Re: The Prisoner: "Schizoid" & "Checkmate" 11/17/09 - Grading & Discus
I thought that the first two episodes were the strongest with the second two being the weakest and the last two somewhere in the middle. Overall, it was a bizarre little series. I will undoubtedly have to watch it again at some point since there's a lot I didn't get the first time around. I'll also have to watch the original.
I have other questions too and a few really vague ideas about what's going on, but I'm going to hold off on commenting.
Here's what I was thinking... I didn't know how or why, but I did suspect that there were two worlds existing simultaneously. I also thought that the holes were literal holes in the "village world" and that if someone were to jump in, they'd be out, which an instinctual fear of death prevented.
I didn't buy the "Who is Number 1" answer for a moment. And anyone who did is buying into the mainstream conception of how television tells a story.
That's why I said I'm glad they
asked the question. I'm holding out for the possibility that we'll get another answer.
Yep. More clever twists and stuff to mull over there. Let's see...
- There was two of everyone, hence the head of the village being Number Two.
- As I suspected, Number Two's comatose wife was "Number One" in that she started this thing.
- The goal was to make people "whole", or "one" through village therapy.
- Once you're "one", you're no longer of two minds, or confused and therefore understand the illusion of the village. Kind of Matrix-like. Of course, Number Six never escapes the illusion. Instead, he stays and becomes Number Two because he's still attached to his own humanity.
The towers are an obvious parallel to the World Trade Center as well (since Six is from New York City), although I wonder why they picked that, given that there hasn't BEEN a WTC since 9/11...
Why they picked the towers is an interesting question. Maybe anything else as a signpost representing New York, like the Statue of Liberty for example, would have been too obvious. Two non-descript crystal towers are both clear enough (no pun intended) to be a clue and vague enough to not give anything away.
By the way... I wonder if the people who made this series saw
Otherworld. The towers kind of reminded me of Ymar, a place that also represented a way home for its characters and had towers of some sort, if I remember correctly. It's been 24 years since I saw it.
Now I'm left with one significant question about
The Prisoner... Why was Michael Number Six? Why such a high number?