Free For All

I don’t normally comment when famous people die – it is an odd moment, when someone who seems like part of the furniture is suddenly no longer there, or when someone who seems utterly guaranteed to have a long and prosperous career is abruptly gone – but I just found out that Patrick McGoohan has passed away, aged 80, and I’ve simply got to say something.

The Prisoner had a gigantic effect on me. It first entered my life when I was around six or seven – the series was being repeated on ITV at some absurd time like 10am on a Sunday morning, and I can remember being both utterly terrified and entranced by it. It was particularly the appearence of Rover that burned into my brain, with the first sequence in ‘Arrival’ where Rover appears and smothers the one Village member who runs in fear being a standout. I can remember ‘Arrival’, I can remember the end of ‘Living in Harmony’, where the Western backdrop falls away and Number 6 realises exactly what’s going on, and – although it took me watching it again nearly ten years later to realise it – I also remembered the utterly crazed final episode ‘Fall Out’. It stayed with me, and I was always aware of it, but it wasn’t until my teens, around the age of 16 and 17, that I finally tried to catch up with The Prisoner, and found myself gripped by one of my occasional crazes. It’s an amazing show – both fascinating and deliberately obtuse, crammed full of weird symbolism and bizarre self-indulgence along with moments of absolute genius. Just getting to grips with the levels that the show was prepared to work on was a major task, and McGoohan’s portrayal of Number 6 was part of that – sharp, charismatic, and steely, along with enough of an edge to make you suspect (as anyone who reads about the background of the show will discover), that McGoohan could be an absolute bastard to work with when he wanted to. But, it’s one of those rare occasions (the only other one I can think of right now is Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor) when an actor’s performance and identity expands outwards to almost become bigger than the show.

Much of what was great about the show was thanks to McGoohan, and much of what was head-scratching, peculiar or just plain daft was down to him as well. It’s not 17 episodes of perfection – there are ups and downs – and yet, there’s so much to discover in there, and compared to most of its contemporaries, it’s like a transmission from a strange, Kafka-esque alternate universe. My passion for the show may have cooled a little from its teenage peak, but my love of the show’s sheer experimentalism and the way it expanded my horizons hasn’t. It’s still a formative experience, part of the architecture of my mind, and always will be, and despite McGoohan’s refusal to talk much about the show in his later years (you can probably count his interviews on the fingers of one hand), I think he knew that it was what he was going to be remembered for. Like many demented artists, he had a glorious peak that he then found difficult to top, retreating to L.A. and doing plenty of work, but nothing that ever seemed to come close to the strange motherlode he tapped with The Prisoner. I can’t help wishing that his last cinematic appearences of any note were in better films (A Time To Kill and The Phantom, for heaven’s sake), but he lived to a healthy age, had more of an influence than he ever expected, and his characterisation of Number 6 will always be one of my televisual heroes. And, in my head, he’ll always be sat at the wheel of that Lotus 7 racecar, on his way to deliver that resignation and kick off the whole quest towards discovering who Number 1 really is.

R.I.P, Mr McGoohan.

TV EYE: Heroes, Apparitions, Crooked House, Survivors, Merlin, Legend of the Seeker, Fringe

Time for a round-up of some of the stuff I’ve been experiencing in the last couple of months, from the delights of Crooked House to the worrying blandness of Legend of the Seeker, from the fall of Western Civilisation to Martin Shaw in a dog-collar shouting at the devil, it’s all here – and, as usual, fear the spoilers….

‘Save the cheerleader, save the… oh, does anybody really care anymore?’

Twilight Christmas

I realised today that, thanks to more storage issues, I don’t have my DVD copy of 1984 BBC adaptation of The Box of Delights with me. It’s something I’ve watched just about every Christmas for the last few years, and it doesn’t really work if you watch it at any other time of the year (As a tangent – it’s also an unutterably strange story, where the first couple of episodes are genuinely spooky stuff, revolving around magic, sinister wolves and the pagan history that’s lurking just behind the quiet facade of England, and then it suddenly turns into a decidedly camp Buchan-for-kids romp all about nasty gangsters abducting clergymen, only really remembering its weirdness in the last episode (just before the ‘It was all a dream’ ending. It’s also one of those series where it’s only when you watch it as a grown up that you realise that Robert Stephens’ OTT turn as Abner Brown is so flagrantly, spectacularly gay that there are barely words to describe it…)

Anyhow, I found myself adrift for Christmas viewing, but the Internet is coming to my rescue in a variety of ways – including finding this, the Christmas 1960 episode of classic anthology series The Twilight Zone. It’s not one of the show’s out-and-out corkers, and it’s also one of the happier tales from a show that was more than ready to look in some very dark places, which also means that there’s lots of sentiment and a few moments which could certainly be described as twee and dated – but it’s also charming, touching, and with enough of writer Rod Serling’s sense of intelligence and social conscience to it that it still exerts a pull. So, for your seasonal viewing, here’s the full episode – ‘The Night of the Meek’. Enjoy…

Watch 11. The Twilight Zone – The Night of the Meek in Entertainment Videos  |  View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com

TV EYE: Flashback – Doctor Who: Season 3 (2007)

Okay, I realise that this isn’t much of a flashback, but thanks to the recent repeats and the joys of BBC iPlayer, I was able to catch up with most of the recent repeat of New Who S1 (I missed a couple of episodes, and deliberately didn’t put myself through the Slitheen two-parter). Rather bizarrely, they seemed to sail past season two (a fact I wasn’t too sad about – despite the fabulousness of Girl in the Fireplace, I think on the whole it’s the least interesting and succesful of all four New Who seasons) and go straight for Season 3, and while there was the temptation to only watch the episodes I’d really enjoyed, I eventually decided to bite the bullet and give the whole thing a second try, managing an episode a day over the next three weeks (the repeats were only on weekdays).

And the result? I’m still largely impressed by what I saw, although it is also a case of that effect you get when there’s an album that you really enjoy, and then you go back and listen to it again and realise that it’s actually those three classic tracks that make it as exceptional as you remember. S3 is impossible to talk about without taking into account the frankly amazing one-two-three punches of Human Nature, The Family of Blood and Blink – outside of that famed trio, however, there’s still enough that I liked to make S3 the point where I could actually allow myself to genuinely enjoy New Who, rather than throw my hands up in horror at what I was seeing.

A quick run-down of my reactions to the episodes:

Fear the spoilers…