Damn! I was one of the ones claiming that a Prisoner remake couldn't be done, at least not in any way that would really justify its existence.
I don't know why anyone would doubt it. It has a durable premise that won't wear out its welcome after just a few episodes and keep in mind, most people watching won't know or care that there was ever another version of the story. Same as with almost all remakes.
I read an interview where the makers of this adaptation were instead questioning modern society's cult of the individual, suggesting maybe we've taken it too far in the other direction. Something like that. I don't quite get what they were saying, and I don't know if it will work.
Wow, sounds ambitious. It's easy to see how to make a paranoid fantasy about the destruction of the individual - and the problem of course is that the idea is not very fresh to say the least. To try to make the opposite point sounds counterintuitive and hard to pull off, but at least they aren't doing the same old thing.
So I guess this isn't the "durable premise" that I assumed they would be going for. This is more interesting than I expected...