Anonymous ID: 9d5627 Feb. 18, 2019, 10:07 a.m. No.5244232   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4353

>"Fall Out" is the 17th and final episode of the allegorical British science fiction series The Prisoner, which starred Patrick McGoohan as the incarcerated Number Six. The episode originally aired in the UK on ITV on 1 February 1968, and was first broadcast in the United States on CBS on 21 September 1968.

 

>"Fall Out" generated controversy when it was originally aired owing to the obscurity and ambiguity of the installment's last 20 minutes. This reaction forced McGoohan, who wrote and directed the episode, to go into hiding for a period of time because he was hounded at his own home by baffled viewers demanding explanations.

 

>The episode omits the usual long opening sequence in favour of a recap of the penultimate episode, "Once Upon a Time". It is the only episode in the series in which the show's main outdoors location, Portmeirion, is given a specific credit in the opening titles. This resulted from an agreement with Portmeirion's architect, Sir Clough Williams-Ellis, that the location would not be revealed until the series finale.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_Out_(The_Prisoner)

 

>Lead star and series creator Patrick McGoohan wrote and directed the episode.[5] As ITC managing director Lew Grade said in the 1984 documentary Six into One: The Prisoner File, McGoohan, despite having promised earlier that he would conceive an ending for the series, came to him admitting that he was unable to come up with an ending.

 

>This is the only episode to feature a modern pop song. As Number Six approaches the large "court" chamber and again during the climactic gun battle, The Beatles' current hit "All You Need Is Love" (

 

last episode is about the deep state

https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x3ln4uq