paulrudgley1682
      @paulrudgley1682 Месяц назад

      Crisis of democracy
      Michael Tsarion with David Whitehead on American Freedom Radio 05/20/2013
      1:27:55
      it looked like man might free himself at this point because he I mean what I mean is free himself commercially and if you free yourself financially and commercially then you free yourself intellectually and that's what they were worrying about at the American experiment they tried to bring in the troops that didn't work so they had to find other ways to dumb down the population and they bloody well succeeded but it can be turned around it absolutely can be turned to a round
      Progressive Radio News Hour - Dennis Rancourt - 2-8-14
      a new paradigm.
      They've understood something,they understood that with that,you know,economic freedom came freedom of thought and independence,of action and choice and democracy.
      And so and it gave rise to the sixties and seventies,
      where people revolutionised the structures of their institutions and so on.
      Universities became more liberal and so on and so on all the workplaces and unionism
      and so on.
      And they realised that they could lose control and that they had largely lost
      some control and they needed to regain it and the way to do it.
      They called it a crisis in democracy.
      And the way to do it was to squeeze down economically
      and also make gut universities so that you're not teaching
      thought and real knowledge.
      And instead you're teaching you you you're doing obedience,
      training and indoctrination.
      Democracy was regarded as entering into a crisis in the 1960s. The crisis was that large segments of the population were becoming organized and active and trying to participate in the political arena. p32,Excerpted from Media Control, 2002
      the prisoner - fall out "
      This session is called in a matter of democratic crisis.... opens the president.
      banging down his gavel to bring the assembly to order."
      The status quo wouldn't want a democratic crisis or a crisis of democarcy like they had in 1968, would they?
      control, control ,control. lol
      Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right's Stealth Plan for America
      A must read especially if you want to understand Trumpty Dumpty’s boldness in calling for the constitution to be scrapped! It’s been the plan all along - Charley Shults
      This seems to be a good book it has the recommendation that Elisabeth Warren wanted Amazon to ban selling of this book.
      The Truth About Covid-19: Exposing the Great Reset, Lockdowns, Vaccine Passports, and the New Normal
      We are now living in a world that is increasingly ruled, not by our democratic systems and institutions, but by public health fiat, carried out by politicians who rule by instilling fear and panic.

  • @swanseamale47
    @swanseamale47 Месяц назад +20

    I've been to the village twice. It's a beautiful place.
    On the second occasion there was a prisoner event with lots of people dressed up in the costumes.
    Might go back this year if I get time.
    It's a few hours drive.
    Be seeing you.

    • @HammerLex77
      @HammerLex77 Месяц назад +3

      The 40th ‘Portmericon’ actually took place last weekend with some brilliant reenactments.
      People wearing blazers, capes and holding their brollies and No 6 placards imitating the scene from ‘Free For All’.
      There was also a ‘Rover’ balloon during a recreation of the chess scene from ‘Checkmate’ where human chess was played!
      A brass band was also playing in the bandstand.
      I was there myself black blazer and all and it was absolutely brilliant.
      I was told it was earlier than usual this year and it normally takes place at the end of April.
      I’ll definitely be joining the ‘Six of One’ appreciation society after being there.
      Be seeing you!

    • @swanseamale47
      @swanseamale47 Месяц назад +2

      @HammerLex77 that must have been great. I'd be guessing and say it was the tenth anniversary that I went. Didn't know about before I got there though.

    • @MichaelWillby
      @MichaelWillby Месяц назад +1

      I was only a kid when the prisoner started, we had a telly but not always the electricity. I saw some but missed most .I'd love to be able to watch all episodes now

    • @swanseamale47
      @swanseamale47 Месяц назад +1

      It's probably out on dvd.

    • @HammerLex77
      @HammerLex77 Месяц назад

      @@swanseamale47 It is as well as on Prime. 😀

  • @pauldavies5611
    @pauldavies5611 Месяц назад +34

    Very nice presentation. For me “The Prisoner” is the best thing ever made for television.

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +5

      Thank you very much. It certainly has to be the best show ever made....for those who question their imprisonment.

    • @fazole
      @fazole Месяц назад +7

      Check out the "Newsbenders" from 1968 with Donald Pleasance. The topic will shock you.

    • @paulrudgley1682
      @paulrudgley1682 Месяц назад

      the not The. Any idea what the number 48 symbolized, Israel?.

    • @Johnnycdrums
      @Johnnycdrums Месяц назад +4

      This man is a (T)raditionalist, but I think I already had that vibe.
      Knowing it difinitively, makes me like him even more.

    • @andrewarthurmatthews6685
      @andrewarthurmatthews6685 Месяц назад +3

      As a boy in the early 60’s having watched Danger Man , Man From Uncle, Z Cars etc I recall my dad and I being absolutely taken aback when we tuned into the first episode of The Prisoner. Didn’t understand it and unlike the other productions nothing really happened every week !

  • @twcc406
    @twcc406 Месяц назад +4

    A fantastic piece of archive footage, thank you for uploading. I came to this channel as the rumour is the next Christopher Nolan movie could be an adaption of 'The Prisoner'.
    BCNU

  • @DianeCee57
    @DianeCee57 Месяц назад +3

    Lew Grade was a freaking legend. Bankrolled some of the best UK sci-fi - proper entertainment moghul who understood ideas.

  • @stewartdowbiggin2337
    @stewartdowbiggin2337 Месяц назад +11

    The great Warner Troyes, from the time when Canadian journalism was a beacon

  • @jedeyetown
    @jedeyetown Месяц назад +5

    Brilliant series from 1967 68, still intriguing and rare insights from Mr McGoohan ...

  • @user-eg8pv2om7j
    @user-eg8pv2om7j 28 дней назад +1

    The prisoner went full circle becoming the governor of Alcatraz.

  • @stephenbaker7079
    @stephenbaker7079 Месяц назад +3

    At the age of about 17 I was an avid fan of this fantastic series, and so was my Dad! They were an absolutely unique series, nothing like it before or after. They've stood the test of time and it would be great if they were issued on DVDs.

    • @helenlloyd610
      @helenlloyd610 Месяц назад

      They are available on D.V.D. I have the full complete set. And belive it or not I haven't played them.😊

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 19 дней назад

      @@helenlloyd610 I watched my set of this series a few years ago and now I must watch it again.

  • @mdsf01
    @mdsf01 Месяц назад +3

    He truly was forward looking - prophetic.

  • @andicog
    @andicog Месяц назад +3

    I've stayed in Porthmerion a few times before their prices went rediculous , if I had the chance I'd not leave! Wonderful beaches and quirky architecture make it a fabulous place.

  • @ravingnutter1698
    @ravingnutter1698 Месяц назад +16

    I'm not a X , I'm a person, I'm not a Toc Tiker, I'm a Person, I'm not a Facebooker, I'm a person, I'm not an instagramer, I'm a person, I'm not a What 'sapper, I'm a person. I shall not be influenced by AI algorithms, I'm a person. Loved the Prisoner growing up, I think it actually taught me not to believe anything your told by anyone in society, ''I'm an individual, I'm a person.'' Funny that filming the Prisoner at Portmeirion actually saved this architectural treasure due to the large number of tourists visiting it every year. So, Patrick Mcgohan has done more to save Welsh architecture than he ever would have thought. I think he use to drink in our town pub in the South of England in the 1960's as my mum always mentions what stars lived and drank in town.

    • @petejohnson8397
      @petejohnson8397 Месяц назад

      Reminds me of something I said years ago.
      MATTER
      That which occupies space and has mass; physical substance.
      I am made of matter. I live in a world of matter. The rest is not, and does not, matter.

    • @landscapedetective4064
      @landscapedetective4064 Месяц назад

      @ravingnutter No offence intended, but I suggest you obtain a legal dictionary then look up 'Person.' The legal definition of 'Person' is not what you think, especially when used in a so-called 'Court of Law,' which is actually a place of business.

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 19 дней назад

      With my diverse interests in subject matter on RUclips I may end up breaking its algorithm.

  • @christophermorrison8632
    @christophermorrison8632 Месяц назад +3

    Absolute brilliance there. For me this was easily the best TV ever made, and I hope the remake demonstrates the depth of the ideas behind it.

  • @petejones879
    @petejones879 Месяц назад +3

    I think the reason it has a cult following is because of how magical it felt when watching it.. I got that in 67 and still get it now when watching it in 2024.. And also because of Patrick's amazing acting as No. 6

  • @jayraskin
    @jayraskin Месяц назад +20

    I was around 13/14 years old when I first saw this series. I didn't miss an episode. I totally loved it. It is so great to find out all this information that I never knew before. Patrick looks great here. Thanks.

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +4

      Many thanks for your comment.

    • @terrystevens5261
      @terrystevens5261 Месяц назад +2

      I was about 14, 70 now lol.

    • @mrsp3992
      @mrsp3992 Месяц назад +1

      I think quite a few of us watching this are the same age! I guess that makes us all 70 yrs old........

  • @CarlyWaarly
    @CarlyWaarly Месяц назад +10

    Amazing series when it came out compared to what was on TV at the time, followed from the age of 12 and continued to watch when it was continually re released over the years. Now stuck in a Tower block, wake up every morning looking out the window to see the same view, constant reminder of the Prisoner. No kidding, a reflection of real life!

    • @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth
      @TheOfficialMinistryOfTruth  Месяц назад +4

      We hear you....plus we're surrounded by the 'brain-washed cabbages' who have all accepted their fate. Rebel, rebel....

  • @keithnaylor1981
    @keithnaylor1981 Месяц назад +20

    Brilliant, and the host was top class.
    To me the series represents the taking away of individuality. We are all prisoners losing our personal identity through electronic communication (how often do you phone a company and find it impossible to speak to a REAL person) surveillance and brain washing. With the internet we are now controlled and studied far more than Patrick new then, or maybe he could see what the future held.
    I keep as much of my life to myself as I can, and I avoid internet sites where I have to perform an ‘action’ when faced with a ‘cookie’ or ‘privacy’ statement. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered.
    My life is my own.

    • @MichaelWillby
      @MichaelWillby Месяц назад +2

      Me too , stick to it and be happy

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 19 дней назад +1

      I am always disturbed when completing an online application that the button to click at the end says "Submit".