The Prismer: Difference between revisions

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File:Hopelessly Devoted to Hue.jpg|link=Hopelessly Devoted to Hue|"'''[[Hopelessly Devoted to Hue]]'''" is a song by Olivia Newton-John about her feelings for the visible color spectrum.
File:Hopelessly Devoted to Hue.jpg|link=Hopelessly Devoted to Hue|"'''[[Hopelessly Devoted to Hue]]'''" is a song by Olivia Newton-John about her feelings for the visible color spectrum.
File:The Man Who Mistook His Wife for The Prisoner.jpg|link=The Man Who Mistook His Wife for The Prisoner|'''''[[The Man Who Mistook His Wife for The Prisoner]]''''' is a 1985 book by neurologist Oliver Sacks describing the case histories of some of his patients who have extraordinary relationships with the British television series ''The Prisoner'' starring Patrick McGoohan.


File:Enemy of the Tate.jpg|link=Enemy of the Tate|'''''[[Enemy of the Tate]]''''' is a 1998 British performative art comedy-thriller film about a group of corrupt Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) agents conspiring to kill Modern Art and the cover-up that ensues after a tape of the murder ends up in the possession of an unsuspecting Tate curator.
File:Enemy of the Tate.jpg|link=Enemy of the Tate|'''''[[Enemy of the Tate]]''''' is a 1998 British performative art comedy-thriller film about a group of corrupt Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) agents conspiring to kill Modern Art and the cover-up that ensues after a tape of the murder ends up in the possession of an unsuspecting Tate curator.
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* ''[[Light Robe]]''
* ''[[Light Robe]]''
* ''[[Spectrum]]''
* ''[[Spectrum]]''
* ''[[The Man Who Mistook His Wife for The Prisoner]]''
* ''[[The Silence of the Rose]]''
* ''[[The Silence of the Rose]]''



Revision as of 13:34, 21 October 2022

Earliest known title card for The Prismer.

The Prismer is a 1967 British television series about an unnamed intelligence agent who is abducted and imprisoned in a gigantic prism, where his captors designate him as Number Six and try to find out why he abruptly ceased to split white light into its component colors.

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