Somewhere in the French countryside, Napoleon and Illya spy
from the bushes as an arms dealer named Voegler (Frank Marth) delivers missile
parts to Robespierre (Ronald Long), a politician who claims to be a direct
descendent of his namesake, the famed revolutionary leader. Upon the conclusion
of the transaction, Illya and Napoleon trail Voegler back to Robespierre’s
lavish castle. They’re interrupted by Raoul Dubois, an elderly gentleman who
approaches them in a panic and forces them at gunpoint to help him escape from
Robespierre.
Armed thugs on motorcycles pursue them. At Raoul’s desperate
urging, Ilya and Napoleon drive him to his home, where they’re greeted by his
beautiful daughter, Albert (Mala Powers), who is named for Raoul’s idol, Albert
Einstein.
Raoul, who has been missing for three months, claims he was
kidnapped by Robespierre and, along with other captured scientists, forced to
work on a guided missile system. Raoul escaped to warn France of a diabolical
threat. Before he can elaborate on the nature of this threat, the armed
motorcyclists burst into his living room, kill him, and speed off while Illya and
Napoleon stand around and look confused.
Napoleon and Illya head to U.N.C.L.E.’s Paris headquarters,
which, like the New York office, features a secret entryway through the back of
a tailor shop. This shop, in fact, is a near-duplicate of the New York version,
except all the customers wear jaunty berets.
Waverly briefs Napoleon and Illya about Robespierre: As the
head of the Virtue party, which advocated a countrywide prohibition of wine and
whiskey, he campaigned for President of the French Republic and received a
grand total of eighty-four votes. Waverly believes Robespierre will try to
kidnap Albert, who, like her father, is a world-class physicist specializing in
inertial guidance. Albert has been invited to dinner at Robespierre’s castle;
Napoleon offers to pose as her escort to uncover more about Robespierre’s
scheme. Meanwhile, Illya will try to get his pretty hands on Voegler’s guided
missile system before Voegler delivers it to Robespierre.
That’s a photo of Albert Dubois, which Illya came across in The Journal
of Physical Science, which, like most respected scientific periodicals, features
full-page headshots of renowned physicists.
Napoleon accompanies Albert to Robespierre’s castle.
Napoleon and Robespierre instantly commence with the petty sniping, with Robespierre
kicking off a vigorous round of insults by taking potshots at Napoleon’s
namesake: “Bonaparte was a drunkard and a libertine! Why should I be proud of
him?” Napoleon, who has more than a faint libertine streak running through his
veins, takes umbrage at this.
It should be noted that Napoleon spends much of this episode
being witty and charming while looking dashingly handsome in a tuxedo.
Left to his own devices while Robespierre talks business
with Albert, Napoleon contacts Illya to discuss their plan and/or flirt with
him. Napoleon is in a mood to chat, but Illya, who is working to familiarize
himself with a newfangled bow-and-arrow set to prepare for an encounter with
Voegler, tersely tries to wrap up the call in a hurry. “What’s the matter? You
lose your little comforter?” Napoleon taunts.
I have no idea what that comment means, but Illya seems
disgruntled and mildly scandalized by it, so I’ve chosen to interpret it as
something impolite and likely sexual in nature.
Upon finding a hidden door next to the fireplace, Napoleon
sneaks down a flight of stairs into Robespierre’s underground lair, where the
captured scientists are industriously working on the rocket. His path is
blocked by an armed guard, who is swilling something from a flask. Napoleon
dons a terrible accent (Robert Vaughn’s fake French accent continues to be
ridiculous and hilarious and wonderful. See also: “The See-Paris-and-Die Affair”) and, adopting Robespierre’s firm teetotaler stance, berates him for
drinking on the job. When the guard protests that it’s only cough syrup,
Napoleon gives him a capsule which he claims will cure his cough. The guard
obligingly snaps the capsule in two, then promptly collapses from the ensuing
cloud of knockout gas.
Before Napoleon can get into the laboratory, more armed
guards set upon him. They chase him back upstairs, where he’s captured by
Robespierre.
Meanwhile, Illya orchestrates a chance meeting with Voegler
on Voegler’s private hunting preserve. Illya shows off his weird-looking bow/slingshot
hybrid and challenges him to an archery competition. Various gimmicky hijinks ensue
as Voegler and Illya attempt to dazzle each other with feats of skill and
trickery. Illya wins the challenge by tossing his signet ring in the air and shooting
an arrow through it before it hits the ground.
Back at Robespierre’s castle, Robespierre chains Napoleon
and Albert up in the usual ungainly and vaguely sexual manner, then reveals his
fiendish plan: His missile is designed to scatter radioactive material across
Champagne, Bordeaux, and Chablis, which will contaminate the ground for a
hundred years, thus crippling the world’s supply of fine wine. He menaces
Napoleon with a hot poker to force Albert to help him complete the inertial
guidance system, then locks Napoleon up in a cell to ensure her continued
cooperation.
At Voegler’s villa, new buddies Illya and Voegler drink a
toast to Illya’s shooting prowess. Voegler casually asks, “By the way, did you
get that new bow from U.N.C.L.E.?” Taken off guard, Illya nonetheless plays it
cool: “U.N.C.L.E.? What’s that?” Voegler triumphantly points out Illya’s
mistake: “Any other man would have said ‘Who’s
that?’” Oh, good show, Voegler! Pat
yourself on the back. Illya walked right into that one. Voegler cuffs Illya’s
hands behind him and paints a gigantic target on the back of his white
turtleneck, then gives him a head start before charging after him with a bow
and arrow.
Illya runs for his life. Granted, it can’t be easy to sprint
with bound hands across uneven ground, but he spends a ridiculous amount of
time falling on his face, then getting lucky when Voegler’s arrows fail to hit
him.
Finally, Illya wriggles around and contorts his body until
his hands are cuffed in front of him, which is one of those nifty tricks you
can only pull off if you’re a petite, limber little thing like Illya. With his
hands still cuffed, he knocks out Voegler’s henchman, then kills Voegler with
the henchman’s discarded bow.
Free at last, Illya raids Voegler’s study and finds the
inertial guidance system. Before he can leave with it, two of Robespierre’s
henchmen arrive, ready to deliver it to their boss. Thinking fast, Illya poses
as an engineer and insists on accompanying them.
At the castle, Robespierre takes Illya down into the laboratory
to instruct the scientists on how to install the guidance system in the rocket.
Along the way, they pass Napoleon’s prison cell, so Illya takes a quick break
from the mission to sling caustic insults at his captive partner: “You can see
he’s the stupid sort, the way the eyes are set close together.”
Illya then strolls off, leaving Napoleon feeling: a)
reassured his partner knows he’s in trouble, and b) newly neurotic about the
distance between his eyes. Nobody can wound Napoleon to the core like Illya
can. Nobody.
Illya dons a lab coat and an adorable pair of wire-rimmed
glasses and gives the captured scientists an impromptu lecture on the operation
of the inertial guidance system. Even though Illya has his doctorate from
Cambridge in, ahem, quantum physics, he’s a complete disaster at this. An adorable complete disaster.
The captured scientists look less than enchanted with his
adorability.
As Illya tries to bluff his way through the demonstration,
Robespierre hears about Voegler’s death and orders Illya captured and executed
for murder. Illya threatens to smash the guidance system to smithereens unless
he’s allowed to go free; Robespierre counters by threatening to kill Napoleon. Illya
surrenders himself to protect his partner.
So Illya is led off to a guillotine, which Robespierre,
being a French Revolution buff, just happens to have set up in his courtyard.
Upon hearing of Illya’s looming execution, Napoleon hooks a
wire from the light socket to his cell bars and spills water on the ground,
then tricks his jailer into turning on the light and grabbing the bars. Nicely
done, Napoleon! This is kind of a quiet, mild-natured little episode, but
Napoleon and Illya are both in top form, and their spywork is… I’m not going to
go so far as to claim it’s good,
exactly, but it’s certainly less criminally incompetent than usual.
(I mean, Napoleon and Illya did kick off this episode by getting carjacked by an elderly
physicist, then stood around and gaped as he was gunned down by
motorcyclists, but I still maintain that, by their usual standards, this
mission is going pretty smoothly.)
Napoleon breaks free from his cell and arrives at the guillotine
in time to shoot up the place and kill Illya’s would-be executioner. He leaves
Illya chained and kneeling at the guillotine, and, with Albert in tow, heads
off after Robespierre to stop him from launching his now-completed missile.
While searching through all the rooms of Robespierre’s
enormous castle, Albert frets that they’ll never find him in time to stop the
missile. Napoleon grimly replies, “We’ve got to. I want my children to drink
champagne!” This might be the finest line of dialogue in all of The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
Napoleon and Albert burst into the control room, but it’s
too late—Robespierre has already launched the missile. Robespierre taunts them
at gunpoint; knowing of Robespierre’s exaggerated sense of gallantry toward
women, Albert ignores his threats of violence and hits the abort switch. The
missile explodes harmlessly in mid-air, thus saving France’s noble vineyards.
Having rescued the world’s future supply of fine wine,
Napoleon and Albert bring a picnic lunch of champagne, bread, and cheese out to
Illya, who is still chained to the guillotine. Of seeing Illya chained on his
knees, Napoleon quips, “I’d sort of gotten used to seeing you that way.” Well! Someone’s feeling frisky. I’m going to
repeat an observation I made about “The Adriatic Express Affair”, because it
seems equally apropos here and, indeed, could be the mantra for the series as a
whole: It’s not that I think Illya and
Napoleon are shagging each other on the sly, it’s just that some scenes make a
whole lot more sense if you assume
they’re shagging each other on the sly.
Then Illya casually uses the guillotine to slice the
baguette, while Napoleon looks like he’s trying very hard not to think about
all the blood and spinal fluid and viscera probably still lingering on the
blade from Robespierre’s prior victims.
This episode was written by prolific pulp sci-fi/mystery author
Henry Slesar, who, fun fact, is credited with having coined the term “coffee
break” during his early employment as a Madison Avenue copywriter. Slesar also
wrote over a hundred scripts for various TV programs, including several for U.N.C.L.E.; while none of his U.N.C.L.E. episodes reach the level of
all-time classic, they uniformly feature a solid understanding of the
characters, a knack for sparkling banter, and a light touch with the material.
This one is no exception.
Comments
So I wasn't sure did illya right that archery competition or was that mention to be for real.
I found it amusing that the guards didn't question a soaked illya being some engineer they didn't know was arriving. They are almost as good as thrush security.
Oh and why was the executioner wearing tights?