In Switzerland, Illya and Napoleon visit the local U.N.C.L.E.
branch, which is located inside a watch repair shop, because there’s no country
this show can’t boil down to one salient characteristic. Upon entering the
offices (via a secret passageway behind a grandfather clock, naturally), they
find all the Swiss agents sprawled on the floor, dead from unknown causes.
While they’re reporting the deaths to Mr. Waverly, a THRUSH goon breaks into
their tiny, adorable car and drizzles honey everywhere. Napoleon climbs into
the car, realizes his seat is sticky, and immediately licks it, which is a
totally rational and hygienic thing to do after discovering some kind of
mysterious fluid smeared inside your rental vehicle. “Honey,” he solemnly
informs Ilya.
The THRUSH goon releases a swarm of bees in their general
direction. Attracted by the honey, the bees surround the car and bombard the
windshield. To evade the bees, Illya is forced to drive the car straight into a
lake. Their adorable car bobs on the water for a moment, then sinks beneath the
surface, dragging Illya and Napoleon down to a watery grave.
Next thing you know, Napoleon and Illya are back in New
York, safe and sound, having just regaled Mr. Waverly with a zesty account of
their daring adventure. “A most remarkable escape, I must say,” Mr. Waverly
remarks. We’ll have to take your word for it, Mr. Waverly.
Per Waverly, the Swiss agents died from being stung hundreds
of times by a new breed of super-small, super-lethal bees. “The punctures were
so tiny they were invisible to the naked eye, indicating that the bees
themselves were almost invisible,” he says. Invisible killer bees! It’s an episode about invisible
killer bees! You know what this means? We’re going to get to see actors pretending
to be chased by swarms of invisible bees! I can’t wait. This is going to be amazing.
Waverly zeroes in on a likely culprit behind the bee attacks:
Dr. Swan (John Abbott), noted entomologist and compulsive gambler. Illya nods
in approval, saying, “He published an article not long ago advancing the theory
of breeding a new super-bee.” He turns to Napoleon and asks, “Did you read
it?”, which earns him a look of withering scorn tinged with a smidgen of self-doubt.
Ha! This is a ridiculous episode (invisible
killer bees), but as always, the genius of this show lies in the little
moments between Napoleon and Illya. “Did you read it?” is a fleeting joke, but
there’s a ton going on inside of it: Illya reads entomological journals
recreationally, Illya knows damn well Napoleon is unlikely to read
entomological journals recreationally and thus is deliberately busting his
chops, Napoleon feels superior to Illya for being far too cool to read
entomological journals recreationally, and yet at the same time he hates
admitting Illya knows something he doesn’t. I’ve now grotesquely over-explained
this throwaway line, but I felt it was important to let everyone know exactly
why David McCallum’s innocent delivery of “Did you read it?” sends me into fits
of giggles every time I watch this episode.
Waverly theorizes that Dr. Swan’s gambling debts have made
him vulnerable to exploitation by THRUSH. He orders Napoleon to track down Dr.
Swan; meanwhile, Illya will be questioning all retailers of the special brand
of honey found smeared inside their car. Illya’s task sounds like meaningless busywork,
like something designed to keep him out of everybody’s hair while Napoleon
tackles the important and dangerous part of the assignment. Given Illya’s
formidable ability to muck up even relatively straightforward missions, this is
probably a wise decision on Waverly’s part. Surely Illya should be able to chat
with a few shopkeepers without bringing destruction and ruin down upon all of
U.N.C.L.E., right?
…right?
Hot on the trail of the honey, Illya visits a health food
store, where he witnesses the lovely young clerk, Tavia (Anna Capri), selling
great quantities of the stuff to Mr. Mozart (John McGiver), a THRUSH
agent-slash-killer bee aficionado who also happens to own a bustling dance
studio. After Mr. Mozart leaves, Illya approaches Tavia and reveals his
identity to her. “I’m with the U.N.C.L.E,” he says. “I’m Hungarian,” Tavia
replies, because “Hungarian” is the only personality trait the writers have
given her.
Tavia is… well, she’s very sweet and docile and maybe a
little bit dim; despite all this, Illya becomes hopelessly smitten with her at
first sight, because every once in a great while the U.N.C.L.E. writers feel
the need to convince viewers that, despite his counterculture leanings and his Bohemian
oddness and his ongoing flirtation with Napoleon, Illya is a red-blooded heterosexual
Lothario at heart. Illya convinces Tavia to go undercover as an instructor at
Mr. Mozart’s dance studio to find out what he’s doing with all the honey,
because why should Illya do any dangerous spy work when there’s a perfectly
good untrained civilian available to do it for him?
Napoleon visits a THRUSH-owned casino and befriends Dr.
Swan, who is losing all his money at roulette. The games are rigged to ensure
Swan continues losing, which in turn ensures that Swan remain indebted to Mr.
Mozart, who is financing his gambling habit in exchange for all his valuable
research into the development of invisible killer super-bees. The casino owner
spots Napoleon and instantly identifies him as an U.N.C.L.E. agent (which makes
sense; as we’ve seen often enough, there’s a whole section dedicated to Napoleon in the official THRUSH manual). At the casino owner’s urging, a sexy
cigarette girl saunters up to Napoleon and gives him a poison-laced boutonnière.
Fortunately for Napoleon, some poor slob sitting next to him at the roulette
table borrows the boutonnière for good luck, then immediately drops dead.
Posing as a prospective client, Illya visits Mr. Mozart’s dance
studio for a lesson with Tavia. As he and Tavia dance together, he grills her
on her progress in finding the bees. Tavia has made no progress on that front,
because: a) she’s not a trained spy, and b) she doesn’t seem terribly quick on
the uptake. I hate to harp on Tavia, because she’s quite lovely, but this
episode keeps trying to make Illya + Tavia happen, no matter how awkward and
forced it seems, and wow, these two
have a sad, soggy, dismal lack of chemistry together.
You want to see some chemistry? Mr. Mozart spots Illya, immediately
identifies him as a spy, and sends an
evil, sexy dance instructor (Lorri Scott) to lure him into a trap. Boom! Chemistry!
In their brief scene together, Illya and the dance instructor manage to create
some genuine sparks, right up until the point where she stabs him with a
poisoned needle from a record player and knocks him unconscious.
Mr. Mozart ties up Illya and Tavia and threatens to subject
them to a machine that emits agonizing eardrum-shattering high-frequency waves
unless Illya tells him how to access the ventilation system of U.N.C.L.E.’s New
York headquarters, so he can flood the offices with invisible bees.
Illya refuses. Mr. Mozart activates his machine, which gives
Illya and Tavia a chance to trot out their very finest oh-no-my-eardrums-are-being-shattered
expressions.
After far too long of this nonsense, Illya agrees to
cooperate. So Mr. Mozart packs up a suitcase full of invisible killer bees, and
he and Illya saunter off to U.N.C.L.E. headquarters, ready to murder everyone
in the building.
Napoleon’s search for Dr. Swan leads him to a secret
laboratory underneath the dance studio. Suspicious of Napoleon’s intentions,
Dr. Swan sends his bees to attack him, which means we get to see Robert Vaughn
pretending to fight off invisible bees, which makes this otherwise lackluster
episode totally worth it. Robert Vaughn was born
to pretend to fight off invisible bees.
I think he’s planning on shooting the bees. I love you, Robert
Vaughn.
After swaying Dr. Swan to the side of good, Napoleon rescues
Tavia, then heads over to U.N.C.L.E. headquarters. He’s just in time to watch
via hidden camera from Waverly’s office as Illya leads Mr. Mozart into the
building through the top-secret back entrance.
After beating up one
of his fellow agents to steal his security badge, Illya guides Mr. Mozart
through a million labyrinthine traps and puzzles—electrified fences and hidden
elevators and whistle-operated grates and disguised keypads—and leads him
straight to the ventilation shaft. The first time I watched this episode, I was
pretty sure Illya had a plan up his sleeve to trap Mr. Mozart. Nope. He doesn’t.
He’s just leading a THRUSH agent into U.N.C.L.E. headquarters and showing him
the best way to murder everyone in the building with invisible bees.
It’s not Illya’s strongest episode, frankly.
Before Mr. Mozart can release the bees, U.N.C.L.E. agents
surround him. Mozart forces them to back off by threatening to open the suitcase,
then escapes unscathed. Dr. Swan suggests tracking him down by using sonar to
locate the bees by the vibrations of their buzzing. While Napoleon and Dr. Swan
drive around the city in a sonar-equipped van in search of the bees, Illya, who
somehow still has a job after aiding and abetting in the attempted murder of
all his coworkers, heads back to Tavia’s store to see if Mr. Mozart will pick
up more honey to feed his bees. This is an episode about invisible killer bees, so I don’t feel I should nitpick too much about
how the bees subsist on commercially-prepared honey instead of making their
own, or how the bees only eat one particular brand of honey which is only sold
in a couple of stores in all of New York; yes, the sloppiness is irksome, but
if I start focusing too much on any of this I’ll go mad, so it’s best to just
forge ahead.
Anyway, Illya and Tavia, who now has her old job back,
engage in some more soggy attempts at flirting, and then Mr. Mozart saunters
into the store, clubs Illya unconscious, steals a case of honey, and kidnaps
Tavia.
Illya. Babe.
Sweetheart, sunshine, light of my life, what’s going on with you this episode?
You are not at your sparkling best here.
Upon regaining consciousness, Illya immediately alerts
Napoleon, who seems downright cheerful about how badly his partner has been
botching things lately. “This isn’t your day, is it?” Napoleon chirps merrily,
then informs Illya that they’ve located the bees via sonar.
So Illya and Napoleon head to the roof of a nearby building,
where Mr. Mozart, with Tavia as a hostage, is waiting for a helicopter to take
him and his bees to safety.
A gunfight ensues. The suitcase smashes open, releasing all
the bees, who conveniently kill all the bad guys. Illya shoots the case of
honey, which distracts the bees and saves the world or whatever. “You saved us,”
Tavia tells him breathlessly. “Yes, I did, didn’t I?” Illya smugly replies.
Back at headquarters, Tavia continues her attempts to form a
one-woman Illya Kuryakin Appreciation Society: “I owe everything to Mr.
Kuryakin. We all do!” she tells Napoleon, who looks vaguely nauseated.
The episode ends just before Mr. Waverly (presumably and
hopefully) places Illya on a lengthy unpaid suspension for grotesque
incompetence. Illya, you are an amazing, dazzling creature, but in this
episode, you got outsmarted and outclassed by your partner, who tried to shoot
invisible bees. Raise your game, my love.
Comments
http://www.invaluable.com/auction-lot/the-man-from-u.n.c.l.e.-vintage-original-special-962-c-41d457da03
Have you ever wondered about all the ill-will Solo and Kuryakin must have sown by now among their fellow UNCLE agents? Decking a fellow co-worker with no warning or reason? The little thing with everyone gathered around with all the dangerous tiny bees threatening to be unleashed? Getting knocked out while a senior agent is sitting at a table munching away unawares? Okay, scratch that. How much ill-will has KURYAKIN racked up here...?
I laughed hard at the 'Did you read it?' scene. Its great that Solo was still shooting snarky faces at Kuryakin all the way up to Waverly coming between them trying to desperately move the meeting along. There's a lot of these episodes I always visualize Vaughn breaking the fourth wall just to look at the camera and say, 'Really?'
I was dying at these screenshots! They beg to be captioned and meme'd to all get out!
Robert Vaughn is so wonderful to watch, even in scenes where Napoleon isn't supposed to be doing much. I could watch him pull weird faces and do strange stuff in the background of scenes all day. He's amazing.
Any what's with the throwaway line about his trousers? I feel like there's some hidden joke I missed. I get the feeling illya is uncomfortable with the attention from the honey selling dance instructor. But little disappointed we didn't get to see illya properly bust a move.