The connection to politics may be only tangential, but OpinionJournal Political Diary (free today; normally $3.95 a month) says that The Prisoner, the quintessential 1960’s paranoia drama, will be returning to TV.
In the original 1967 version, Patrick McGoohan played Prisoner No. 6, a former secret agent who is kidnapped to a strange seaside village where everyone is known only by a number and where he is told that “by hook or by crook” the reasons for his resignation as an agent will be extracted from him. For 17 surreal episodes, the series explored profound issues of privacy, individualism and mindcontrol. . . .
The British magazine Broadcast reports that the Sky One channel has commissioned eight new episodes of the series. Executive producer Damien Timmer says they will deal “with themes such as paranoia, conspiracy and identity crisis.” The episodes will be partly written by Bill Gallagher, a creator of the BBC series “Conviction,” an edgy police drama about vigilante behavior in society.
To my mind, The Prisoner was much more about style than substance. The show was imbued with Mr. McGoohan’s quirky brand of libertarianism (he did much of the writing as well as being the star), but it wasn’t a preachy tract on privacy and civil liberties. I much fear that a 2006 version will sell the original’s birthright for a pot of message. Here’s hoping that I’m wrong.
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