[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/img_prisonerfallout.PNG]]''[[caption-width-right:350:[[Music/TheBeatles There's nothing you can do that can't be done\\
Nothing you can sing that can't be sung]]]]''

After his victory over Number Two, Number Six is offered a chance to meet the secret rulers of the Village, and have all his and our questions finally answered.

----
!!This episode provides examples of:

* TheSixties:
** The 60s counterculture is symbolized by Number Forty Eight, a young man dressed in the mod style and rebelling against the norms "because he must."
** Music/TheBeatles' "All You Need Is Love" is playing on jukeboxes along the ramp that the Supervisor escorts Number Six and the Butler. And during the dramatic shootout at the end during Number Six's final(?) escape.
* AllJustADream: Possibly. Or maybe the entire series.
* AsTheGoodBookSays: Number Forty-Eight sings -- almost obsessively -- the song "Dem Bones," which refers to [[https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ezekiel%2037 the Book of Ezekiel]] where Ezekiel preached to the dead and resurrected them.
-->'''Number Forty-Eight:''' ''(keeps ringing a bell)'' Now hear the word of the Lord...
* BatmanGrabsAGun: After spending the entire series consistently refusing to use firearms, Number Six leads an armed revolt.
* BookEnds: The show ends as it began, with Number Six driving towards us, implying he's caught in a loop or stuck in the same identity as The Prisoner.
* BreakingTheFourthWall:
** Number Forty-Eight looks into the camera a few times, most notably at the end when he acknowledges the audience after he escapes.
** Number Two directs a "Be seeing you" at the camera as he sinks out of sight.
** The on-screen acknowledgement of the Hotel Portmeirion at the start of the episode qualifies as this as it's unusual to pull the curtain back in this way.
** Alexis Kanner smiles at the camera as his credit appears.
* DancePartyEnding
* DramaticUnmask: Inverted.
* TheEndOrIsIt: This is why we can't claim this has a BittersweetEnding or DownerEnding. The Village itself falls after the rebel force of Six, Two, Forty-Eight and the Butler destroys the command room and [[invoked]][[InferredHolocaust launches Number One's rocket]], but the episode ends with Forty-Eight seeking a vagabond life on the street, Number Two returning to Parliament, and Number Six returning home - where [[OhCrap the door opens]] for the Butler just like the doors did ''at the Village'' - to just get back in his customized car to go driving off as he did at the series' beginning. It doesn't help that the end credits doesn't name [=McGoohan=], it simply calls him "The Prisoner" implying he still hasn't escaped.
* EnemyMine: After it being hinted at somewhat in the previous episode, the final Number Two fully allies with Number Six.
* FreezeFrameBonus: The number on the door to Number Six's house becomes visible for the first time.
* FunnyBackgroundEvent: During the return to London, Number Six and the Butler are approached by a curious policeman who confronts Six while the Butler (and the camera) are on the other side of a zebra crossing. While the Butler silently looks on, Number Six pantomimes the entire escape sequence from the Village while the soundtrack for "Dem Bones" plays in the background. Six then leaves the bemused policeman and rejoins the Butler; next we see, they're running down the street, but it's only in order to catch a bus, not because they're being chased.
* GainaxEnding: After footsying around with metaphor and allegory for the entire series, the GrandFinale goes so allegorical that there's a fairly good case for calling this trope the Fall Out Ending or the Prisoner Ending instead. The debate over what actually happens at the end hasn't died down in over fifty years. Two main camps seem to be as follows: 1) The Village was an allegory for 6's own mental conflict over his decision to resign, and thus the entirety of it takes place in his mind; his escape being a metaphor for solving the conflict; and 2) The Village wins by creating an ideal position for 6 as its leader; even though 6 escapes to his home, the door to his flat now closes in the same way doors do in The Village, essentially showing that "they" are still monitoring his every move.
* GrandFinale: One of the first in television history, and certainly the first to throw everyone a huge curveball about the entire show.
* HeelFaceTurn: Number Two, who turns against his masters and is labelled as one "who bites the hand that feeds him."
** The Butler, who already turned to serve Number Six in the previous episode and continues to serve him now. (At least so we assume; he doesn't seem at all surprised when the door to No. 6's flat in London opens on its own...)
** Number Forty Eight, who was brought before the Village in judgment for his open cultural rebellion as a youthful offender. When Number Six encourages the young man to not "wear himself out," Forty Eight immediately sides with him.
* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: Number Two appears to say "Be seeing you" to the camera-- or is he talking to a guard?
* MoodWhiplash: We go from the sparse, minimalist and intense episode "[[Recap/ThePrisonerE16OnceUponATime Once Upon a Time]]" to this gaudy, action-packed and intense episode.
** Occurs within the episode itself, as it goes from tense and political to outright silly as the "Dem Bones" musical number begins, and then back to tense and political again.
* MusicalEpisode: Comes close to it, when Number Forty-Eight suddenly breaks into song and a musical number based around "Dem Bones" begins. However, the musical background appears to be diegetic and is in fact taken from a well-known recording of the song, rather than Forty-Eight himself singing it.
* NoNameGiven: Played with. A major concept of the series deals with the loss of individuality incurred by numbering everyone in the Village. In this episode, Six is finally allowed to be an individual, but instead of revealing his real name, he is instead simply referred to as "Sir," with the closing caption simply calling the character "Prisoner."
* TheReveal:
** We finally get one answer with this episode: outdoor filming was done at the Portmeirion Resort in Gwynedd, North Wales. Which explains how the Butler is able to drive the heroic Number Six, Number Two, and Number Forty-Eight straight from The Village to London. It's not as if Portmeirion was totally unknown to the general public - it had been a popular tourist village for three decades at this point - but outside the UK, that's another story.
** Number Six unmasks Number One... to reveal a monkey's mask. And then he removes that mask to reveal... ''himself'', that ''he'' had been Number One the whole time. That sound you heard back in 1968 was everyone's heads exploding from the MindScrew.
** Take a look at the number on Number 6's door when he finally arrives home. That's right... it's No. 1. (To be specific, 1 ''Buckingham'' Place, if you please!)
* RealLifeWritesThePlot:
** The technicians give Number Two a shave and haircut before reviving him. This was because this episode was filmed about a year after "[[Recap/ThePrisonerE16OnceUponATime Once Upon a Time]]," and Creator/LeoMcKern had ditched his beard and long hair in the interim.
** According to the show histories, [=McGoohan=] had to bang out the script for this episode in only a few days due to the head of Creator/{{ITC|Entertainment}} cancelling production of the series on short notice; as a result, Kenneth Griffith, who plays the President, reportedly had to write his own dialogue, which says a lot considering his is virtually the only voice heard in any substantial fashion prior to No. 2's resurrection.
* SeriesContinuityError: A lot of what we find out at the end doesn't jibe with some of the clues we saw in earlier episodes. (''Especially'' regarding the location of the Village, which explicitly contradicts an earlier episode.) Which was probably Creator/PatrickMcGoohan's intent.
* SoundtrackDissonance:
** "All You Need Is Love" being played for the second time as Number Six, Number Two, Number Forty-Eight, and the Butler violently shoot their way out of the conference chamber.
** The episode also features incongruous usage of Carmen Miranda and "Dem Bones."
* SpecialEditionTitle: The episode starts with a recap of "[[Recap/ThePrisonerE16OnceUponATime Once Upon a Time]]", with the title card appearing at the start of that. This is followed by a series of shots of The Village from afar, which includes a special credit screen at the start acknowledging Portmeirion as the Village's real-life location for the only time. In addition, Alexis Kanner's guest star credit has a boxout around it, because [=McGoohan=] was so impressed by his performance he wanted to single him out.
* TotallyRadical: The President tries to chide a confession out of the younger Number Forty-Eight with late 60s youth slang. In response, Number Forty-Eight expresses his rebelliousness by singing a song from the ''1920s'' ad nauseam.
-->'''The President:''' Now you're high. Give it to me, baby! Now you're hip!
* TrippyFinaleSyndrome: The episode was ''massively'' controversial. [=McGoohan=] has gone on record stating that he did this specifically to piss people off. ExpandedUniverse states that, yes, it was an LSD trip.
* {{Undercrank}}: Employed when Number Six and the Butler race to catch a bus in London. Coming right after a somewhat "still" moment (a long shot of Six describing his escape to a police officer as the Butler watches motionless), the effect is (possibly unintentionally, possibly intentionally) comedic.
* TheUnreveal: For a finale, this episode leaves lots of open questions.
** We still don't know why the Prisoner resigned.
** We never learn who Number One is or why he looks identical to Number Six.
** Despite the episode's theme of the individual winning out, we still never learn Number Six's real name.
----