At U.N.C.L.E. headquarters, Illya and Napoleon track the
progress of the toy plane on their radars with growing alarm: It’s headed right
for their building! Suspecting it contains explosives, Illya tries to zap it
out of the sky with a rooftop-mounted laser beam, which malfunctions. This is really all you need to know about the
inner workings of U.N.C.L.E.: Of course
U.N.C.L.E. has a rooftop-mounted laser beam, and of course it never works when you need it to.
The plane crash-lands on the roof. No explosion, no drama. Napoleon
and Illya investigate the wreckage and find an enigmatic note left inside:
“Boom! You’re dead.”
A summit of top world leaders is set to take place at
headquarters later in the day. Concerned about security gaps, Mr. Waverly
orders Illya and Napoleon to work closely with fellow agent Riley (Peter
Haskell), an expert in explosives, to find out who’s behind the trick with the
model plane before the delegates arrive for the summit.
Meanwhile, Riley secretly meets with THRUSH scientist/evil
mastermind Dr. Egret (Lee Meriwether). Riley, it seems, is a double agent,
who’s been conspiring with Dr. Egret to plant explosives at the upcoming summit
in the hopes of killing all the high-ranked delegates. Riley has already
replaced the table in the conference room with a duplicate table topped with a
thick slab of plastic explosives. As soon as a lit cigarette touches a
specially-designed ashtray on the table, the ashtray will explode, which in
turn will cause the table to explode, which will destroy the building.
Egret gives Riley a gift: a fountain pen that can be used as
a lethal device. If he places the tip of the pen against someone’s head and
clicks it, it’ll shatter the skull. Or, as Dr. Egret explains it, “The brain,
in effect, is homogenized. Death is instantaneous.”
Homogenized. Is
that really the word you want, Dr. Egret? By shattering the skull, the brain will
get emulsified? Fats and liquids combined into a smooth mixture, like a really
disgusting salad dressing? Don’t get me wrong, that’s a very evocative and very
gross concept, and I sure wouldn’t want that to happen to my brain, but I’m not
entirely convinced that’s likely to
happen when the skull shatters.
Her part in the mission over, Dr. Egret bids adieu to Riley,
then peels off her face to reveal a totally different face beneath it. She’ll
surface again later in the season in “The Girls of Nazarone Affair”, where she’ll
be played by a different actress. Ah, the brainy and lethal ladies of THRUSH. I’m
just going to quickly point out that in all the episodes I’ve recapped thus
far, we’ve yet to see a single woman employed by U.N.C.L.E. in any kind of
scientific capacity. Women at U.N.C.L.E. tend to be secretaries, receptionists,
researchers, and translators. Across town at THRUSH, though, women are doing
all kinds of weird, shady, science-y crap, like designing brain-homogenizing
fountain pens. I know which organization I’d rather join.
Outside U.N.C.L.E. HQ, a young woman named Kay (Zohra
Lampert) squabbles on the sidewalk with her fiancé about their upcoming nuptials.
Mr. Hemingway buys a hotdog from a nearby
cart, then walks over to Kay, smashes it under her breast, and smears it across
her abdomen. He apologizes profusely and offers to pay to have her dress
cleaned at the tailor shop that serves as the secret entrance to headquarters.
The young couple accept his apologies with good grace, assuring
him that they’re sure it was an accident. They’re being remarkably chill about
this. Dude, he just waltzed up to her and deliberately smeared a hotdog across her stomach. That’s assault. People have been stabbed for less.
Anyway, Hemingway escorts Kay into the tailor shop, hustles
her into the changing room, and, while she’s whipping off her soiled dress,
uses a hand-held electronic device to activate the secret door leading into
headquarters. Kay finds herself half-dressed and surrounded by a slew of very surprised
U.N.C.L.E. agents.
Far be it from me* to criticize the inner workings of
U.N.C.L.E., but between this episode and “The Ultimate Computer Affair”, there’ve
been at least two separate occasions where scantily-clad women have unwittingly
ended up in the secret bowels of U.N.C.L.E. following a changing room mishap.
Maybe, just maybe, it’s time to move the secret entrance to a more secure
location?
*Oh, who am I kidding? I live to criticize the inner
workings of U.N.C.L.E. The entire organization is delightfully lampoonable.
On high alert after the earlier attack, Napoleon and Illya
haul Kay off to an interrogation room. Confused and terrified, Kay insists she
has no idea what’s going on. At one point, she refers to U.N.C.L.E. as a “chrome
and gunmetal madhouse”, which is sort of brilliant.
Oh, Kay. How do I explain Kay? Kay is a doozy. Throughout
this episode, her emotional state will careen from bouts of sobbing to hysterical
laughter to irritated boredom to easygoing humor, often all within the same short
scene. It’s really bizarre, and yet kind of mesmerizing.
All right, this is how I can explain Kay to those who haven’t
seen this episode: Kay is so bizarre that at
no point does Napoleon flirt with her. Just try to wrap your head around
that: Napoleon, who has no problem sleeping with women who’ve tried to murder
him, looks at Kay and thinks, “Hmm, I don’t really need that level of drama in
my life.”
Napoleon gets nowhere with his gentle grilling of Kay, probably
because she won’t stop sobbing and/or laughing hysterically long enough to
answer his questions, so he sends in Illya to scare the information out of her.
Illya protests that he always ends up playing the villain, but Napoleon overrules
him. Resigned, Illya dons his dark glasses: “I better go and snarl at her.”
Illya is pretty good at playing the villain, actually.
While Illya is off cheerfully traumatizing Kay, Napoleon and
Riley examine the wreckage of the model plane. Even though their conversation
is friendly and innocent—Napoleon clearly has no inkling Riley is a THRUSH mole—Riley
clutches his lethal fountain pen throughout, ready to seize any possible
opportunity to turn Napoleon’s brain into a milkshake.
Illya and Napoleon loiter in the corridor outside the
interrogation room, debating how to handle Kay. Mr. Hemingway strolls up to
them and asks them for directions to the elevator. Illya and Napoleon happily
oblige.
Yep. Everyone’s on the highest possible alert following a
couple of alarming security breaches on the day of an important summit of world
leaders, and U.N.C.L.E.’s two top agents
just gave directions to a stranger wandering around the building. Excellent
work, boys.
It dawns on Napoleon and Illya belatedly that, hey, maybe
this is something they should investigate? When they chase after Hemingway,
they find he’s rewired the security system to block their path.
The compromised security system has caused chaos throughout
the building (Mr. Waverly: “I was trapped for forty-five minutes in the men’s
room without my pipe!”). Meanwhile, Kay becomes unraveled again (sob! laugh! repeat
ad infinitum!), culminating in a severe case of hiccups. Napoleon fetches her a glass of water from the
tap, which turns out to be filled with guppies: Mr. Hemingway has wreaked his prankish
brand of havoc on their water supply.
Meanwhile, one of Riley’s fellow explosives experts starts
to investigate the rigged table in the conference room. Thinking fast, Riley
murders him with his pen (brain: homogenized!) and stuffs his corpse in the laundry
hamper.
Riley, Illya, and Napoleon do one last check of the
conference room before the summit. Illya, inscrutable as always, holds a lit
match very close to the highly explosive surface of the table. Upon first
watching this episode, I assumed this meant Illya suspected something was amiss
with the table, but nope, he doesn’t. He’s just being his usual strange and
inexplicable self.
Illya starts to toss his match into one of the exploding
ashtrays. In a panic, Riley stops him, then explains that they shouldn’t present the world leaders with
a dirty conference room. Illya agrees with this logic: “If we can’t impress
them with our security, we can at least show them that we are neat.” Ha! Illya,
you are a very weird little man, but I love you.
They seal off the conference room until the start of the
summit, only to discover someone has tampered with the electricity in the
building: All of the metal doors and walls are electrified. En route to the
fuse box, Napoleon and Illya run into a distressed Mr. Hemingway, who has just
discovered the body of the murdered agent.
It turns out Mr. Hemingway has been working for Mr. Waverly
all along—Hemingway, in fact, is Waverly’s brother-in-law. Waverly hired him to
test U.N.C.L.E.’s internal security in advance of the summit. Considering how
Hemingway managed to sabotage the alarm system, electrical wiring, and water
supply all in the span of an afternoon, I’m assuming U.N.C.L.E. did not pass
this test. Hemingway explains his role: “I was simply meant to be a sort of
gadfly, just to sting you into awareness.” “Yes, I thought it might be
something like that,” Napoleon notes with a trace of lofty smugness. Sure you
did, Napoleon. Sure.
Realizing there’s a murderer at loose in the building,
Napoleon and Illya summon all possible culprits to the conference room: Hemingway,
Kay, Riley, and everyone who worked with the murdered agent. Napoleon explains
the situation to the suspects: Someone in the room is a murderer, so they’re
all going to sit there until the culprit ‘fesses up, or until the room
explodes. This is a terrible plan! The plan is made much worse by the fact that
everyone immediately breaks out cigarettes and starts smoking.
Kay stubs out her cigarette in an explosives-laced ashtray.
Riley knocks it off the table before it can detonate the tabletop, thus
revealing himself as the murderer. He makes a break for it; Illya and Napoleon
chase him through the building, but he escapes into an elevator.
Hemingway uses one of his electronic devices to trap Riley
between floors. Napoleon and Illya climb down the cables and break into the elevator.
Oh, man, in these early episodes, before the show had a big enough budget to cover
luxuries like stunt doubles and adequate rehearsal time, the action scenes were
rough. Everything stops dead for a
while as Vaughn and McCallum dangle awkwardly from ropes, looking like they haven’t
the foggiest idea how they’re supposed to get down from there.
Napoleon brawls with Riley, who keeps trying to use his
exploding pen to turn Napoleon’s brain into a high-protein smoothie. Riley
accidentally plunges the pen into his own chest and drops dead. “It looks like
permanent writer’s cramp,” Napoleon quips while staring down at Riley’s corpse.
Illya breaks into a delighted grin, pleased by his partner’s disturbing
penchant for ghoulish humor in inappropriate circumstances.
Her day of excitement and danger and glamour finally over,
Kay reunites with her fiancé. With all security threats neutralized, the summit
goes on as planned. Check out that amazing display of Important World Leader
Headwear on the table outside the conference room: Turbans! Trilbies! Pith
helmets!
A thoroughly loopy and charming episode, in which we learn
that, on the inside, U.N.C.L.E. is even more slipshod and poorly-run than it
seems from the outside. Hard to believe,
but true.
Comments
It is things like this that have convinced me "Get Smart" was better than "The Man From UNCLE". The former did not take itself seriously and had no pretensions. Its bad guys (KAOS) and their agenda were somehow more logical. Always defeated in the end but more logical and immediate and, pardon this politically incorrect term, "black and white". KAOS's German-accented Siegfried makes it clear from whence KAOS's evil derives. Siegfried's insistence that South America (where many war criminals managed to flee after the Holocaust) is the "New Fatherland" adds a patina of historicity, whereas Thrush's agenda is too often confused and confusing.
Of course, there are some UNCLE gems (right now, for me, limited to "The Judas Affair", but I have only seen a few episodes) that, once seen, linger in the memory and store themselves forever in the preconscious, but they are more the exception than the rule. "Get Smart" is timeless and always serviceable in its good versus evil universe.