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Thursday, 3 October 2013

The Therapy Zone

   Get the message? Yes I think we just got it! Even No.48 makes his point during his trial of ‘Fall Out,’ is given the opportunity to plead his case before the assembly. And the ex-No.2 has the opportunity during his address to the assembly, to spit No.1 in the eye! But Sir, who has become so important to them, and who is asked to make a speech by him but for them, is shouted down at each attempt! What could Sir possibly have to say that frightens the assembly so much, alright we didn't get it after all!
    Get the message? Well not quite the first time around we didn't, because Patrick McGoohan failed to make himself understood! But then later in the late 1970's, nearly a decade later, certain individuals who did get the message, began to gather together, and in time formed a fan club for the Prisoner and in so doing Prisoner appreciation was born.

    You would not believe the ideas and theories which fans of the 1960's television series ‘the Prisoner’ have come up with over the years, some of them plausible, others not so. One such theory in an article I came across in a Number Six magazine.
     There is a book entitled The Magus by one John Fowles, which I have not personally read, but apparently which has many similarities between the book and the Prisoner, and after reading this book the author of the article was forced to look at the Prisoner in a new light. In this that the village could be the environment of a stage, for a major psychological experiment into human behaviour. The author suggests that a subject be taken, such as No.6. Drug or brainwash him until he has present conceptions and reactions. Then place him in an alien environment but containing familiar items - his cottage - so that he has immediate affinity with his surroundings.
   The subject is then placed in a series of stressful, unusual and at times dangerous situations or events and then observe his reactions. Included are continuous betrayals by women and use these to observe the change in the subjects character.
    The subject is fed with limited information, some of it false - as in the location of the village - and again observe how the subjects reacts to that information provided. In the case of the location of the village during ‘The Chimes of Big Ben,’ No.6 attempts to escape with No.8-Nadia.
    What's more the village and its community, according to the author, could be populated by actors and psychologists involved in the experiment. This could explain the inconsistency in numbering throughout the series. No.113 being a contributor to the Tally Ho newspaper in ‘Free For All,’ and then No.113 being a dead woman buried in the graveyard in ‘Hammer Into Anvil.’ {Well that's one way to explain it I suppose}. The Rook-No.53 is another experiment which doctors are carrying out, and again with No.8-the white Queen in Checkmate. Then there is all the therapy work, and various experiments being carried out on members of the community.
    No.6 may not know what his prior job was, or indeed why he resigned. If the knowledge was instilled in No.6, as part of his initial conditioning, and thereby any amount of information in his possession is limited. So how then would the subject react with repeated demands for that information which he simply does not have?, but which he feels he should know? The whole sequence of his resignation could have been drug induced, in the same way that his dreams were induced in ‘A B and C.’
   If the Village, according to the author, is the setting for such an experiment, then that could explain the inconsistencies within the series, And thereby account for the reason why during certain episodes of the Prisoner they seem to be, "toying" with No.6.
    The author concludes with the statement of how the village is like the island of Phraxos in the book ‘The Magus.’ Isolated, idyllic, and yet somehow sinister. That the Prisoner, like ‘The Magus’ has a very ambiguous conclusion.

    If London was to lie in ruins, how come it would be possible for the girl to have Bond Street, the Scottish Marshall to have Wembly football stadium, and the Marshals together to have Chelsea barracks? With a Neutron bomb that would be possible, but not with an ordinary warhead. But then I suppose we are talking about a fairy tale... aren’t we?

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