Ah, “The Hong Kong Shilling Affair”: Proof positive that even
Season One could churn out the occasional terrible episode.
We open in Hong Kong, where Illya, barefoot and dressed as a
Chinese rickshaw driver, a conical hat pulled down over his face to hide his blond
hair and blue eyes, crouches outside a waterfront bar called the Smiling Fish
and keeps a careful watch over boats arriving at the harbor. A Western businessman
hops in for a ride; Illya dons a ghastly Chinese accent and replies, “So sorry,
rickshaw not free now. Honorable gentleman try someplace else.”
Ugh. Yeah. I mean… Yeah. On several other occasions, I’ve
discussed this show’s cheerily dated and cringe-worthy approach to foreign cultures,
particularly when it comes to the many disguises of Illya Kuryakin, Man of a
Thousand Faces, so I’m going to move right along, though I’ll quickly note that
this episode will get much worse. Consider bailing out now if you’re not
feeling up to dealing with this sort of thing.
A small boat arrives at the harbor. The passengers, a shady
courier named Max (Joseph V. Perry) and his beautiful cheongsam-clad companion,
Heavenly Cortelle (Karen Sharpe), climb onto the shore. Max passes a few coins
in payment to the boat’s pilot, a young Asian woman who is carrying a purse
embroidered with a dragonfly.
Napoleon, who is keeping a watch over the harbor from the
balcony of a nearby building, takes a few moments to ogle Heavenly, then contacts
Illya to compare notes on the arrival of the couple. Illya complains to his
partner that his bare feet are getting cold. Napoleon: “Your suffering
distresses me, but not very much.” This is the single best line of this
episode. That’s it. That was the high point. There’s no need to watch any
further; it’s all over. Go home.
In a lavish mansion belonging to a corrupt toy manufacturer
named Cleveland (Gavin MacLeod, Captain Stubing on The Love Boat), a coterie of villains have assembled at the behest
of a reclusive contraband dealer named Apricot to bid upon stolen bits of
American military intelligence and weaponry. In Cleveland’s living room is a
statue of a Japanese armored warrior, which Apricot uses as her avatar so she
can participate in the auction remotely, communicating to the group via a
transmitter inside the statue. Apricot announces that a valuable auction item
has arrived in Hong Kong and will soon be delivered to her. The starting bid
for the unidentified item will be one million dollars.
Max and Heavenly, who are transporting the valuable item in
question, enter the Smiling Fish bar. They’re greeted by a hulking thug named
Merry, who is played by Richard Kiel, the seven-foot-plus actor who built a
career out of playing tall, lurking heavies; he’s probably best known as Jaws
in The Spy Who Loved Me. Merry and
Max attempt to negotiate for the item, but soon resort to fisticuffs.
A dashing young former Marine named Bernie (handsome Route 66 star Glenn Corbett) wanders
into the bar while Max and Merry are bashing each other over the heads with
chairs. While Bernie and Heavenly bat their pretty eyes at each other and fall
madly in love at first sight, Merry whips out a knife, stabs Max in the gut,
and saunters off.
Heavenly frantically searches through Max’s pockets for the
item. Max gasps out, “After all the things I’ve done, I get killed for a pine
tree shilling,” then mutters something about a dragonfly before dying.
Heavenly and Bernie flee from the bar, whereupon they find
themselves ambushed by Illya and Napoleon. Heavenly bolts to safety, but
Napoleon and Illya apprehend Bernie.
They haul him into U.N.C.L.E.’s Hong Kong headquarters,
where he tells them all about Max’s murder and last words. Napoleon, who knows
everything, explains that a pine tree shilling is a rare seventeenth-century
American coin: valuable, but certainly not worth the millions Apricot is
expecting to get for it. Illya and Napoleon can’t be bothered to do their own
assignment—i.e. find the shilling and figure out why it’s so important—so they offer
Bernie a thousand dollars to tackle the dangerous part of their job for them. Bernie,
who is anxious for a chance to run into Heavenly again, agrees to pose as Max’s
business partner and offer to sell the shilling to Apricot.
So Bernie goes to the Dragon’s Tooth, a fancy club and known
hangout of Apricot, where he encounters Heavenly and tells her he has the pine
tree shilling in his possession. Let’s stop here for a moment and discuss
Heavenly, who is the strangest and most tedious character in this strange and
tedious episode. “Heavenly Cortelle” is not an Asian name, and Karen Sharpe is
not an Asian actor, but nonetheless, I highly
suspect this character is supposed to be Chinese. Heavenly speaks stiffly and
slowly and entirely without contractions (there are some very, very odd line
deliveries in this episode, all of which come from Heavenly), and her eyeliner
is flicked up at the ends to give a hint of a slant, and then there’s the
cheongsam… Draw your own conclusions. In any case, Heavenly is bloody awful.
Meanwhile, back at U.N.C.L.E. headquarters, Napoleon eavesdrops
on Bernie’s conversation with Heavenly via a hidden transmitter while Illya
plays mahjong with Jasmine, an agent from the Hong Kong office. Jasmine is
played by prolific Chinese-born actress Irene Tsu; she gets very little to do
here, but she’s lovely and smart and charming. Hey, you know one quick change
that would’ve vastly improved this episode? Casting Irene Tsu as Heavenly.
After the meeting with Heavenly, Bernie disobeys Napoleon’s
orders and heads back to the Smiling Fish, for some never-clarified reason. He’s
ambushed by Merry, who ties him up in a fishnet and dangles him from the
ceiling and threatens to kill him unless he surrenders the shilling. While
handsome and dashing, Bernie is an unlovable shmuck, so I really can’t be
bothered to care overmuch about his fate.
Illya and Napoleon arrive at the Smiling Fish and hurl gas
bombs around in time to save Bernie from being gutted by Merry. Back at
headquarters, Napoleon pays Bernie his grand and sends him on his way, then
makes a plan to break into Cleveland’s mansion. Illya warns him about possible
attack geese—“They’re not called the watchdogs of the east for nothing!”—then
makes his point by honking loudly and repeatedly. Napoleon looks sad and
bewildered by this, like it’s dawned on him that he’s mired in a very tedious
mission, where nothing about the assignment quite
makes sense, and now his steadfast and loyal partner is making a bad situation
worse by inexplicably quacking at him.
So Napoleon breaks into Cleveland’s mansion by, uh, piling
plastic explosives around the doorknob and blowing it open. There are indeed
geese inside the mansion; they honk at him and cause a ruckus, but by the time
you’ve blasted the door open to get inside, maintaining a stealth approach during
a burglary is probably a lost cause anyway. Bernie, who continues to be a twit,
trails Napoleon into the mansion and insists on helping. Napoleon is
monstrously displeased with his interference.
After kicking Bernie out, Napoleon is captured by Merry,
whereupon he’s bound and gagged and delivered to Cleveland, who reassembles his
coterie of miscreants for an impromptu auction. Assuming Napoleon is Max’s
partner, Cleveland offers to sell him to the highest bidder, who may then try
to torture the location of the coin out of him: “I offer you one body ready for
interrogation.” This moderately kinky plot twist serves to briefly heighten my
interest in this dud of an episode.
Apricot, speaking again through the statue, announces that a
Mongolian warlord is on his way to Cleveland’s mansion, anxious to bid on the
coin: “His name is Toqtamish Kipchak. He’s traveling as Jeremiah Krim, and he
will identify himself to you with the password, The tundra is fertile.” Sometimes this show is so giddily ridiculous
that it’s the most delightful thing on earth, like a glass of champagne
garnished with gumdrops and Pixy Stix, and then sometimes it’s just plain
ridiculous.
Bernie, who’s been lurking outside the mansion, calls the
police and anonymously reports the evil shenanigans going on inside. When the
cops arrive, Cleveland urges Merry to smuggle Napoleon out through a secret
exit. Merry, carrying a bound and groggy Napoleon, runs into Bernie and beats
him unconscious. To avoid detection by the police, he dumps both Bernie and
Napoleon into a dumpster, which is picked up and emptied into a passing garbage
truck.
The truck dumps its cargo into the harbor. Bernie and
Napoleon are saved from drowning by Heavenly, who dives into the water and
pulls them to safety. Heavenly and Bernie proclaim their love each other and smooch
energetically while a still bound-and-gagged Napoleon watches from the
sideline, wondering how he ever got so badly sidelined on his own show. Bernie
decides to work for Heavenly instead of for U.N.C.L.E. and runs off, leaving
Napoleon behind.
So Illya and Napoleon kidnap Toqtamish Kipchak, aka Jeremiah
Krim, at the airport, whereupon Illya takes his place and shows up at
Cleveland’s mansion for the shilling auction disguised as a Mongolian warlord.
I am sooooo close to giving up on this episode, you won’t even
believe it.
The makeup and heavy prosthetics used to disguise Illya as
Kipchak look decently convincing, actually, even though David McCallum’s
ability to speak while wearing the makeup was obviously impaired and thus all
of Illya’s dialogue is overdubbed (poorly
overdubbed: Illya-as-Kipchak’s lines have a weird electronic echo, like
listening to a radio transmission from a great distance). Anyway, Illya amuses
himself at the auction by hurling misogynistic insults at the evil Madame
Claudile (Lilyan Chauvin): “This is no place for a woman! … Among my people,
when a woman dares oppose Kipchak, I have her flogged and dragged behind the
wild horses.” Madame Claudile, who might be this sorry-ass episode’s unsung heroine,
responds to this crap with weary, eye-rolling disdain.
Cleveland finally explains the importance of the shilling
(just FYI, all of the assembled villains have been sitting around bidding
millions of dollars for this shilling despite having no idea why it’s so valuable; they’ve all been taking Cleveland at
his word that it’s worth it, which totally seems like reasonable behavior for a
gaggle of global terrorists and corrupt world leaders): It’s made of a super-strong
metal impervious to damage, which is used in the nosecones of American
long-range missiles.
Anyway, while all this is going on, Cleveland spots Heavenly
and Bernie hanging out on his rooftop, spying on the action. He smashes through
the skylight and sends them tumbling into the living room, whereupon they’re
captured by Merry. Apricot, wearing a mask to disguise her face, pops up and
announces that Illya is an imposter, which gives Illya the perfect opportunity
to dramatically rip off his prosthetic mask, Scooby-Doo-style.
Through a series of events that make precious little
sense and are too ridiculous to recap, everyone travels from Cleveland’s
mansion to the Smiling Fish, where Napoleon shows up with the police in tow.
Illya notices that Apricot is carrying a purse embroidered with a dragonfly and
realizes the importance of Max’s dying words: To keep the shilling hidden, Max
gave it to Apricot, who was disguised as the boat pilot who ferried Heavenly
and Max across the harbor. The police arrest Cleveland, Apricot, and Merry,
whereupon Heavenly reveals herself to be an undercover police lieutenant. While
Illya and Napoleon look relieved that this long and tiresome episode is finally
coming to a close, Heavenly and Bernie make out behind the bar; they remain out
of sight of the camera the entire time, because, as it turns out, poor Glenn
Abbott injured himself badly while filming the stunt where Bernie falls through
the skylight and ended up in the hospital; a stand-in was used for the
remainder of the episode.
Well! That was pretty relentlessly ungood! A rare misstep
from the glory days of Season One, where the stellar episodes far outnumber the
clunkers.
Comments
I sometimes think there was some kind of challenge to disguise Illya in as many non-racially-appropriate ways as possible. The amount of times he's 'comically' disguised as Asian or Spanish or so on...
To me this episode is notable for yet another trouser-stealing gag, which seems to be a Season 1 thing. I enjoyed Illya quacking and playing mah jong. But it is pretty dire.
Vintagehoarder -- yeah, what are all the agents in UNCLE's Hong Kong office doing while Illya is disguising himself as a Hong Kong native? Surely they had someone they could send in...