SlagA
Wednesday 21st April 2010 11:10am
Blackwood
5,335 posts
The final episode is weird but I think it's a bit of social allegory mixed in that creates the confusion.
All through the series the village is placed either near the coast of Poland (although the weather doesn't concur) or near the Azores. But in either case, number six is told this by others, so it's most likely disinformation. The disturbing thing is that the village turns out to be not some experiment far away but somewhere in Britain. Number two, after escaping the village is seen returning to his normal life as an MP. This also would indicate the village was in the UK, so that number two could easily move between his posts without notice.
When six returns home, the door number is 1. The door opens just as in the village and the funeral directors (that gassed him in the beginning) drive past his house just as six enters, which all suggest he's been duped again. McGoohan said six never really escaped. And it seems either he's been tricked once again or more sinisterly the village has spread globally.
Some interesting points for me are: six should never have taken the throne. It seems out of character and I think it's the key moment that indicates he actually lost his battle with the system. That he expresses no surprise when the door of his London home opens just as in the village seems to indicate he's now fully integrated - despite the previous protestations of the judge and jury that he successfully rebelled. The paradox is it was the moment he accepted their praise for being the only individual, he lost it. When asked to give his speech, he keeps being drown out by the jury all speaking at the same time. In a world of individuals there is no single voice that can be distinguished seems a subtle paradox, individuality can only be expressed when it is a rarity.
Another explanation is that the whole of the last 2 episodes are a drug-induced phantasm created by number 2 - but I tend to think it's meant to be taken as seen. That it isn't just a dream, that six's mind was fractured by the experiment or that it was broken.
McGoohan rejected suggestions to make the butler number 1. Thank goodness.
Clues as to the real number one: I is close to 1 visually - I is one. In the opening credits the answer to the question "Who is number one?" is intoned carefully and the listener's sense of the the answer implies "You are number six." which seems to ignore six's question but in the last episode it changes to "You are, number six." The comma completely changes the sentence sense. That the real number one is six himself means that his prison is ultimately inescapable. Wherever six goes, so does the village.
Quote: zooo @ April 20 2010, 10:52 PM BST
Whaa?
How did that happen?
IIRC they filmed them in a different order but as production was slower than the broadcast schedules, they had to fill gaps in schedule with episodes that were to hand.