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  2. Fall Out (The Prisoner) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_Out_(The_Prisoner)

    After besting Number Two at a battle of wills in "Once Upon a Time" at the apparent cost of Number Two's life, Number Six requests he be taken to see Number One. He is taken by The Supervisor to a large cavernous chamber that includes a British assembly hall with a number of masked delegates, whom the Supervisor joins, and a large metallic cylinder with a mechanical eye, labelled "1".

  3. Opening and closing sequences of The Prisoner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opening_and_closing...

    Just before the closing credits of each episode (except "Fall Out"), the face of The Prisoner rises up from a bird's-eye view of the Village, to be covered by bars clanging shut. [9] This is not seen in "Fall Out" as a tag, but appears in the crystal ball held by the robed Number One in the episode's climax.

  4. The Prisoner in other media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prisoner_in_other_media

    The novels are all set after the events of the TV series finale, "Fall Out". The Prisoner by Thomas M. Disch (later republished as I Am Not a Number! ), issued in 1969, [ 1 ] details the recapture of the Prisoner after he had been brainwashed to forget his original experience in the Village, and his struggles to remember what was taken from him ...

  5. Shattered Visage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shattered_Visage

    The Prisoner: Shattered Visage is a four-issue comic book mini-series published by DC Comics in 1988–1989, based on The Prisoner, the 1967 television series created by and starring Patrick McGoohan. The name is a reference to Percy Shelley's famous sonnet Ozymandias, which forms part of the introduction.

  6. ‘Prisoner’s Daughter’: Catherine Hardwicke’s Latest Gets Out ...

    www.aol.com/prisoner-daughter-catherine-hardwick...

    Her career hobbled by uninspired material since the commercial bonanza of “Twilight’s” first screen installment 15 years ago, Catherine Hardwicke at first appears to be back on firmer terra ...

  7. Rover (The Prisoner) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rover_(The_Prisoner)

    Rover is a plot device from the 1967 British television programme The Prisoner, and was a crucial tool used to keep 'prisoners' from escaping the Village. It was depicted as a floating white balloon that could coerce, and, if necessary, incapacitate or kill recalcitrant inhabitants of the Village. It also had the ability to subdivide.

  8. Review: John Prine sideman steps out as reflective balladeer

    www.aol.com/news/review-john-prine-sideman-steps...

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  9. Talk:Fall Out (The Prisoner) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Fall_Out_(The_Prisoner)

    The numeral "1" appears on the door of The Prisoner's home during the opening sequence of "The Prisoner" throughout the series, not just in this episode when Number Six returns there (as is suggested in the paragraph entitled "Escape?"). The exterior sequence was filmed in Buckingham Place, London, outside the house numbered "1". It is still there!