Rover (The Prisoner)
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Rover is a fictional entity from the 1967 British television program The Prisoner, and was an integral part of the way 'prisoners' were kept within the The Village. It was depicted as a floating white ball that could coerce and if necessary disable inhabitants of the Village, primarily Number Six. It was also shown to be able to kill if necessary. Several aspects of the Rover device were not explained, presumably left to the imagination/speculation of the viewer.
Rover was only named onscreen in one episode, "The Schizoid Man.", but the name appears throughout the scripts. In the novel The Prisoner: Number Two by David McDaniel, based upon the series, the name Guardian was used instead of Rover.
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[edit] Portrayal
[edit] Characteristics
Rover was depicted as a large white inflatable ball with a flexible skin. Rover would constantly produce a bleeping sound, and was occasionally capable of roaring. It would also sometimes emit a strange light display / luminescence from its interior. Once released, Rover could bounce and glide across the land and sea for a long range and at high speed, faster than say a vehicle or boat.
Rover is apparently a self-aware, and/or semi-intelligent being, and could interact with its surroundings, adjusting to and anticipating the actions of Number 6 and other characters. No apparent direct control was ever shown to be exerted over it by the controllers of the Village, other than release it.
Rover possessed considerable strength, and was able if necessary to incapacitate people either by blunt force impacts, or through suffocation by pinning the subject down.
[edit] Operation
The use of Rover appeared to be both intimidatory and functional. Following encounters in the early episodes, where Rover actually physically acts on prisoners, the Number 6 character gradually comes to give up trying to defeat Rover directly, and its mere presence is often enough to achieve its objectives.
While Rover primarily appeared to exist to prevent escapes, Rover was also seen when a character was required to take a certain action or direction, or to prevent their access to some part of the Village. In the cases where Rover incapacitated a prisoner, it also appeared that it had the capability of transporting their limp body.
Rover could be summoned at the direction of the control room, with a stock scene of its inflation shown before its appearance, although this sequence could also be omitted with Rover appearing spontaneously. It would be inflated beneath the sea, although its first appearance came as being inflated from the Village fountain. No explanation was ever made as to where Rover went after its mission had been completed.
[edit] Plot device
Several aspects of how Rover worked were never revealed in the series beyond the primary actions in subdueing prisoners, in which task it was apparently extremely effective.
Open questions surrounding Rover suggest that its use in the series was a variation of the deus ex machina type of plot device, used as a means to give a reason as to why the Village is so successfull in coercing the inhabitants and preventing escape, without having to waste unnecessary screen time explaining this method. The other methods of control of the Village, such as surveilance, mind-control and double agents are explored in much more detail in the TV series than Rover.
[edit] Production
Rover was originally supposed to have been a robotic, wheeled device with a siren. It resembled a circular inflatable swimming pool topped with a checker-pattern dome. Although a prop was constructed,[1] it did not work properly, and sank in the waters off Portmeirion during the initial stages of filming.
The final version of Rover was inspired by a weather balloon seen above Portmeirion by Patrick McGoohan. The balloon was dragged across the set with wires, with the wires and the attachment point sometimes being visible. Several approach scenes were filmed through the use of reversing a film of the balloon being towed away from the camera, although the balloon was often also filmed from the side being towed in direction of travel.
[edit] Cultural references
Rover has become an icon of the series, and has been referenced numerous times in popular culture, such as in the Simpsons episodes "The Joy of Sect" and "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes."