Somewhere in the Ozarks, Napoleon visits a beautiful young hillbilly
named Clemency McGill (Joan Freeman), whom U.N.C.L.E. is interested in
recruiting for her remarkable powers of clairvoyance. Napoleon’s skepticism about
Clemency’s abilities deepens into smirking contempt when she claims Illya is in
immediate danger of being mauled by a bull in Spain. Illya, Napoleon tells her with
maximum hauteur, is currently on assignment in Sweden, not Spain.
Cut to Illya in a bullring, waving his suit coat like a flag
in front of a stampeding bull. On the sidelines, armed THRUSH agents costumed
as matadors prevent him from leaving the ring. So apparently Clemency knows
what she’s talking about.
While Joan Freeman is lovely and appealing, Clemency is the
worst. As in, the woooooooorst. In
the hands of the U.N.C.L.E. writing
staff, “unschooled and full of childlike wonder” somehow mutated into “behaves
like a particularly dim toddler.” Napoleon looks flat-out mortified whenever
he’s around her.
Of course, this won’t stop him from trying to get into her
pants.
Back at U.N.C.L.E.’s New York headquarters, Napoleon tells Mr.
Waverly that Clemency’s ESP seems to be legit, as everything she’s told him has
been proven correct. This is confirmed by a call from Illya, who is languishing
in a Spanish prison for using knockout gas to stop the charging bull, which the
Spanish authorities appear to think was a majorly uncool move. When Mr. Waverly
grills him as to why he’s in Spain in the first place, Illya explains: After
intercepting a THRUSH missive containing a list of mysterious numbers in
Stockholm, he traced the sender to Madrid, where he was ambushed and chased
into the bullring by THRUSH goons.
As Mr. Waverly sees it, THRUSH’s actions mean Illya must be
close to uncovering their latest mysterious scheme. THRUSH recently issued a
warning about something called Operation Night Flight, which, THRUSH claims,
will paralyze worldwide air travel. Waverly tells Illya to keep on the trail of
the list of numbers, as it may prove crucial to unraveling THRUSH’s plan.
Having been ordered by Waverly to keep an eye on Clemency,
Napoleon takes her out for a bite to eat in the commissary. She yammers on
about her love of ice cream sodas while he nurses his coffee and looks miserable.
When Clemency asks for a refill, Napoleon raises a hand and inexplicably
bellows, “Bartender!” at the poor beleaguered counterman. This makes perfect
sense if you assume Napoleon had a quick tipple somewhere to give him the
strength to get through lunch with Clemency, and is now stinking drunk.
This is the face of a man who’d rather be chained to a wall in
a THRUSH prison right now.
At the commissary, Clemency gets another psychic message
about Illya: To learn more about the list of numbers, he should go to a bar in
Seville called Casa Lobo. Napoleon dutifully relays this information to his
partner.
So Illya follows Clemency’s suggestion and visits Casa Lobo,
which turns out to be a THRUSH hangout. It’s the usual wretched hive of scum
and villainy, overflowing with miscreants who glower and leer at cute little Illya
while he just tries to blend in with the crowd.
Soon, he’s approached by a pretty flamenco dancer, who shoves him into a secret
passageway behind the bar and bolts the door. Having dispensed with Illya, the
dancer notifies her bosses at THRUSH Central via a communicator hidden inside
her rose: “She got him here right on time.” Aha!
I thought to myself while first watching this, Clemency is a THRUSH agent! That’s great! I’ll forgive Clemency
anything if it turns out her painful-to-watch down-home act was all a ruse to
lure U.N.C.L.E. into a sense of complacency so THRUSH can spring a fiendishly
clever trap!
Alas, I was disappointed. But I’m getting ahead of myself.
Illya finds himself surrounded by heavily-armed THRUSH goons
in a dark cavern. They take him to meet their boss, Count Zark, who reveals
himself as the mastermind behind Operation Night Flight.
Zark sports a Transylvanian accent, dresses in a long black
cloak lined in purple satin, has a pronounced bat fetish, and, because he’s
played by Oscar-winner Martin Landau (who, fun fact, was one of the actors
originally considered to play Illya), is pretty awesome. There are several key
varieties of great THRUSH villains: You have your scheming European charmers
(Victor Marton, Victor Gervais), you have your sadistic sexy ladies (Miss Diketon, Mother Fear, Doctor Egret), and you have your goofy weirdos (Mr. Elom,of the cold turkey soup). Count Zark is a splendid example of that last
category.
Zark introduces himself to Illya: “You have heard of me, of
course.” Illya takes in the cloak and the accent and the corpselike pallor and
replies, in the driest possible deadpan, “Well, there’s something familiar
about you, but just what it is escapes me for the moment.” Ha! Illya, you are a
delightful human being. You’re a terrible spy, capable of botching even the
simplest courier assignment, but you’re peerless in your ability to coolly
mouth off to villains when you’re under duress.
Upon recovering the stolen list of numbers from Illya, Zark
orders his henchmen to kill him. Illya manages to escape, whereupon Napoleon
contacts him with a hot new psychic tip from Clemency: Go to a mysterious
castle in Transylvania. Illya follows Clemency’s bidding and arrives at the
castle (there’s the requisite piranha-filled moat surrounding it, naturally),
where he’s captured yet again by Count Zark and his hulking, scar-faced
henchman (Charles Horvarth).
I wish I could say that getting captured twice by THRUSH on
the same assignment was some kind of record for Illya, but… it’s not. Happens
more than you’d think, actually.
Back in New York, Napoleon has stashed Clemency in a nice
hotel, where he’s been buying her fancy smocks and ladybug-patterned rain
slickers. U.N.C.L.E. headquarters is concerned that Illya hasn’t checked in for
a long time, but Clemency assures Napoleon there’s no need to worry—in fact,
Illya’s on a plane home right now. Clemency is being an ass during all this,
sulking about how Napoleon is only paying attention to her for her, ah, brains:
“If I didn’t have this gift, you wouldn’t even look at me.” Napoleon reassures
her that he thinks she’s very pretty; in response, Clemency complains, “I bet
you tell that to all the girls with extra-sensory whatever-you-call-it.” Oh,
Clemency, honey, let’s talk: Napoleon tells that to all the girls, period.
Napoleon convinces Clemency that he’s horny for her for
reasons having absolutely nothing to do with ESP. They make out for a while,
and then Napoleon discovers the cortical stimulator hidden inside her hair
clip, through which THRUSH has been implanting information directly inside her
brain without her knowledge.
Realizing Clemency has been unwittingly leading Illya into a
series of traps, Napoleon contacts Waverly to ask for permission to rescue his
partner. His explanation of “I know I
told you I’d heard directly from Illya, but what I meant was that the pretty
lady with ESP, who is actually a THRUSH patsy, reassured me he was fine” doesn’t
go over all that well. Napoleon is U.N.C.L.E.’s top-ranked agent in all of North America, by the way. Mr. Waverly
doesn’t have anyone more competent than Napoleon on his entire staff. Chills
the soul a little, doesn’t it?
In his laboratory, Count Zark reveals his motivation for
capturing Illya a second time. Illya, the sly devil, had given Zark a forged
list of numbers earlier. Zark needs the original list back to successfully
execute Operation Night Flight, in which cages of genetically-modified vampire
bats will be simultaneously released at all major airports worldwide. The
enhanced echolocation abilities of the bats will render airport radar systems useless,
thus throwing global air travel into chaos.
…I mean, it’s not like it’s the worst plan THRUSH has ever come up with.
Illya refuses to cooperate, so Count Zark locks him in a
cave, where he gets gnawed on by vampire bats.
In advance of Operation Night Flight, all flights have been
grounded worldwide, except for the one containing Napoleon and Clemency, who
are bopping over to Europe to rescue Illya. The in-flight movie, just as an
aside, is One Spy Too Many, which is
actually two Man From U.N.C.L.E.
episodes (“The Alexander the Greater Affair”, parts one and two) repackaged into
a feature-length film for international theatrical release. Napoleon dismisses
it as “light entertainment” and calls it “pretty far-fetched”. That sound you
hear? That’d be the fourth wall toppling down.
Upon reaching Transylvania, Napoleon and Clemency sneak into
Count Zark’s castle. Napoleon hands his gun off to Clemency and orders her to
keep Zark at bay while he checks on Illya.
I appreciate your concern for your injured partner,
Napoleon, but you should probably swap roles with Clemency, instead of making
the untrained civilian face off against the dangerous THRUSH villain while you
do… whatever it is you’re doing here.
Zark, who is not especially intimidated by a gun-toting Clemency,
releases all the bats, then flees. Realizing the mysterious numbers on the
stolen list are the radar control settings necessary to recall the bats, Illya
reprograms the radar. The bats return to the castle, stopping only to kill and
eat Zark.
Having made air travel safe for the world once again, Illya
and Napoleon, accompanied by Mr. Waverly, treat Clemency to a bunch of celebratory
ice cream sodas. In defiance of all logic and reason and cohesive character
development, Illya asks Clemency out on a date. Hang on a minute, buddy—you’ve
had two full seasons of beautiful and smart and interesting women throwing themselves
in your path, and Clemency is the one
who finally melts your icy heart? I just don’t get you, Illya. Mr. Waverly,
too, takes a half-assed stab at asking Clemency out, but she turns them both
down: She has her heart set on a night of debauchery with Napoleon.
Comments
I also come here for the fantastic images!