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The Prisoner episode 6 review: Checkmate

Nick Smith


After all my criticisms that the show lacked excitement or impact, it finally managed to make me feel something, albeit a dark, depressing emotion.

The Prisoner miniseries ends on a good note, with the final episode, Checkmate...

Published on Nov 24, 2009


6. Checkmate

After innumerable puzzles, mysterious characters and quirky goings-on, the final part of The Prisoner wraps everything up with a satisfying climax.

Amazingly, Checkmate justifies the bizarre dream logic, the disappearing people, the holes and the homilies that have appeared throughout the series. Two and his wife have their own representatives in New York, meet up with Six's alter ego (Michael) there and explain what the hell's going on.

In the Village, Two gives Six his final ultimatum: conform or die. The obstinate Six falls ill, stricken with the dreaded Village Death. 313 wants to help him, but she's also trying to deal with increasingly disturbing dreams of her own.

Two's son isn't keen on following in his father's footsteps, so he decides to put his mum out of her misery and make sure that Two doesn't get his own way. This forces Two to turn to Six for help, something that was fated to happen all along. By the end of the episode we find out who One is, how the Village was created and what its purpose really is.

To understand these answers we are required to take a leap of belief in an outlandish scientific explanation. If viewers can make that leap then everything falls into place for this six-part arc plot that could easily have been told in two or three hours.

As with earlier episodes, Checkmate works best if you're familiar with the original show, taking beloved storylines and giving them a corporate or biochemical twist. As the series started, I was motivated to go back to the ‘60s version to remind myself how good it used to be. Checkmate completes its cycle so neatly that such a revisit seems redundant.

This isn't the kind of franchise-friendly programme that leaves you with a smile on your face, desperate to go out and grab the old DVDs. It's too bleak for that. In fact, the 2009 series' pervading fatalism left me feeling seriously bummed.

After all my criticisms that the show lacked excitement or impact, it finally managed to make me feel something, albeit a dark, depressing emotion.

Bill Gallagher has succeeded where many other TV scribes have failed in the past; he's helped the audience relate to his protagonists, and feel what they feel. Does that make The Prisoner a great viewing experience? No, but it definitely makes it stand out as an oasis of creativity in a desert of dry TV.

Read our review of episode 5 here.

 

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All Style - No Substance
Posted By etoh76 1 November 24, 2009 10:58:45 AM

I finished watching this last week, followed your reviews to see what you thought, and I have to admit I was surprised to see that you derived any satisfaction out of it at all. It barely made any sense, and watching it was like being trapped in the Black Lodge in Twin Peaks, being made to watch the last 30 minutes of 1984, repeated ad nauseum - well, 6 times. The original was enjoyable and, while still zany, could still be followed. Every piece of dialogue was part of an intelligent construct, that depending on who you were, was either designed to ensnare or escape. Half the fun was in the battle of wills between McGoohan's 6 and the various 2's. 6 was emotionally and physically skilled and disciplined. Caviezel's 6 just sweats, shouts, and gibbers a lot, was ultimately crushed, and contributed to the crushing of those around him. Very un-6'ish. I think the original has to be watched to understand some of the plot/subplots that happen in this version (as this one barely explains anything), but when you do it highlights just how piss poor this version is. It's just 6 episodes of being babbled at, with a timewasting payoff.

Re: The Prisoner episode 6 review: Checkmate
Posted By theshadowalker 1 November 24, 2009 05:41:34 PM

A drug-induced, communal dreamscape? Not a bad idea, in and of itself. But, personally, I loathed the overall message that lurked behind this climax. That is, I felt like, in the end, I'd watched a six hour advertisement for Big Pharmaceutical. And, while the original Prisoner's motto was basically "Freedom!", this remake's might as well have been "Conform!". Seriously, for all intents and purposes, Caviezel's dull 6 finally said, "I'm not a number, I'm a...no, **** it, I'll be a number. What the hell. I like the Village, it's nice here. Can I stay? Please? Pretty please. I'll play nice, now. Promise."

Re: The Prisoner episode 6 review: Checkmate
Posted By viridis 1 December 15, 2009 02:29:09 PM

I still don't know how the virtual world and real world are connected. How could Michael be active in both, sometimes switching sides, seeing things from the Village and from New York, but how? A neural chip? In the end I felt like 6 lost. 2 was freed from his responsibility. And with no-one to fight, 6, the rebel, becomes 6, the leader. 6=One. Or 6=2? 313 3+3=6 and 1. They're still imprisoned there, and even Michael can't resign, he becomes the corp's boss. Why? Because he's still connected? I saw that dead bodyguard on the screen. Is he still alive in the real world? How does that affect him? Do they all have cameras aimed at their faces all day? Are the avatars and real people different people or not? Michael was waving at 6 to see him in the window. A great, cohesive ending, but it raised more questions than it answered. And he's still imprisoned. So down ending there.
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The Prisoner: Checkmate

The Prisoner: Checkmate

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