Showing posts with label Secret Agent or Danger Man. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Secret Agent or Danger Man. Show all posts

Monday, September 5, 2016

'The Prisoner' Is 50: But Who Was Patrick McGoohan's No. 6 Really... And Who Is No. 1?


Patrick McGoohan's clever, intelligent and way ahead of its time TV series The Prisoner turns 50 today. I loved the show when I was a teenager in the 1960s.

Morgan Jeffery at digitalspy.com looks back at the series and attempts to provide answers that viewers have been asking for 50 years.

Classic '60s series The Prisoner turns 50 today - September 5, 2016 - and half a century since Patrick McGoohan's protagonist arrived in the mysterious Village, two questions persist...
Who was No. 6, and who is No. 1?
The set-up for the surreal show saw McGoohan's secret agent abruptly resign from his post, only to be captured and held captive in the sinister Village.
We never learnt our hero's real name - instead, he was given the moniker 'No.6' as shadowy forces worked to break his spirit... and find out why he resigned.
The true identity of McGoohan's character is still a fierce point of debate for fans of The Prisoner - and even the show's creative team were divided on who No. 6 used to be.

You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:

http://www.digitalspy.com/tv/feature/a806924/the-prisoner-is-50-but-who-was-patrick-mcgoohans-no-6-really/

You can also read an earlier post on Patrick McGoohan's and The Prisoner via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2014/04/patrick-mcgoohan-spy-who-started-it-all.html

Monday, December 22, 2014

My Name Is Drake, John Drake: A Review Of Patrick McGoohan's Secret Agent AKA Danger Man


Kyle Mills at dvdtalk.com offers a review of the Secret Agent AKA Danger Man: The Complete Series DVD.

"Every government has it's secret service branch. America, the CIA; France, Deuxieme Bureau; England, MI5; Even NATO has it's own. A messy job? Well that's when they usually call on me or someone like me. Oh yes, my name is Drake. John Drake." Starring Patrick McGoohan from the fan favorite series, The Prisoner, in the titular role of John Drake, comes Secret Agent AKA Danger Man: The Complete Series, a less edgy, James Bond/Roger Moore-esque take on the spy genre. 

For those who don't know much about this series, I will give you a brief backstory. Before Patrick McGoohan assumed his most identified role as Number Six in the groundbreaking series, The Prisoner, a role that many fans assume is a continuation of this series, he starred on a British television as a secret agent named John Drake in Danger Man (also known as Secret Agent, the title that it was broadcast under in North America).

The first installment ran in half-hour installments on British television from 1960 through 1962 before McGoohan tired of the role after 39 episodes. Eventually 2 years later, the show was brought back in an hour long format clearly to cash in on the success of the cinematic adventures of James Bond, in 1964 and it ran until 1966, until McGoohan once again wanted to leave the role.

This was assumed to be the end of John Drake's escapades, but McGoohan decided to return once more which only lasted for two episodes in 1968. This is the last we'd see of Drake and his espionage tales. After several releases over the years, After A&E had released the series multiple times, Timeless Video once again brings together the entire anthology of Secret Agent: AKA Danger Man to offer it in one deluxe, compact, slick looking box set. Secret Agent: Danger Man revolves around the espionage exploits of Bond, James Bond Drake, John Drake. A smooth talking, charismatic agent that would rather talk you down than force you to cooperate, never carrying a gun but relying on his quick wit and brain to resolve intense situations. But don't let that deter you, this is an action show, fists fly and people do get shot, and for a show nearly 55 years old, it all looks great.

Each of these 86 episodes, it follows the exact same formula; John Drake is assigned a mission, he goes to some beautiful/exotic locale, follows the target, plot twist! and he wraps it up nice and neat. We follow the exact same formula through these 86 adventures, and while most shows would get tedious after doing the same thing that long, Secret Agent somehow kept it fresh thanks to it's great locales, phenomenal production designs, tight writing and of course it's star.

You can read the rest of the review via the below link:

http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/67026/secret-agent-aka-danger-man/

You can also watch the opening of Secret Agent via the below link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1PxrJoAlmjM

Note: When I was a teenager in the 1960s I enjoyed spy thrillers. I was a huge fan of Sean Connery as James Bond in the movies and I was a huge fan of Ian Fleming's darker and more complex James Bond novels.

I was also a huge fan of Patrick McGoohan's brilliant and surreal 1960s TV series The Prisoner and his previous 1960s TV series, the clever, intelligent and realistic Danger Man (called Secret Agent in the U.S).

Secret Agent has similarities with Ian Fleming's James Bond - exotic locations, beautiful women, action, suspense and danger - but I don't think the series was, as Kyle Mills notes above, "Roger Moore-esque." Roger Moore's Bond was campy and comedic. Secret Agent was a serious show, with very little humor. 

I bought the complete series a while back and over the course of many months I watched every episode. Good stuff.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Patrick McGoohan: The Spy Who Started It All


Susan King at the Los Angeles Times offers a piece on one of my favorite actors and one of my favorite TV programs, Patrick McGoohan and The Prisoner.

There's never been a TV series quite like "The Prisoner," which premiered in England in 1967 and debuted in the U.S. the summer of 1968 on CBS.

Best described as James Bond meets George Orwell filtered through Franz Kafka, the cult series revolved around a British secret agent (Patrick McGoohan) who wants to resign from the service. Deemed too dangerous to retire, they kidnap him and send him to an idyllic, though completely isolated, seaside resort called the Village.

There residents are assigned numbers instead of names and their every movement is followed by monitoring systems and security forces. And if someone tries to escape, they encounter a mysterious white balloon called Rover.

For 17 brilliant, surreal episodes, McGoohan's No. 6 was in constant battle with No. 2, a revolving door of henchmen who did the bidding for the unseen leader, who is naturally No. 1.

 "At the time, it was so original and unique," said McGoohan's daughter, actress Catherine McGoohan. "It completely took the secret agent spy story to a different level."

You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/showtracker/la-et-st-the-prisoner-20140426,0,3274542.story?track=rss#axzz301hdF2xr

You can also read an earlier post on Patrick McGoohan via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2013/09/patrick-mcgoohan-reliving-work-of.html


Note: I'm also a huge fan of Patrick McGoohan's earlier TV series, Secret Agent (Danger Man in the U.K.). I purchased the DVD complete collection and over the course of this past year, I watched all of the Secret Agent episodes. Secret Agent is an intelligent, cool and clever show that holds up after all these years.