In Lisbon, Illya poses as a cabbie and drives Napoleon along
a winding mountain road in search of the current hideout of Pharos Mandor, the exiled
second-in-command of all of THRUSH. Following a failed coup attempt, Mandor has
turned traitor against his former compatriots, supplying U.N.C.L.E. with vital
information about THRUSH’s inner workings in exchange for great sums of cash.
Illya and Napoleon are trailed by a THRUSH agent operating under the orders of
Valandros (Nehemiah Persoff), Mandor’s former protégé and current arch-nemesis.
A squadron of Mandor’s personal bodyguards swoop down the hillside and mount an
attack. They murder the THRUSH agent, kidnap Napoleon, and leave poor Illya stranded
on the side of the road with his totaled cab.
Napoleon is whisked off to a lavish gated villa to meet with
Mandor, who is played by Hawaii Five-O’s
effortlessly sleek and cool Jack Lord. This is a season four episode, which is
another way of saying it’s really not any good—the pacing is sluggish, the
script is sloppy, and nothing quite
makes cohesive sense—but Lord’s Mandor is pretty consistently terrific. Much of
the first half of this episode just features Napoleon and Mandor hanging around
the posh villa together, sipping cocktails and looking handsome in their nice
suits and exchanging veiled threats while trying to outclass and out-cool each
other. As fond as I am of Napoleon’s easy sophistication and unruffled charm, I
have to give the edge to Mandor.
Mandor has already given U.N.C.L.E. crucial information that
has led to the elimination of THRUSH outposts in Turkey and South Africa. Now,
he wants U.N.C.L.E. to kill Valandros, who is hell-bent on wreaking terrible
vengeance against his old friend for betraying THRUSH. In exchange, Mandor will
give Napoleon a vital piece of intelligence: the names of the THRUSH leaders in
Moscow, London, and New York. Napoleon refuses to kill Valandros, on the
grounds that U.N.C.L.E. is not in the assassination business.
Somewhere nearby, Valandros lurks in his lair, plotting his
revenge on Mandor. Valandros is in possession of a staggeringly powerful,
quasi-magical computer, which has carefully synthesized all known facts about
Mandor and, following an in-depth analysis of his personality traits and
behavioral patterns, has produced a series of snazzy dot-matrix images of the
disguises Mandor is most likely to don whilst in hiding:
Mandor is probably not losing much sleep worrying that
THRUSH’s supercomputer is going to track him down anytime soon.
Mandor, who is a crafty fellow, is actually playing
U.N.C.L.E. against THRUSH: As soon as U.N.C.L.E. uses the leaked intelligence
to eliminate all his enemies within THRUSH, Mandor plans to stage another coup
and take complete control of his former organization. As the next stage in his
plan, Mandor calls up Valandros and anonymously tells him where he can find a
cute, helpless blond Russian U.N.C.L.E. agent.
So Valandros sends some THRUSH goons to kidnap Illya, who is
still waiting patiently by the side of the road with his totaled cab. (Illya
flags down the THRUSH jeep and tries to hitch a ride, then seems stunned when a
cluster of uniformed goons pull guns on him. Where are your survival instincts,
lad?). The goons drag Illya to Valandros’s lair, where Valandros orders his men
to brutally torture him into telling them where Mandor is hiding.
Cue the gratuitous Illya torture! Why, we could almost be
back in the lurid heyday of season two’s peak Illyasploitation, back when Illya
was getting tied up and/or stripped and/or tortured pretty much every single
episode.
Back at the villa, Napoleon hangs out in the courtyard,
catching some rays and half-heartedly flirting with Mandor’s pretty female companion,
a fashion model named Leslie (Leslie Parrish). Napoleon urges her to leave
while she can; Leslie explains that she’s a prisoner in this place. She was
lured to the villa to attend what she thought would be a fancy jet-set party,
but instead found herself trapped. It’s not quite
as unsavory as it sounds: Of Mandor, Leslie quickly points out, “He never even
made a pass!”
Wow. Let’s discuss Napoleon’s sunbathing outfit. This is…
well, this is something. It’s some kind of matching two-piece patterned shorts
ensemble, complete with terrycloth collar and cuffs, and it is amazing. Since Napoleon didn’t pack a
suitcase for his unscheduled vacation at the villa, we can assume it’s a loaner
from Mandor. The outfit is almost bizarre enough to draw attention away from
the unprecedented amount of leg Robert Vaughn is flashing in this scene.
Almost.
So much leg, Vaughn. So much.
Mandor (who is wearing a seersucker bathrobe with an ascot knotted
over his bare chest, because everyone at the villa has, in the greatest
possible way, gone sartorially batshit), takes Napoleon aside for a friendly chat.
He cheerily informs him that he turned Illya over to Valandros for a little
recreational torture, and if Napoleon wants his partner back in one piece, he’s
probably going to have to do Mandor a solid by killing Valandros. Once again,
Mandor rocks. Between his genial sophistication and his diabolical scheming, he
seems more like a Bond character than a run-of-the-mill THRUSH baddie, which
makes total sense; after all, Jack Lord was the first of many actors to play James
Bond’s longtime ally, CIA spook Felix Leiter, back in 1962’s Dr. No. Mandor, truly, is living the THRUSH
dream: He’s keeping an U.N.C.L.E. agent as a pet, dressing him up in weird and
vaguely emasculating outfits while manipulating U.N.C.L.E. into serving as his
unwitting patsy in his war against his arch-nemesis. There are the bones of a truly
rip-roaring episode here, hidden beneath season four’s signature layers of tedium
and bloat.
Mandor pats Napoleon on the head and sends him off to rescue
Illya. He even gives him a cute, sporty red convertible as a parting gift.
Mandor is evil, yet awesome. While Napoleon zips away from the villa, Leslie
pops up from the backseat and surprises him. Mandor, who has a soft spot for
the ladies, tells Napoleon via a hidden microphone that he’s decided to let
Leslie escape.
Over the course of this show, there are moments when it
becomes blatantly obvious that Robert Vaughn circa 1965 is the exact same
person as Kyle MacLachlan circa 1991. While this discovery can be momentarily
disconcerting, I for one am delighted and dazzled by this incontrovertible
evidence that time travel really does exist.
Napoleon and Leslie head to U.N.C.L.E. headquarters in
Lisbon, where they meet up with Mr. Waverly and Lisa Rogers. Napoleon frets
that Leslie is still at risk from Mandor, so Lisa volunteers to guard her in
the penthouse suite of a fancy hotel. When Leslie scoffs at Lisa’s capacity to
protect her from harm, Lisa dumps out the contents of her purse and shows off
her arsenal of secret weapons: She’s got a poison-tipped lipstick, an adorable
little gun, and a perfume atomizer filled with a gas that will, as Mr. Waverly
discreetly puts it, “curb one’s aggressive instincts.” Lisa coolly reveals that
she’s had to use it six times, but only twice in the line of duty. Napoleon
looks chagrined at this.
The implied joke here is that Lisa has whipped out her spray
to ward off Napoleon’s unwanted advances on four occasions. This is not so much
a joke as it is deeply horrific and unsettling—“Ha,
ha, our much-loved protagonist is a predatory rapist!”—so I prefer to interpret
this scene thusly: Lisa can’t stand Napoleon, and thus sprays him with mace at
every possible opportunity (“Hey, Lisa, did you happen to find that file… holy
crap, woman, why do you keep doing that?”).
Then Lisa and Napoleon diffuse the tension by engaging in a
weird, lengthy competition as to who can make the goofiest facial expression.
Then Napoleon finally heads off to rescue Illya. About damn
time, Napoleon.
Because this is a season four episode, and because all
season four episodes are bloated and flabby and padded out with unnecessary filler,
most of Act Three is devoted to following Napoleon as he slooooowly breaks into
Valandros’s lair: He sloooowly
approaches a barbed-wire fence, then he sloooowly
wriggles under the fence, then he sloooowly
climbs up the side of the wall, then he sloooowly
makes his way through Valandros’s mansion, then he sloooowly takes an elevator down to the prison level… At long last,
Napoleon finally—finally!—arrives at the cell where Illya is being kept.
Napoleon breaks into Illya’s cell. By this point, Illya’s
brain has been turned into scrambled eggs from all the relentless torture, so
he stumbles around and babbles nonsensically and gets underfoot while a
long-suffering Napoleon tries to free them both. Napoleon literally ends up
taking Illya by the hand and leading him to safety. “Illya? Is my name Illya?”
Illya wonders aloud. “Who cares?” Napoleon snarls in reply.
Mr. Waverly, with Leslie in tow, meets up with Illya and
Napoleon, who have escaped from the lair in Napoleon’s sporty little red
convertible. Meanwhile, THRUSH Intelligence finally manages to locate Mandor’s
villa, so all of Valandros’s goons jump on their scooters and zip off for an
invasion. While both U.N.C.L.E. and THRUSH converge on the villa, Mandor bops
on over to Valandros’s now-unprotected lair and calmly murders Valandros.
It finally dawns on Napoleon that Mandor has been
manipulating U.N.C.L.E. every step of the way. He returns to Valandros’s lair
and, with Illya’s help, tries to apprehend Mandor. Illya’s brain is still
cabbage, so Napoleon once again has to physically take him by the hand and lead
him into the lair. This is very sweet and kind of sexy and absolutely ridiculous.
Hey, Napoleon? Maybe Illya should sit this one out. Leave him in the car with
Mr. Waverly and Leslie, and handle this on your own. Just as Napoleon and Illya
arrive on the scene, Valandros rises up and, with his dying breath, shoots
Mandor in the back.
And then the episode ends with a weird and borderline nonsensical
scene in which Napoleon shows up in a tux to take Leslie out on a date. For no
reason other than to provide fanfiction authors with valuable fodder, Illya
poses as Napoleon’s chauffeur and accompanies them. Napoleon presents Leslie
with a book listing the names of all the millionaires in the United States and
Europe; ignoring the suggestion that she’s a gold-digging floozy, Leslie seems
genuinely happy to receive the gift.
Season four, man. You are a strange and deadly beast, season
four.
Comments
I wondered why Napoleon took Illya back in with him rather than leaving him in the car. It is sweet, but ill advised. But at least I get to see more Illya, and in that woeful and depressing season I'll take what I can get.
Google "Ken Doll 1961" (or see the picture on the "Ken (Doll)" Wikipedia entry, and you'll see what I mean. Same outfit, different fabric. Same amount of leg showing.