The popularity of the James Bond films lead to one of the best espionage action shows on television in the form of the
The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
which had a tone that ran from taught thriller to almost campy fun at
times, but midway through season one we got a delightful blend of
serious spy action, with a nice dash of fun, as secret agent Napoleon
Solo found himself teamed up with a young Kurt Russell.
The
episode has a rather grim beginning as we open on a small Scottish
island where all of the inhabitants seem to have died rather suddenly.
American Napoleon Solo (
Robert Vaughn) and Soviet Illya Kuryakin (
David McCallum)
arrive via helicopter, one that is helpfully named branded U.N.C.L.E.
on the side, which makes one wonder what kind of secret international
agency these guys are running if they label their vehicles so obviously.
The two agents step out of their helicopter wearing 60s versions of
hazmat suits and start to investigate the scene, a scenario that looks
chilling familiar if you’ve seen
The Andromeda Strain
which hit theaters seven years later, and when the pair begin to
investigate the village they soon discover that not one soul is left
alive.
“This man is not sawing wood, he’s dead.”
This
is pretty bleak stuff for your average 60s television show and it gets
even darker, after finding a mysterious crate with a note attached to it
that reads, “
To Highest Authority Open only under controlled conditions”
Solo and Kuryakin load it into the helicopter and then proceed to use
incendiary grenades to destroy the village. They don’t even know the
cause of the mass deaths but whether it's because of the threat of a
possible contagion spreading, or possibly they don’t want word of such
an atrocity getting out, they take extreme measures to get rid of all
evidence of it ever happening.
Meanwhile in Norway we meet our villains.
Much
of the series had Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin facing off against
U.N.C.L.E.’s opposing organization THRUSH but as WWII was not so long
ago when this show aired we occasionally got leftover Nazis and Japanese
villains to fill the roster of threats to the free world. In this
episode the chief villain is General Yokura (
Leonard Strong) and his villainous femme fatale Tomo (
Tura Satana),
and as we are introduced to them we learn that General Yokura is very
angry that agents of U.N.C.L.E. had beaten him to the site and retrieved
what could be an important clue before he could get his own men there.
He quickly gives orders for Solo and Kuryakin’s helicopter to be shot
down, but he didn’t take into account U.N.C.L.E. equipping their
helicopters with air to ground rockets that easily dispatch the bad
guys. Our heroes escape but Kuryakin took a round in the arm and so he’s
basically out of commission for the bulk of the episode.
He is replaced by a young Snake Plisken.
Back
in London offices of U.N.C.L.E. the contents of the crate is revealed
to be a Pinnipedia Otaridae, meaning “finny footed” and “having ears” or
in layman’s terms a common eared seal. An autopsy reveals that the
seal's last meal was a feast of blue-gilled sardines, a very uncommon
variety only found off the coast of Norway. The doctor informs them,
“That the though it is an unmistakenly young seal he unquestionably died of old age.”
Solo noting that all the residents of the island appeared to have been
very old when they died he deduces that some foreign chemical must have
been ingested by the sardines who in turn were eaten by this seal, along
with some of his brethren, and they washed ashore on this lone Scottish
island where the villagers fell victim to it as well. Director Waverly (
Leo G. Carroll)
benches the wounded Kuryakin and sends Solo to the town of Bergen in
Norway to find the origins of the “Age Plague” and if it is a weapon of
an enemy power he is to put a stop to it.
“Relax, what trouble could a single agent have against unknown forces?”
While at the London airport Solo saves a boy by the name of Christopher Larson (
Kurt Russell)
from being run over by a luggage cart, and for some reason this causes
the young man to decide that Solo would be a perfect husband for his
widowed mom. The kid notices Solo’s luggage name tag and states,
“That’s kind of funny name, but I guess I could get used to it.”
He then proceeds to inform Solo that his mom is a very pretty widow and
a good cook, and that he is off to visit his grandparents in Bergen,
Norway,
“Oh, uh, you aren’t married, are you?” he quickly
asks. After Solo walks off to take care of some business Chris goes to
the ticket counter and has his ticket for New York City exchanged for
one to Bergen. Now Robert Vaughn is very suave and cool character but
this kid goes straight into stalker mode just because of one act of
kindness, you got to wonder what his home life was like that he is so
eager to have a new dad.
I guess finding a dad in the 60s was tough business.
The
business Solo had to take care of was checking in with headquarters and
from Kuryakin he learns that their agent in Norway is dead but before
he died he managed to smuggle something to them, a strange oversized
ring and a cryptic message
“Marry the Maiden” but unfortunately
for our heroes the agents of General Yokura were listening in the phone
call and now plan to intercept Solo and retrieve the ring. An agent
tries to deliver the ring to Solo, who is patiently waiting for his
plane, but the man is intercepted by an assassin. Christopher witnesses
the agent being stabbed, who was at least able to kill his assassin, and
Chris is even more shocked when the dying man gives Chris the ring to
deliver to Solo.
“Here kid, try not to get murdered.”
The
traumatized kid boards the plane but he takes a while to finally tell
Solo what he witnessed. Upon taking possession of the strange ring Solo
convinces the kid that what he witnessed was a practical joke that his
friend was pulling, and that the blood he saw was just ketchup. This
subterfuge doesn't last long for when they arrive at Bergen a group of
enemy agents, led by the beautiful and dangerous Tomo, try grab Solo and
retrieve the ring, but our "hero" uses the kid as cover to escape
through the luggage area. The rest of the episode proceeds along these
lines with the villains chasing after Solo and the kid, narrowly
escaping death at every turn, and even at one point they are captured
and are only able to escape when Solo uses a novelty toy that Chris had
as a distraction which allows them to shoot their way out, with the poor
boy still in tow.
Chris is going to have the best “How I Spent My Summer Vacation” essay ever.
While
being “interrogated” by General Yokura Solo learned that the villains
are after a chemical known as J-47 which was developed by a Japanese
scientist during the war in a secret laboratory here in Norway. The man
who developed this accelerated ageing chemical only made one small batch
before he died, having succumbed to
“Romantic fantasies of guilt”
he overdosed himself on the stuff. General Yokura wants that last
batch of the formula and he believes Solo knows where it is. Of course
Solo doesn’t have a clue where the hidden supply is but when he and
Chris arrive in Stromberg he notices a statue called “Maiden of Norway”
and he deduces that putting the oversized ring on the statue’s ring
finger is what the clue was alluding to.
It’s like a Nancy Drew mystery only with a pretty high body count.
Peering
through the ring, once placed on the finger of the statue, Solo sees
that it points towards a cave up on a coastal cliff side. When Chris
climbs up on the statue to see for himself Solo spots a tracking device
on the back of the kid’s belt, obviously planted by General Yokura so he
could follow them to the lost chemical, solo attaches the tracking
device to the collar of a local dog and then yells
“Fetch!” and
tosses a stick into the water. The dog dives in after it and Solo and
Chris beat it to the hills to find the last remains of J-47, with the
hopes that Yokura and company will be busy following the dog. It was a
great plan but unfortunately the dog was also a great tracker and it
manages to follow the pair to the cave.
Man’s best friend my ass.
General
Yokura, Tomo, and a couple of goons arrive at the cave and Solo, Chris
and the dog are soon trapped inside. What Yokura doesn’t know is that
not only did Solo find the hidden chamber where the last metal drum
holding J-47 was placed but he discovered that over the years the metal
drum had rusted through and in time all of the chemical had all poured
out of a hole and made its way down to the ocean below. There is no
more J-47 left, it’s either dried up or washed out to sea where the
sardines ended up eating the stuff. . Solo tries to explain this to
Yokura, who of course doesn’t believe him, and we are then treated to a
nice little gun battle. Solo kills one of the men while Chis knocks
another goon unconscious, and when the man comes to Solo forces him to
call out to Yokura to say that Solo is dead. The happy general enters
the cave only to find himself facing the very not dead Man from
U.N.C.L.E.
Do not screw with Napoleon Solo.
After shooting the General Yokura our hero turns to Tomo and asks,
“What about you? I thought it was the old Japanese custom for the servant to follow the master by hari-kari.” She glibly responds,
“You’ve got the wrong century, Jack.”
I must say that Robert Vaughn makes a pretty badass spy and is
certainly no knock-off James Bond, and the first season of the show was
probably more in keeping with the tone of Ian Fleming’s books rather
than the later Bond movies.
The Finny Foot Affair
is a damn fine episode and is absolutely a great kid’s adventure story
with Kurt Russell playing the part that every red blooded American boy
would dream to have. Who wouldn’t want to be a Junior James Bond?
And meet exotic femme fatales.
The
episode has a sweet epilogue where Solo and Christopher arrive at the
New York City airport and Napoleon is shocked to find out that Chris no
longer finds him to be proper dad material,
“I like you an awful
lot, Mr. Solo, but I still got to take care of mother first. Well she
needs somebody to be around a lot, you know to kiss and stuff. Well,
being a spy and all you probably wouldn’t be able to spend much time at
home. Well that would make my mother awful unhappy.” So Chris decides he needs to shop around a little more for a father.
It’s actually a really sweet moment.
Of
course it has to end on a nice comic moment with Solo spoting Mrs.
Larson who turns out to be a beautiful blonde, and Waverly drags Solo
away before the man can chase after the pair. As televised adventure
shows go
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. was one of
the best and it still holds up remarkably, and seeing a young Kurt
Russell tussling with a gang of villains is just the cherry on the top
of this rather excellent episode.
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