Prisoner 2: DVD Cover

    Prisoner 2

    DVD - 2 Disc Set - Dolby 5.1 / Mono Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 10/31/2000
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 55,576
     
    • Overview
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
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    Features

    Original broadcast trailers; Interactive map of the village; Production stills gallery; Trivia; Interactive menus; Scene selection

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Prisoner, Set 2
    1. Fine Game [11:17]
    2. Breaking Point [9:47]
    3. New Experiment [9:41]
    4. Disconnection [7:00]
    5. Mayday Call [6:51]
    6. Misunderstanding [5:44]
    1. Why Did You Resign? [11:14]
    2. New Neighbor [7:14]
    3. Dreadful Interrogation [7:58]
    4. Developing Trust [8:05]
    5. Toward the Open Sea [6:35]
    6. The End of a Nightmare [9:12]
    Disc #2 -- Prisoner, Set 2
    1. "A" [14:55]
    2. Second Dosage [6:00]
    3. Meet "B" [9:55]
    4. #14 [8:07]
    5. Who is "C"? [3:59]
    6. Mysery [7:26]
    1. Speed Learning [11:14]
    2. "Here's Your Passport" [7:14]
    3. Investigation [7:58]
    4. Approval Session [8:05]
    5. Projection [6:35]
    6. Introducing the General [9:12]

    Scene Index

    Customer Reviews

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    • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

    Prisoner 2by Anonymous

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    October 04, 2000: The Prisoner is an allogorical wonderland, which challenges veiwers to reconsider their place as individuals in society. The plot can be summed as follows. There is a place where people with sensetive and valueable information disappear to, where their secrets are extracted and their individuality crushed. This place is known only as ''The Village''. Our hero, once a top level spy, is kidnapped from his home shortly after he angrily resigns from his job. In the Village his only designation is No.6, and over seventeen episodes he struggles to retain his individuality and escape the Village. Though almost thirty years old, The Prisoner still maintains almost cult following. It is probably my all time favorite TV show. The dialogue is full of British wit, the conception ''artsy'', and the plot and symbology intellectually challenging.