Rover alert: No. 6
James_H
Posts: 1,036
Code 66 brings back happy memories of utter confusion from the 60s.
https://www.daz3d.com/li-elemental-dynamics--sand-and-water
And I'd certainly buy a set based on Portmeirion!
lielementaldynamicssandandwater12daz3d.png
1500 x 1950 - 2M
Post edited by James_H on
Comments
One of the best visual sequences of Portmeirion from the series is the opening credits from the final episode "Fallout" where you go on a helicopter tour of the village. I would definitely buy a village set too. I visited Portmeirion some years ago but parts of it were very brightly painted, rather like a holiday camp, for instance the pond was bright sky blue. I was suprised how much is packed into a quite small area and how clever the series film crew were at making it seem bigger, for instance Number 6's house ( now a shop ) is just a single room rather than a two room apartment as it appears in the series, but it's not glaringly obvious watching the series.
Grovelling apologies to Laticis Imagery. (I am having increasing difficulty waking up in the morning.)
And now I've removed the duplicate apology.
I'll take myself outside and give myself a talking to.
I have dim memories of the village from a family holiday in Wales in the 60s. Whether I will ever get there again is moot.
When I was an innocent child - maybe 8 yo, and not at all used to seeing violence on screen - I accidently glimpsed a scene from the first episode, where Rover attacks and suffocates an inmate. I was horrified and started crying. Afterwards for the longest time I was so confused about what I had seen. Did I really witness a giant balloon kill a person? Sounds too surreal to be true, and yet, I was sure that I had seen it. It was only in my late 20es that I learned of The Prisoner. I immediately binged it, it's one of my all-time favourite TV shows now.
I don't know how they would have handled that scene with the original rover, which was more like a small hovercraft ( it was lost when it sank in the bay) the weather balloon was a stroke of genius, and probably a quick improvisation so that filming could continue without a long delay.