By FRAZIER MOORE, AP Television Writer

NEW YORK – A man named Michael from New York wakes up in the desert,
much to his surprise.

Fortunately, a pleasant-looking village is nearby.

Unfortunately, Michael wants to get back to New York and finds he
can't.

"That's not possible," the Village elder tells him. "There is no New
York. There's only the Village."

"I want out!" Michael says.

"There is no out," insists the leader. "There is only in."

So goes "The Prisoner," a brilliant six-hour, three-night reimagining
of the 1960s classic. It airs Sunday through Tuesday at 8 p.m. EST on
AMC.

"The Prisoner" is a sometimes startling, always eye-popping meditation
on freedom through the prism of mass thought control. Jim Caviezel
stars as Michael, the addled detainee who finds that, on his arrival
in the Village, he, like all the residents, is designated by a number,
not a name. He is now Six.

Ian McKellen is the charismatic, delicately despotic boss, Two. With a
suave, creepy-reassuring manner, he lords over this realm with its
daunting sinkholes, huge white beach ball and compliant, seemingly
contented populace.

Here wanderlust is out of the question, the solution to every problem
is "More Village" and every home has a pig to somehow guarantee
stability.

What's it all mean? That's up to each viewer, and it's fun (and mind-
expanding) to surrender to the Village's enigmas and find out.

"He's running the Village with the best of motives," declares
McKellen, speaking of his character, Two.

But Two embodies, among other things, the drawbacks of capitalism,
McKellen says.

"Capitalism offers you freedom, but far from giving people freedom, it
enslaves them," he says. "That's part of the show's message."

At 70, the British-born Sir Ian (who was knighted in 1991) is deemed
one of the greatest actors working today. He has triumphed with
Shakespeare in his long stage career, while his many films include
"The Da Vinci Code," the "X-Men" adventures and the "Lord of the
Rings" trilogy (and, ahead for him, a pair of "Hobbit" films back in
his role as Gandalf).

McKellen says he chooses a project based on whether it is something he
would like to see himself. Another consideration: Can he learn
anything from doing the role?

He accepted "The Prisoner," he says, because screenwriter Bill
Gallagher (British TV's "Lark Rise to Candleford," "Conviction")
"wasn't writing a fantasy, he was writing science fiction — something
that might indeed happen, NOT something that could never happen.

"But I had decided I wanted to do this before I read the final
episode," which mercifully clears up much of the mystery.

"Once I found all the questions," says McKellen, "I just took it on
trust that Bill would come up with some good answers."

McKellen says he saw only enough "to get a flavor" of the original
"Prisoner" series, which starred Patrick McGoohan as Six while
shuttling numerous actors through the role of Two.

Filming took place in Capetown, South Africa, and in Swakopmund, a
town on the Atlantic coast of Namibia. Hayley Atwell, Ruth Wilson,
Lennie James, Rachael Blake and Jamie Campbell Bower also star.

Asked how difficult he found the role of Two, McKellen says, "I don't
think I've ever played a part that I haven't really, really worried
about, and thought, 'I shouldn't be doing this.' I'm never confident.
But, perversely, I'll only do a part if I think I can't do it, because
that will get the best out of me."

It was in Swakopmund where McKellen found a tailor who, furnishing
Two's signature white suit, helped him get into character.

That costume, says McKellen, "became my favorite," but he cautions
that the suit's on-screen spiffiness is oddly missing off-camera. "In
life, if you saw it you wouldn't want to wear it."

Now, as he speaks with a reporter in a New York hotel suite, McKellen
is fashionably rumpled in a dark striped jacket, vest, open-collar
shirt and jeans. On his feet are a pair of rubber Calzuro clogs, a
version of which he was issued with his prison costume as Magneto in
"X-Men" and has worn ever since.

Charming and witty, he slouches back on the couch in thought when
asked how performing any other part (Magneto? Gandalf? Two?) can
possibly compare to a Shakespearean role.

"That's what Jude Law said to me," says McKellen, who has just seen
Law on Broadway. "'What am I going to do after Hamlet? Everything is
going to seem third-rate.' Well, it's true — it is," McKellen sums up
with a laugh. "Because Shakespeare is FIRST-rate."

But then, referring to every other dramatist, he adds, "You can look
for the good intentions, I suppose, with the understanding that even
halfway up a mountain, the view can be pretty good."

Regular ascents to the summit with Shakespeare have certified
McKellen's lofty stature. But he suggests his reputation is somewhat
by default.

"If you're associated with great pieces, some of that luster rubs off
on you. Besides, there are not that many great actors around. Olivier,
Gielgud, Scofield, Guinness" — now all passed from the scene — "are
major, major performers, and you can tell I sort of modeled my career
on them, because I like the sort of things that they liked.

"But that's not to say I'm up there with them."

Whereupon, with perfect timing, his voice drops to a stage whisper:
"But don't tell anybody."
____________________________

Don't know if you've heard about this, t.  I know you're a fan of the
original TV show.
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