In
“The Quadrapartite Affair,” a scientist in Yugoslavia, Dr. Raven, is infected
with a terrible “fear gas.” His grown daughter, Marion (Jill Ireland) manages to return to the States and warn U.N.C.L.E.
about the situation.
Ilya
Kuryakin (David McCallum) is assigned to protect her, should the forces of
THRUSH seek to capture her. But a
delivery man drops off a box of chocolates that emits the fear gas, incapacitating
the agent.
Consumed by fear, Ilya is
unable to save Marion.
Napoleon
Solo (Robert Vaughn) stages a dangerous rescue mission of Marion, freeing her
from imprisonment on the yacht of a deadly THRUSH operative, Gervaise Ravel
(Anne Francis).
Then, Napoleon, Marion
and Ilya head to Yugoslavia to meet up with a local scoundrel who may be able
to provide information about the fear gas, first developed in World War
II.
But can they trust Milan Horth
(Roger C. Carmel)?
The
“Quadrapartite Affair” opens with the unusual sight of our favorite U.N.C.L.E.
operatives breaking the fourth wall and introducing themselves to the audience.
After a narrator reveals the HQ in an “ordinary
tailor shop” (or “is it?”), Solo, Kuryakin and Waverly all tell us their names,
and their positions in the organization.
I suppose this was deemed necessary, to make certain that viewers were caught
up with the details of the series, but today it nonetheless plays as a bit
strange, and labored. Imagine if, on
Star Trek, Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy)
suddenly broke the fourth wall, addressed us directly, and began discussing the
details of Starfleet hierarchy.
Otherwise,
this early episode of the series in notable, perhaps, for the increased role
played by Kuryakin.
The Soviet agent comes across in the episode as supremely
self-confident, but also physically edgy in a way that Solo is not, really. Solo is
dashing and debonair. Kuryakin, it is
clear -- especially from his flirtations with Marion -- is more direct, or more
basic. There is real attraction in the air here, and that may be a result of the
fact that McCallum and Ireland had been married since 1957. They starred in
five episodes of Man from U.N.C.L.E. together, the last in 1967.
One
extremely impressive aspect of “The Quadrapartite Affair” is the interlude aboard Gervaise’s yacht. Solo breaks Marion out
of the brig, and then must get her off the ship, which is sailing in New York
Harbor.
The chase goes up to the deck of ship,
over the deck roof, back down to the deck, up and down stairways, and finally
onto a waiting skiff, and is genuinely exciting. There is no fakery or studio-bound footage
here, and it looks like Vaughn and Ireland really jump onto the boat’s bow
seconds before it speeds off. This is a sustained, well-directed action set-piece, and a nice reminder who well assembled some 1960s cult-television really was.
The
main threat of the episode a “fear gas,” is one that, for some reason, was
extraordinarily popular in 1960s cult-television. An episode of Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea (also from 1964) called “The Fear Makers” involved fear
gas.
Similarly, an episode of Batman
(1966 – 1968) saw Shame (Cliff Robertson) unleash a similar type of fear gas on
the Dynamic Duo.
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