If
‘the Prisoner’ is all in the mind of Number 6, then he could use this to
subconsciously work out his conflict. In this interpretation each Number 2
would be a facet of his own personality. And all the other symbols, the penny
farthing bicycle, the Butler, The Village Guardian and such like would be
metaphors of his own unconscious mind, symbols for which he couldn’t express in
his waking life. There is evidence for supporting this dream theory, for during
the opening sequence to each episode, save for ‘Living In Harmony’ and ‘Fall
Out’ the Prisoner passes out in the confines of his own home only to wake up in
the confines of The Village! If
this is the case then the location of The Village is easily found, it lies
somewhere in the mind of the Prisoner, which would explain the sequences becoming more and more bizarre, but would at the same time defeat the main
theme of one man versus society and does unnecessarily complicate things. I mean
are we to believe that in ‘A B & C’ Number 6 was dreaming about his dreams?
However if you take things quite literally
then the Prisoner has been rendered unconscious by the use of nerve gas hasn’t
he? He then wakes up again in what at first appears to be his own home, but
within the confines of the village. So if the Prisoner is awake how can what
we see in ‘the Prisoner’ be a dream if he is awake? I mean for anyone to
carry all ‘the Prisoner’ around in his head, well he’d have to be mad!
Be
seeing you
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