In the middle of a bleak Nevada desert, Napoleon braves a
sandstorm to ask an elderly prospector (J. Pat O’Malley) for directions to a
nearby ghost town, which is named, promisingly, Nowhere. Upon reaching Nowhere,
Napoleon stumbles across the corpse of a murdered man sprawled on the floor in
a deserted saloon. Napoleon searches the saloon and finds a pocket watch with a
map hidden inside it. While attempting to contact U.N.C.L.E. headquarters about
his discovery, he’s ambushed by horseback-riding THRUSH goons dressed as old-timey
gunslingers. He hides the pocket watch and map in a cow skull, then sends a frantic
emergency message to U.N.C.L.E.—“I’m taking Capsule B!”—before he’s clubbed
over the head and captured.
Back at headquarters, Mr. Waverly briefs Illya on the situation:
Napoleon went to Nowhere to meet an undercover U.N.C.L.E. agent—the dead man in
the saloon, presumably—who was going to pass along intel about a famous cybernetics
specialist, Arum Tertunian (Lou Jacobi), who’s being held captive by THRUSH.
Mr. Waverly plays Illya a recording of Napoleon’s message about Capsule B, a drug
that induces amnesia for up to three days. “That’s the new capsule the research
boys were bragging about in the cafeteria!” Illya exclaims cheerfully. “It’s
supposed to be top secret,” Waverly mutters, filled with weary resignation at
this latest bit of evidence that his powerful global spy organization is
staffed entirely by knuckleheads and blabbermouths.
Illya receives his assignment: Find Napoleon and the map
hidden inside the pocket watch. The pocket watch, which is apparently something
U.N.C.L.E. agents regularly carry in the field to make them easy to locate in
an emergency, is radioactive, so Illya takes a Geiger counter along to help him
in his search. Mr. Waverly refers to the Geiger counter as a “beeper”, which makes
me feel a bit leery of his scientific knowhow. You know what also makes me leery? The fact that he forces
his field agents to carry radioactive pocket watches. Seems like an excellent
way to end up with a lot of sick and dying field agents, Waverly.
Napoleon wakes up in THRUSH’s underground desert lair in the
clutches of THRUSH villain Walter Longolius (David Sheiner). Capsule B has done
its job: Napoleon has no idea who he is. He also claims to have no knowledge of
either U.N.C.L.E. or THRUSH. Convinced Napoleon is faking his amnesia, Longolius
and his loyal associate, a beautiful blonde scientist named Mara (Diana Hyland),
inject him with truth serum and interrogate him.
This proves ineffective, so Longolius and Mara, with the aid
of the captive cybernetics expert, Tertunian, brainstorm ways to help Napoleon
get his memories back. Mara, who speaks with some ill-defined foreign accent, pages
through THRUSH’s official file on Napoleon: “He’s classified here as a swinger.
What’s that?” she asks. Longolius quips, “A manic depressive who’s never
depressed.” While this is a terribly inadequate definition of “swinger”, it’s a
pretty good assessment of Napoleon’s typical mental state. Anyway, Mara, Tertunian,
and Longolius comb through Napoleon’s (hefty) file and marvel at his vast and
varied sexual exploits.
Inspired by Napoleon’s file, Tertunian comes up with a foolproof
method for shocking him out of his amnesiac state: All they need to do is
“arouse his whole body chemistry.” Yep. They’re going to make Napoleon horny.
Oh, dear.
(Napoleon's file: Best U.N.C.L.E. prop ever, right?)
Acting on Longolius’s orders, Tertunian has already programmed
a super-powerful computer with the lurid details of the love lives of all
THRUSH employees. There’s a throwaway line about how this is to uncover ways of
increasing worker productivity, but let’s be real: Longolius, like so many
THRUSH bosses before him, is a garden-variety pervert.
So Tertunian feeds THRUSH personnel records into the computer
to find Napoleon’s “perfect intellectual, emotional, and physical match”. Per
the computer, the ideal mate for Napoleon is a glacial, prickly,
scientifically-minded blond with a thick foreign accent. And since Illya is
currently occupied elsewhere*, the job falls to Mara.
*Oh, I kid, I kid. Even setting my slash goggles aside,
however, I’m willing to place a bet that the initial pitch for this episode ran
something along these lines: “Napoleon meets his computer-selected ideal woman,
and she turns out to be Illya with breasts.” The Mara-Illya comparisons are
just too blatant to be unintentional.
Mara is horrified by this result: All THRUSH agents receive comprehensive
training in the art of seducing the enemy, but she claims to have missed that
semester due to measles: “I meant to make it up, but somehow I got sidetracked
with differential calculus.” (See what I mean? See? It’s easy to imagine Illya
delivering that exact same line, isn’t it?) Nonetheless, she agrees to take one
for the team and shag Napoleon back into his right mind.
She slips into Napoleon’s bedroom, claiming to be an
undercover U.N.C.L.E. agent sent by Mr. Waverly to rescue him. Confused and
sick from the effects of various drugs and interrogation, Napoleon has no
interest in being seduced.
He pushes Mara away and storms out of his room, then
collapses from pain and exhaustion. One of the burly THRUSH gunslingers picks
him up in his arms, carries him back to bed, and tucks him gently under the
covers. It’s ludicrous, and yet not unsexy. The gunslinger, by the way, is the
spitting image of Alison’s hapless husband Donnie on Orphan Black, which surely makes Napoleon/Donnie the crossover
slash pairing no one knew they wanted until just this moment.
Illya arrives in Nowhere. The Geiger counter leads him to
the pocket watch, but the map is missing—the old prospector from the opening scene
found it first and absconded with it.
Stranded for most of his time on screen in a superfluous and
mostly dialogue-free subplot, David McCallum seems hilariously over this episode.
Back at the THRUSH compound, Operation Shag Napoleon escalates.
Mara fixes Napoleon a martini to his specifications (Napoleon takes his with
two onions, the savage), regales him with made-up details of their pre-amnesia
sexual exploits, then slithers around on top of him.
As it turns out, tricking Napoleon into sex is really not
all that difficult.
The map contains lingering traces of radiation from the
pocket watch, so Illya follows the Geiger counter’s signal deep into the
desert, until he comes across the old prospector. Over the man’s protests,
Illya wordlessly ransacks his supplies until he finds the map, which leads to
THRUSH’s desert compound. Illya recruits the prospector to help him break into
the compound and rescue Napoleon.
Meanwhile, a befuddled but agreeable Napoleon continues to
have lots of sex with Mara.
While all this shagging takes place, Longolius and Tertunian
observe Napoleon and Mara on hidden cameras. Despite having had his body
chemistry aroused multiple times, Napoleon shows no sign of having his memories
return. “This whole thing has been a fiasco!” Longolius growls. “Nothing has
been accomplished at all, other than that he’s been having a great time!”
Longolius decides to let Napoleon escape, hoping he’ll lead THRUSH
directly to the stolen map. So Mara shags Napoleon one final time, then gives
him her gun and promises to help sneak him out of the compound. Alas for Mara,
as soon as Napoleon holds her gun, all his memories come flooding back. He suddenly
realizes he’s been the target of THRUSH’s creepy sexual shenanigans.
He is, quite understandably, not happy about this.
Mara wrestles the gun away from him. Longolius orders her to
shoot Napoleon, but she finds herself unable to obey, because, oh yes, she’s fallen
in love with him.
Napoleon makes a break for it. Irate, Longolius locks Mara
and Tertunian inside a little room filled with flashing lights, which he
promises will give them “…a long, long death, with a thousand little flares
burning inside you through all eternity!” Huh. It’s not at all clear what
that’s about. Sounds bad.
At the secret underground entrance to the THRUSH compound,
Illya whips out a tube of exploding toothpaste (…of course Illya has exploding toothpaste) and blasts his way into
the building. While the old prospector lines the tunnels with dynamite, Illya
finds Napoleon, who is battling the THRUSH gunslingers. “It’s me, Illya! Do you
remember?” Illya asks him. Napoleon stares at him in confusion. “Illya?” he
asks blankly. Since we’ve seen that Napoleon has his memories back, it’s
logical to assume he’s just messing with Illya’s head here. I can respect that.
Illya and Napoleon rescue Mara and Tertunian and make it out
of the compound before the old prospector blows the whole place to smithereens.
Back in the saloon, Mr. Waverly presents Mara with an opportunity to erase her
past life: She can use Capsule B to forget she ever worked for THRUSH. If one pill
causes a three-day memory loss, Mr. Waverly figures taking the entire bottle
will erase her memories permanently. There’s a lot of faulty and dangerous
logic involved in that, but Mara solemnly agrees to give it a try.
She gulps down a whole bottle of pills, which causes her to
forget everything about her past life… except for her love for Napoleon. Napoleon
and Mara gaze deeply into each other’s eyes, and then the episode ends,
presumably right before she slips into an irreversible coma after recklessly overdosing
on Capsule B.
A tawdry, sordid, needlessly sensationalistic little episode, start to
finish. I have no complaints.
Comments
This episode is a little mind-boggling, though. I know the sexual politics of the series could sometimes be a little dicey, but this episode is downright rapey. And the resolution, with the mind death, is darker than I'd have expected.
For another project, whenever a good plot analysis or lack of one, escapes me, this is the place to come! Remarkable restraint, skeletal respect, and Preppie Truth-Tellers. The Nowhere Affair has a certain “Star Trekkian” appeal. The equivalent of “Spock’s Brain.” Maybe a good idea! Except nobody can pull it off! The question is, did the Production Crew all call in sick that week! Like, only the floors are looking really shiny! The Regulars look angry, and only the Guest Stars are having fun! Let’s just leave it as MFU’s Headless Horseman! Nobody could see where they were going! For obvious reasons!!
Thank you for having the courage to review it.