As Christopher Nolan basks in the afterglow of Oppenheimer’s dominant performance at the 96th annual Academy Awards – including a best picture win for the film and a long-overdue best director nod for Nolan himself – speculation is growing about what the British filmmaker will tackle next for his 13th feature. Nolan is typically reticent to speak about future projects; with the director working on a more or less three-year cycle for his last several films, he might not even officially say anything about his new movie until later in 2024 or early in 2025.
But according to rumors that have surfaced online in the past week, Nolan may tackle as his next film a big-screen version of the cult classic TV series The Prisoner, which was broadcast in the UK in 1967 and the US in 1968. The show, which ran for a single season consisting of 17 episodes, was created by Irish actor/writer Patrick McGoohan,...
But according to rumors that have surfaced online in the past week, Nolan may tackle as his next film a big-screen version of the cult classic TV series The Prisoner, which was broadcast in the UK in 1967 and the US in 1968. The show, which ran for a single season consisting of 17 episodes, was created by Irish actor/writer Patrick McGoohan,...
- 3/15/2024
- by Don Kaye
- Den of Geek
The shooter who killed three children and three adult staff members at Covenant School in Nashville in March planned the attack with specific people in mind, according to the shooters’ writings, as Nashville’s Metropolitan Police Department confirmed. The confirmation came after the pages were leaked online.
“I am greatly disturbed by today’s unauthorized release of three pages of writings from the Covenant shooter,” Chief John Drake wrote in a statement, confirming that the writings came from shooter Audrey Hale.
In what appears to be a three-page handwritten note,...
“I am greatly disturbed by today’s unauthorized release of three pages of writings from the Covenant shooter,” Chief John Drake wrote in a statement, confirming that the writings came from shooter Audrey Hale.
In what appears to be a three-page handwritten note,...
- 11/7/2023
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
First Lady Dr. Jill Biden attended a candlelight vigil in Nashville on Wednesday evening. The event honored the lives of six people — including three children — murdered in a mass shooting at an elementary school Monday morning that has left Music City reeling. The night saw featured performances from Sheryl Crow, Margo Price, and Old Crow Medicine Show’s Ketch Secor, each of whom has spoken out in favor of gun regulation after this week’s tragedy.
Among the event’s speakers, which did not include the First Lady, were Nashville Mayor John Cooper,...
Among the event’s speakers, which did not include the First Lady, were Nashville Mayor John Cooper,...
- 3/30/2023
- by Adam Gold
- Rollingstone.com
For the second night this week, Fox host Tucker Carlson accused the transgender community of targeting Christians with violence. The host has escalated his attacks on trans people in the aftermath of a school shooting in Nashville, Tennessee, in which three third-grade students and three adults were killed.
Authorities identified the shooter as Audrey Hale, a transgender man. Even though acts of mass violence by transgender individuals are an extremely rare occurrence, Carlson has laid the blame for Hale’s actions on the transgender community as a whole.
“Transgenderists hate Christians above all,...
Authorities identified the shooter as Audrey Hale, a transgender man. Even though acts of mass violence by transgender individuals are an extremely rare occurrence, Carlson has laid the blame for Hale’s actions on the transgender community as a whole.
“Transgenderists hate Christians above all,...
- 3/30/2023
- by Nikki McCann Ramirez
- Rollingstone.com
At 10:13 a.m. Monday, in Nashville, Tennessee police received a call of an active shooter at Covenant School.
The shooter was Audrey Hale, 28, a former student of the school. Hale was assigned female at birth but used he/him pronouns and the name Aiden on various social media platforms.
Surveillance cameras captured Hale wearing camouflage-style pants, a white t-shirt, a black vest and a red hat. They shot out a side door and entered the building with an Ar rifle and pistol, and handgun.
In Memoriam 2022: 100 Great Celebrities Who Died In 2022
Body camera footage was released on Tuesday that showed Officer Rex Engelbert searching the first floor of the school before more gunshots were heard on the second floor. Upon entering an atrium, Engelbert sees the shooter standing near a window and fires four times, causing the shooter to fall to the ground.
Another officer, Michael Collazo, fires...
The shooter was Audrey Hale, 28, a former student of the school. Hale was assigned female at birth but used he/him pronouns and the name Aiden on various social media platforms.
Surveillance cameras captured Hale wearing camouflage-style pants, a white t-shirt, a black vest and a red hat. They shot out a side door and entered the building with an Ar rifle and pistol, and handgun.
In Memoriam 2022: 100 Great Celebrities Who Died In 2022
Body camera footage was released on Tuesday that showed Officer Rex Engelbert searching the first floor of the school before more gunshots were heard on the second floor. Upon entering an atrium, Engelbert sees the shooter standing near a window and fires four times, causing the shooter to fall to the ground.
Another officer, Michael Collazo, fires...
- 3/29/2023
- by Hailey Schipper
- Uinterview
‘It Could Happen at Any School’: Remembering Nashville Students, Faculty Killed in Covenant Shooting
On Monday, the Nashville community was left shocked and grieving after the Metro Nashville Police Department confirmed the identities of six victims killed in a mass shooting at The Covenant School in the Green Hills area of the city. “I have four grandkids here. I mean, I can be thankful, but I am so sad for these parents and kids,” Kathy Thoreson, who lives close enough to have heard the gunfire, told local news affiliate Wkrn. “It’s very tragic. It’s two blocks from our house. It could happen at any school.
- 3/28/2023
- by Miles Klee
- Rollingstone.com
Three children and three adult staff members are dead following a school shooting at a Christian elementary school in Nashville, Tennessee, on Monday morning. Officials said a suspect — 28-year-old Nashville area resident Audrey Hale — is also dead, and “multiple patients” have been reported following the shooting.
A hospital spokesperson confirmed to Rolling Stone that three pediatric patients with gunshot wounds were taken to Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt, where they were pronounced dead after arrival.
The six victims fatally shot by the active shooter at Covenant School,...
A hospital spokesperson confirmed to Rolling Stone that three pediatric patients with gunshot wounds were taken to Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt, where they were pronounced dead after arrival.
The six victims fatally shot by the active shooter at Covenant School,...
- 3/27/2023
- by Althea Legaspi
- Rollingstone.com
In one of his last movie performances, actor Bruce Willis stars in the new action feature “Detective Knight: Rogue”, directed byEdward John Drake, now available as VOD and in limited theater engagements:
“…in Los Angeles, four masked men robbed a truck full of cash. After the police arrive, the criminals steal a car from a nearby parking lot. However, the police corner the group, resulting in one of the robbers firing blindly at them. ‘Detective Knight’ and his partner ‘Fitz’ exchange fire with the criminals, resulting in Fitz getting severely wounded. In the chaos, the robbers flee the scene.
“While Fitz is taken to the hospital, the robbers escape to New York City on a private plane. The robbers are revealed to be ‘Casey’ leader of the crew; “Mercer’, the hot-head of the group; ‘Mike’, Casey's best friend; and ‘Sykes’ the girl with the most intelligence among the group.
“Officer...
“…in Los Angeles, four masked men robbed a truck full of cash. After the police arrive, the criminals steal a car from a nearby parking lot. However, the police corner the group, resulting in one of the robbers firing blindly at them. ‘Detective Knight’ and his partner ‘Fitz’ exchange fire with the criminals, resulting in Fitz getting severely wounded. In the chaos, the robbers flee the scene.
“While Fitz is taken to the hospital, the robbers escape to New York City on a private plane. The robbers are revealed to be ‘Casey’ leader of the crew; “Mercer’, the hot-head of the group; ‘Mike’, Casey's best friend; and ‘Sykes’ the girl with the most intelligence among the group.
“Officer...
- 11/2/2022
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
Jamie Andrew Sep 29, 2017
Now celebrating its 50th anniversary, Patrick McGoohan’s The Prisoner was imaginative, unfathomable, and years ahead of its time...
It’s fifty years this month since The Prisoner premiered on British screens, bringing with it blazers, badges and mind-bending bad guys. The show ran for a mere two years, two truncated seasons and seventeen episodes, but its surreal imagery, iconic catchphrases, cerebral plots and absolutely bonkers ending have earned it a perennial place in our cultural consciousness.
See related Star Trek: Discovery episode 2 review - Battle At The Binary Star Star Trek: Discovery episode 1 review - The Vulcan Hello Star Trek Discovery: take our special quiz here!
It's truly an odd-beast, quintessentially sixties in some respects, timeless in others. It's hard to describe or define it as any one thing: it's a spy show that isn't a spy show; it's an action show with bigger...
Now celebrating its 50th anniversary, Patrick McGoohan’s The Prisoner was imaginative, unfathomable, and years ahead of its time...
It’s fifty years this month since The Prisoner premiered on British screens, bringing with it blazers, badges and mind-bending bad guys. The show ran for a mere two years, two truncated seasons and seventeen episodes, but its surreal imagery, iconic catchphrases, cerebral plots and absolutely bonkers ending have earned it a perennial place in our cultural consciousness.
See related Star Trek: Discovery episode 2 review - Battle At The Binary Star Star Trek: Discovery episode 1 review - The Vulcan Hello Star Trek Discovery: take our special quiz here!
It's truly an odd-beast, quintessentially sixties in some respects, timeless in others. It's hard to describe or define it as any one thing: it's a spy show that isn't a spy show; it's an action show with bigger...
- 9/28/2017
- Den of Geek
The sad passing of actress Alexandra Bastedo earlier this month saw many recalling and celebrating her work on '60s spy-fi series The Champions - just one entry in the canon of cult programme makers Itc Entertainment.
Though it also branched out into film production - with the likes of 1976's The Eagle Has Landed and 1982's The Dark Crystal - Itc was best known throughout the 1960s and '70s for its raft of cult TV programming, with shows like The Champions making an indelible screen icon of Bastedo and others like her.
These shows are now world-renowned - The Saint, The Prisoner, Thunderbirds - but the team behind them still go sadly unsung.
This week, the Week in Geek is looking to redress the balance with a fond tribute to Itc Entertainment - one of the UK's very best, most influential production teams.
Sherlock: The Problem of the Vanishing Detective
Doctor Who,...
Though it also branched out into film production - with the likes of 1976's The Eagle Has Landed and 1982's The Dark Crystal - Itc was best known throughout the 1960s and '70s for its raft of cult TV programming, with shows like The Champions making an indelible screen icon of Bastedo and others like her.
These shows are now world-renowned - The Saint, The Prisoner, Thunderbirds - but the team behind them still go sadly unsung.
This week, the Week in Geek is looking to redress the balance with a fond tribute to Itc Entertainment - one of the UK's very best, most influential production teams.
Sherlock: The Problem of the Vanishing Detective
Doctor Who,...
- 1/21/2014
- Digital Spy
What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism. Orwell feared we would become a captive audience. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared that we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. As Huxley remarked in Brave New World Revisited, the civil libertarians and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny "failed to take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions." In Brave New World, they are controlled by inflicting pleasure.
- 8/28/2012
- by John W. Whitehead
- Aol TV.
Everyman: The Story Of Patrick McGoohan – The Prisoner
The Lantern Theatre, Blundell St., Liverpool
8.30pm Sat 14th April 2012
www.thelanterntheatre.co.uk
‘Everyman: The Story Of Patrick McGoohan – The Prisoner’ written by Brian Gorman, details the life of the theatre, television, and film star (who sadly died in 2009).
The play begins a mini tour of the UK, beginning with a special preview at The Lantern Theatre in Liverpool at 8.30pm on Saturday 14th April. The play will be seen later in the year, across the UK, as part of a double bill with ‘A Passion For Evil’ by writer/actor John Burns (detailing the life of the infamous Aleister Crowley).
Chester-based writer Brian Gorman, has played McGoohan and his character 'Number Six' on stage in Manchester, Chester, and twice in Portmeirion (as a guest of Six Of One, The Prisoner appreciation society). A reading of the play by Gorman garnered...
The Lantern Theatre, Blundell St., Liverpool
8.30pm Sat 14th April 2012
www.thelanterntheatre.co.uk
‘Everyman: The Story Of Patrick McGoohan – The Prisoner’ written by Brian Gorman, details the life of the theatre, television, and film star (who sadly died in 2009).
The play begins a mini tour of the UK, beginning with a special preview at The Lantern Theatre in Liverpool at 8.30pm on Saturday 14th April. The play will be seen later in the year, across the UK, as part of a double bill with ‘A Passion For Evil’ by writer/actor John Burns (detailing the life of the infamous Aleister Crowley).
Chester-based writer Brian Gorman, has played McGoohan and his character 'Number Six' on stage in Manchester, Chester, and twice in Portmeirion (as a guest of Six Of One, The Prisoner appreciation society). A reading of the play by Gorman garnered...
- 4/8/2012
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
Within his prolific career, Patrick McGoohan lived, and will forever be remembered, under the shadow of Number Six, the character he’s most famously known for, from the 60‘s avant garde sci-fi show The Prisoner. This despite the fact that he played another spy character on an equally popular show prior to it, called Danger Man, also known as Secret Agent in the Us. On The Prisoner, the identity of Number Six is never revealed, but we know that he was a secret agent of sort, and there’ve been many hints dropped on the show pointing to the fact that it is in fact John Drake, McGoohan’s character on Danger Man. For this reason, The Prisoner is largely considered to be a reaction, if not an outright sequel to Danger Man.
I prefer to consider it a reaction, not because there aren’t enough connection to consider the...
I prefer to consider it a reaction, not because there aren’t enough connection to consider the...
- 10/22/2010
- by Arya Ponto
- JustPressPlay.net
Chicago – Patrick McGoohan was ready to quit. After playing secret agent John Drake in over eighty episodes of the British TV show “Danger Man” (known in the Us as “Secret Agent”), McGoohan was clearly in need of a change. Luckily, his script editor George Markstein had a great idea up his sleeve. What if Drake suddenly resigned, and his employers wouldn’t let him go? What if they kidnapped Drake and sent him to a secret location where he couldn’t escape? Markstein was clearly inspired by the actual incidents during WWII where people were incarcerated and under constant surveillance in resort-like prisons. McGoohan loved the idea, and together they created one of the most astoundingly original and richly entertaining programs in television history in “The Prisoner,” recently released on Blu-Ray to coincide with the AMC remake starring Jim Caviezel and Ian McKellen.
Blu-Ray Rating: 5.0/5.0
“The Prisoner” debuted in...
Blu-Ray Rating: 5.0/5.0
“The Prisoner” debuted in...
- 11/13/2009
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Film journalist Mike Malloy remembers the scrupled actor
McGoohan as Danger Man John Drake in a scene from the feature film Koroshi that was derived from the TV series. (Photo: Mike Malloy collection.)
Most movie-star hopefuls enter the entertainment industry knowing full well they will have to scratch and claw out a career for themselves in ways that compromise their previously held values. This is not to say they’ll necessarily cheat and backstab to make it in The Biz (it often comes to that), but they certainly won’t turn down precious advancement opportunities on moral grounds.
Recently deceased, thoughtful thesp Patrick McGoohan (“The Prisoner,” Ice Station Zebra, Braveheart, “Secret Agent”) found a different route to stardom, one that reflected his very principled beliefs. And because he made choices detrimental to his fame—he could’ve been 007, after all—and yet became an international film and TV star nonetheless,...
McGoohan as Danger Man John Drake in a scene from the feature film Koroshi that was derived from the TV series. (Photo: Mike Malloy collection.)
Most movie-star hopefuls enter the entertainment industry knowing full well they will have to scratch and claw out a career for themselves in ways that compromise their previously held values. This is not to say they’ll necessarily cheat and backstab to make it in The Biz (it often comes to that), but they certainly won’t turn down precious advancement opportunities on moral grounds.
Recently deceased, thoughtful thesp Patrick McGoohan (“The Prisoner,” Ice Station Zebra, Braveheart, “Secret Agent”) found a different route to stardom, one that reflected his very principled beliefs. And because he made choices detrimental to his fame—he could’ve been 007, after all—and yet became an international film and TV star nonetheless,...
- 1/17/2009
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
Two-time Emmy-award winning actor Patrick McGoohan, the star of TV hits Secret Agent and The Prisoner, has died. He was 80, and passed away in Santa Monica, Calif. after a brief illness, his family told the L.A. Times.
McGoohan was born in New York to Irish parents who returned to Ireland when he was several months old, and later settled in England.
His rise to fame in American pop culture began in 1961, when he starred as John Drake in CBS' British-produced Danger Man. In 1965, he reprised the role in Secret Agent, an expansion of the show about a spy working for the English government.
Read More >...
McGoohan was born in New York to Irish parents who returned to Ireland when he was several months old, and later settled in England.
His rise to fame in American pop culture began in 1961, when he starred as John Drake in CBS' British-produced Danger Man. In 1965, he reprised the role in Secret Agent, an expansion of the show about a spy working for the English government.
Read More >...
- 1/16/2009
- by Anna Dimond
- TVGuide - Breaking News
Patrick McGoohan died Tuesday in Los Angeles after a short illness, his son-in-law, film producer Cleve Landsberg, said. He was 80.
Patrick Joseph McGoohan was born March 19, 1928 in Astoria, Queens, NY, raised in Ireland and the UK. He rose to fame in the British film and TV industry by starring in the 1960s television series Danger Man (renamed Secret Agent when exported to the Us) playing John Drake, a role which made him the highest paid actor in England at the time.
McGoohan won two Emmys for his work on the Peter Falk detective drama Columbo, and more recently appeared as King Edward Longshanks in the 1995 Mel Gibson film Braveheart. He portrayed the father (and predecessor) of the Phantom in the 1996 movie.
But he was most famous as the character known only as Number Six in The Prisoner, a sci-fi tinged 1960s British series in which a former unnamed spy is...
Patrick Joseph McGoohan was born March 19, 1928 in Astoria, Queens, NY, raised in Ireland and the UK. He rose to fame in the British film and TV industry by starring in the 1960s television series Danger Man (renamed Secret Agent when exported to the Us) playing John Drake, a role which made him the highest paid actor in England at the time.
McGoohan won two Emmys for his work on the Peter Falk detective drama Columbo, and more recently appeared as King Edward Longshanks in the 1995 Mel Gibson film Braveheart. He portrayed the father (and predecessor) of the Phantom in the 1996 movie.
But he was most famous as the character known only as Number Six in The Prisoner, a sci-fi tinged 1960s British series in which a former unnamed spy is...
- 1/14/2009
- by Glenn Hauman
- Comicmix.com
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