Shattered Visage (The Prisoner)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Prisoner: Shattered Visage
Image:Pris.JPG
The Prisoner: Shattered Visage collected edition.
Author Dean Motter and Mark Askwith
Illustrator Dean Motter
Language English
Genre(s) Tie-in
Publisher DC Comics
Publication date 1988-1989 (individual issues) 1990 (collected edition)
Media type Print (paperback)
Pages 208
ISBN ISBN 978-0930289539

Shattered Visage is a four-issue comic book mini-series based on The Prisoner, the 1967 television series starring Patrick McGoohan.

Illustrated by Mister X creator Dean Motter and co-written with Mark Askwith, this sequel series was later collected as a 208 page trade paperback, with the addition of a new prologue. The trade paperback remains in print and available. [1]

Contents

[edit] Overview

Set twenty years after the final episode of the television series, Shattered Visage follows former secret agent Alice Drake as she is shipwrecked on the shores of The Village and encounters an aged, psychologically scarred Number Six. While the decades-old conflict unfolds between Six and Number Two (as played by Leo McKern in the TV series), secret agents in London have their own plans regarding the intelligence mine that is The Village, as well as the secret lying at its very core.

The trade paperback included a two-page text piece that rationalized the events of the last episode, Fall Out as drug-enhanced psychodrama designed to break Number Six. However, the story itself regards the surreal final episode of the series as a pivotal point of characterization, as opposed to dismissing it entirely.

Patrick McGoohan and ITC Entertainment subjected the story and art to a thorough evaluation. The likenesses of McGoohan and Leo McKern were featured for their characters’ returns. According to Dean Motter, the notoriously critical McGoohan "didn’t hate" the series while McKern was flattered to be a "comic book villain" for the first time.

[edit] Plot synopsis

In London, adventurer, travel book writer and former secret agent Alice Drake prepares to embark upon a round-the-world sailing expedition on her boat, the Vorpal Blade, leaving her daughter Meagan in the care of her estranged husband and a boarding school. Alice's husband, Thomas Drake, is an intelligence officer concerned about the man known only as Number Two (played by Leo McKern in the TV series). Number Two has written a tell-all book (The Village Idiot) about The Village, the retirement home for spies, which Thomas had had to heavily censor and rewrite to keep classified information secret. Number Two had been jailed for violating the Official Secrets Act, but his twenty year sentence is up and he's being released. Thomas fears that Number Two will cause trouble, and possibly return to the evacuated, abandoned Village, and that what he does there will break open the secrecy of British covert operations.

As Alice's sea voyage continues, she runs into a storm. Her ship is washed onto the shores of an island, which appears to be an abandoned holiday resort. (Earlier scenes of Thomas and Lee placing some kind of floppy disk on her boat "with computerized navigation" may indicate that she was brought to the Village as an advanced scout for their faction.) Seeking help, Alice comes across a giant domed room. In the oval-shaped center chair sits a bearded man in a black suit jacket with white lining, who informs her that she is in The Village, and that she is Number Six. This man is the former, original Number Six (Patrick McGoohan). Alice spends the night in the number six living quarters in The Village, and in the morning, Number Six takes Alice on a tour. He is a gentle man who lives a solitary life as the sole inhabitant of The Village. He says that the other Villagers were "free to go" while he was "free to stay". While Six is clearly mentally scarred and paranoid, Alice finds him kind as he catches fish and makes them dinner. But when Alice wanders away at night, a giant white sphere (Rover) encloses her and bears her back to the green-domed house to meet the newly-returned Number Two.

Motter's Number One
Motter's Number One

Alice recognizes Number Two as the initial author of The Village Idiot. He asks if she's seen Number Six, alleging that he wishes to help Six escape. He describes Number Six as a valuable and powerful man, unjustly punished as an individual for actions he performed on behalf of all his countrymen. "The system imprisoned him, interrogated him, broke him, drove him mad," says Two in recounting the events of the TV series. "The man that would not bend, simply broke. Shattered and alone, he chose a number and christened himself Number One." (Fall Out) Alice asks (echoing the series) who Number One actually was, and Number Two responds that she has missed the point. Two explains: "Here's a man who raged against numbering of any kind. To choose any number, even the number one, was a contradiction. He was caught between belief systems. He had accepted. His days were numbered. He was ours, body and soul. We had won!" Alice is appalled at Two's glee and leaves angrily.

Back in London, Thomas Drake and an outside associate, an American agent named Lee, prepare a private expedition to The Village. Despite the lack of official resources that Thomas' superiors are willing to commit, Thomas and Lee are convinced that The Village is at the center of someone's manipulations. There have been a series of recent assassinations of Marconi Electrics scientists -- Marconi Electrics was the office building of Number Six's superiors (Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darling). Later, Thomas' mentor, a Mrs. Butterworth (Many Happy Returns), is smothered in her sleep. It seems the former operating staff of The Village are being eliminated.

As Number Six and Alice walk through the silent streets of The Village, they are accosted by Number Two. Number Six claims to have known all along that Number Two sent Alice as a scout, pointing out Alice's warden's attitude (Checkmate) and suggesting her digital watch as being indicative of the advanced technology of The Village (Six, of course, has been isolated from modern technological advances). Alice protests, but is ignored as Two and Six engage in a fistfight. Disgusted, Alice leaves them to it, while a storm rages. Two calls Six a coward, saying that Six lost twenty years ago (Fall Out) and won't return to the outside world because then he'd have to face defeat. Two adds that Six's secrets are out of date and that Six is nothing. Their fight takes them inside an old mill as a pumelled Number Six declares that he is a free man and his life is his own. Two, choking Six around the neck with both hands, answers, "Then take it!" Both fall out the window of the mill, into the water below.

Shortly afterwards, the door to the number six residence in The Village opens. Number Six enters and begins to cut his beard.

Two separate forces soon enter The Village, although which 'side' either represents is uncertain. First, Thomas and Lee bring a small handful of associates. Shortly afterwards, a group of soldiers sent by Thomas Drake's superior, Director Ross of Operations, follow - although whether Ross has been spurred into action by the assassinations; has been ordered after Drake for disobeying orders in venturing to the Village; or, indeed, is also acting under his own volition is ambiguous. Lee, Thomas and their detail of troopers arrive first, and enter the home of Number Two, ostensibly seeking the secrets of The Village. In Number Two's domed office, Lee triggers the lift below the center chair, lowering them into the underground chambers. Past the jukebox and the "Well Come" sign is an ornate chair (as seen in Fall Out). Sitting in the chair is a figure who speaks of how he will escape and return to destroy The Village, and how he is a free man (echoing the original Number Six). He rises from the shadows, and is revealed as Number Two, saying that Number Six is dead. Lee and Thomas step past him, climbing lower into vertical tunnels ahead. They descend into clear tubes with the word ORBIT printed on them (also seen in Fall Out). Lee and Thomas are now in the heart of The Village, and find housed there several nuclear missiles, still as usable and deadly as ever.

"Power. Control," Lee explains. "That's what The Village is all about." Unexpectedly, the launch sequence for the missiles is triggered. Thomas re-emerges into the upper level to find Number Two setting off the missiles without opening the silo doors. The Village is destroyed in a massive explosion, supposedly killing all who remain. Beyond the reach of the flames, however, Alice Drake's boat, apparently repaired, is seen sailing away.

Director Ross, back in London, receives a report that indicates all the assassinations have one man in common: a mysterious, top-hatted man with a mustache. (The observant reader will already have noticed this man in the background throughout various pages of the comic.) When Ross takes the report to his superior, the Colonel, Ross finds that the Colonel has been replaced by the self-same mustached man, (in a manner similar manner to the TV series' Number Two's being regularly rotated). Ross' report is burnt, and his resignation demanded. Later that night, Ross is gassed unconscious in his home and loaded into a hearse by two black-suited men, to be transported, as was Number Six, to whereabouts unknown. This echoes the start of the TV series.

Number Six and Alice Drake are then seen sitting together on a park bench. Six is clean-shaven and tidily dressed. Alice says that a crucial question remains unanswered -- who was Number One? Six answers her -- and his own -- question thus: "Does the presence of Number Two require the existence of Number One?" Alice then asks about Number Six's secrets, and he assures her that they are safe: "None of us would be here if they weren't," he tells her with a confident smile. Alice, accepting this, informs him that her digital watch is quite commonplace these days. Six responds with The Village salute, saying, "Be seeing you." He leaves as Meagan, Alice's daughter, enters the park and embraces her mother.

This happy reunion is displayed on a video monitor, which is shown to be one screen on a domed ceiling of monitors in a new version of The Village's surveillance centre. On the final page, this new control room is shown to be housed in London's Houses of Parliament...

[edit] 'Fall Out' Re-examined

Shattered Visage addresses Fall Out, the surreal, dreamlike finale episode of the series, in a variety of ways;

  • First is the text-piece prelude in the form of a classified intelligence report on The Village. This report describes the events of Fall Out as "a theatrical tour-de-force involving actors as well as hallucinogenic drugs," organized by Leo McKern's Number Two in which Two "staged his own death and resurrection."
  • Number One unmasked to reveal the face of Number Six in Fall Out is explained by Number Two's recollections. The final episode of the TV series is described as a series of events where a broken Six finally accepted a number, the number one. This is very much in line with what is seen in Fall Out: Number Six is given a ceremony that lauds his revolutionary spirit and the President describes Number Six as "the only individual" and therefore the ideal leader of The Village. Shattered Visage presents these statements as entrapping Number Six. Where before, The Village sought to crush Number Six's sense of identity, The Village in Fall Out claims to accept his individuality and offers him a role of leadership -- the role of Number One. Presumably, Number Six's sanity is at its weakest point by this time, and when Number Six unmasks Number One to find his own face, he is accepting himself as Number One. He is driven mad by his loathing for being a number and his willingness to be Number One. The final episode is therefore explained as a drug-enhanced psychodrama.
  • This view of events is reinforced by the events of the penultimate episode, Once Upon A Time, in which a brainwashing device regressed Six to childhood and forced him to relive various periods of his life. This may have contributed to Six's psychological disintegration which, according to this comic, reached its breaking point in the final episode.
  • According to the text piece, The Village was liberated by UN troops shortly after the finale. This suggests the gun-battle in Fall Out was the skewed perceptions of a drugged Number Six as armed rescue finally came. The episode Many Happy Returns certainly provided Number Six's superiors with enough information to eventually locate The Village.
  • As Number Six recounts the events of Fall Out, two panels show a wide shot of Number Six driving a mini-moke and then a close up of his face behind the wheel. This mirrors the title sequence of the TV series, which was reused for the final shots of the finale episode. This hint that Number Six never escaped The Village is therefore being reiterated over Number Two revealing that Number Six never left. This is affirmed by the closing scenes of the original TV series, in which Six, having "escaped" the Village enters what looks like his old London flat...and the door opens with the familiar "whirr" of the servo moter that all village doors use. He has never really left the Village.
  • When Alice Drake finds Number Six stargazing in The Village control room, she also comes across a mask with the face of a monkey. Number Six removed such a mask from the face of 'Number One' in Fall Out. This would mean that while the events of the finale episode are hallucinatory, some of them had a physical existence. This is later reinforced when the comic revisits the underground location of the final episode.
  • Near the end of the comic, a squad of soldiers led by a pair of intelligence agents venture into the underground caverns seen in Fall Out, and uncover a full complement of nuclear missiles, the warheads still usable and deadly, explaining the facility and the rocket seen in Fall Out as part of a covert nuclear arsenal.

[edit] The Village Idiot

In Shattered Visage Number Two has authored his memoirs entitled The Village Idiot (after a twenty year internment) which became a runaway bestseller despite the security services attempts to ban it. The Village Idiot is clearly a thinly veiled allusion to ex-MI5 agent Peter Wright's book Spycatcher. There were several attempts by the British Government to ban the publication of Spycatcher, but was successfully published in a number of other countries. It is also safe to assume that significant elements of Spycatcher were censored, as with The Village Idiot where the secret services decide that "you grudgingly divulge a lesser evil in order to protect the greater one".

Topics removed from the fictional The Village Idiot included;

  • Project: Operation Pennyfarthing
  • Prisoners Of Power
  • Protect Other People
  • Price of Peace
  • all references to The Arch-Angels
  • Directive 17 - The status of The Prisoner

The shared accronym of the first four topics: "POP", pops up in several places during the course of the programme. It is the code word referenced in rough drafts of the original series - McGoohan saying that if humans couldn't "put it all together", (that is, bring our human morals up to speed with our techonological abilities and overcome the animal within), we would "POP" and destroy ourselves. It featured prominently in an early version of the series' closing credits (which can be seen in the early versions of "Arrival" and "The Chimes of Big Ben") and as a lyric included in the POPular, cryptic and obtuse rhyme "POP Goes the Weasel", a much-used musical-motif in the series, and particularly heavily referenced in the closing two episodes "Once Upon a Time" and "Fall Out".

[edit] Questions are a burden to others

[edit] Prisoner motifs

  • The references to the TV show are also quite prominent in the comic, with reiterated lines of dialogue and scenes reminiscent of various moments of the TV series, including the opening titles. There are also recreations of scenes from the episodes in the form of traced stills integrated into the artwork. Many of these appear in the prologue text piece. Also, many guest-characters from the TV series make cameos. Number Six and Alice pass through a hall with portraits of former Number Twos, including Mary Morris and Derren Nesbitt. The character of Mrs. Butterworth ("Many Happy Returns") also makes an appearance. In two scenes, someone functions as The Butler but is unidentifiable, perhaps due to a lack of clearance from Angelo Muscat's estate.
  • Hidden skillfully throughout the four-book collection are dozens of slightly-out-of-focus illustrations of the classic Village bicycle formed by round background elements. Examples are seen in the layout of Drake's office table, the wall poster of the orbiting space shield, and many others.
  • In a nod to both the idea of "I am not a number!" and the episode, A, B and C, the four issues were not numbered, but were rather Issue A, B, C, and D.

[edit] Danger Man references

  • The, albeit common, surname shared by Danger Man "John Drake", and Shattered Visages Thomas and Alice Drake may well suggest an added level of motive, and even unspoken familiarity between the protagonists and the man who was Number Six. (At the very least, it appears to be a tip-of-the-hat by Motter & Askwith.)
  • Alice Drake claiming that she retired from "British tourism" and her civilian identity as a travel writer recall Danger Man, the Patrick McGoohan spy series in which the spy organization masqueraded as a travel agency.
  • Some of the aliases and code-numbers Number Six has been known by are listed in this book, including "John White", an alias used by McGoohan's John Drake character in Danger Man. The possibility of Drake being the Prisoner has been variously confirmed by George Markstein (script-editor on The Prisoner), and denied strongly by McGoohan. Many speculate that this confusion and denial is in large part due to McGoohan not owning the rights to Danger Man, and wonder whether an overt connection might have involved copyright issues. Potential "proof" that Drake became the Prisoner can be found in actor/character-crossover between the two series' and the authorised Prisoner novels, among other places.

[edit] Other references

  • "Alice" Drake's boat is called Vorpal Blade, after the implement mentioned in Lewis Carroll's poem "Jabberwocky". Indeed, it is eminently possible that Alice's own name is meant to evoke that of Carroll's signature heroine, as she makes her own journey into the unknown, possibly largely allegorical, Village.

[edit] References

  1. ^ DC Comics Site
  2. ^ Fairclough, Robert. "The Prisoner: The Official Companion", Carlton Books, 2002, pp. 129. (English) 

[edit] See also