The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964–1968): Season 3, Episode 2 - The Sort of Do-It-Yourself Dreadful Affair - full transcript

Solo is attacked by a cyborg (a mostly electronic being with some human organs) while on a mission. Later, it's discovered that a Thrush front company is seeking a $1 billion loan. Eventually, Solo and Kuryakin uncover a plot to mass produce cyborgs.

[CLATTER NEARBY]

[GUNSHOT]

[GUNSHOTS]

[GUNSHOTS]

Oh, yes. Oh, yes, yes...

[DOOR OPENING]

It happened. She just twisted the head off
and walked away.

No offense, Napoleon...

...but she probably thought
the dummy was you.

That's not funny. It's true.

After you had put two full clips
of bullets into her?



Seems reasonable.
She did it in a fit of pique.

Goodbye.

Come in, gentlemen.

How do you feel, Mr. Solo?

Oh, I feel fine, sir, thank you.

Yes, I thought you'd say that.

Mr. Kuryakin...

...we've managed to secure a copy
of Thrush's current financial report.

Care to examine it?

Total assets:

$1,654,420,749.

I think we can dispense with the tone
of naked greed, Mr. Kuryakin.

ILLYA:
Sorry, sir.

Point is that Thrush is attempting
to borrow a substantial sum of money...



...from the Swiss Fiduciary Bank.

But why?

They would appear to be quite solvent.

More so than we are, I daresay.

I'm quite sure they're able to support
their normal activities with ease.

It would follow
that this particular enterprise...

...is, well, hardly a normal one.

And so they go outside for financing
behind a dummy front?

WAVERLY:
Of course.

Happily, our Zurich branch
was quite alert.

Then I'll be leaving for Switzerland?

No.

Whatever their project is, it seems
to originate here in the United States.

Swiss Bank is sending an appraiser
to gauge solvency as collateral on the loan.

What will be my cover?

You, Mr. Kuryakin, will be the vice president
of the local branch.

You'll try to look like a banker?

Wait.

I thought that was my assignment.

Originally, yes.

Now Mr. Kuryakin will have to be briefed
to take over for you.

Oh, what am I to do, uh...?

Rest, Mr. Solo.
You've been working much too hard.

This latest episode only confirms
a preliminary diagnosis...

...the medical section
has had on you for some time.

The medic--?

Uh, sir, I was attacked.

Yes, of course.

By a woman with the ability
to tear apart a steel cage...

...who was just about to kill you when she
suddenly turned around and walked away.

Well, don't worry
about not getting the correspondence...

...from the pawn-shop safe, Napoleon.

Our Zurich section managed
to get the information at their end.

Look, everybody here seems
to think that for some reason, I'm--

Now, uh, the Triptych Section
has set up reservations for you...

...at a spa in the Grand Bahamas.

Just think, Napoleon. All those lovely
women waiting to give you a massage.

Lots of rest, peace of mind and body.

Il don't need any rest,
ll don't need any peace of mind, I--

Mr. Kuryakin, will you help Mr. Solo
pack a few necessities?

Yes, sir.

DIRECTOR:
That's good, Andy, now hold it.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Now make it look like Mata Hari.

DIRECTOR:
Okay, Andy, make this real good, huh?

Now, the client's gonna love this one.

DIRECTOR:
Look, look real irresistible, you know?

Hey, Muriel, Muriel, Muriel.

DIRECTOR:
Hey, where are you going?

Hey, what are you doing? Cut.
For crying out loud, you're not through yet.

That was my ex-roommate.
She ran out on three months' rent...

...and left me with a big phone bill.

[MACHINES HUMMING]

[WHISTLING)

[MACHINE DRONING]

Dr. Pertwee.

[PERTWEE HUMMING]

Dr. Pertwee.

Oh, Mr. Lash, and Margo.

How very nice to, uh, um...

How are you? What's new? Uh...

Have you seen my, uh, um...?

Dr. Pertwee, I understand your Model A-77
is still wandering the streets.

Uh-huh, yes.

Um, er, Dr. Zohmer there, you see,
he programmed the model...

...to protect the safe
in that, um, pawn shop.

Then something happened
to confuse the relays.

So it's probably still looking
for that, uh, um, intruder.

You have made a serious error.

It was a very hurried job.

Margo, I think you'd better call Disposal.

But, Mr. Lash,
I have been a loyal Thrush employee.

I have worked on this project
for three years.

This is my first mistake.

How unfortunate you won't be able
to use us as a reference...

...on your next position.

Mr. Lash, Dr. Pertwee.

I, uh-- I've made a mistake.
This is my first mistake.

Don't do this, please.
It's my first mistake.

ZOHMER: No, no!
- What are you going to do with him?

Uh, we have a pension plan.

He'll be well taken care of.

PERTWEE:
Oh, I'm so glad.

I was afraid you were going
to, um, fire the poor man.

Thrush is a very progressive organization.

We don't fire our employees.

Now, Dr. Pertwee,
what are you going to do?

We can't have the A-77
wandering about New York fully primed.

Well, uh, as I've already told you...

I think I've already told you.

Yes, of course, I've already told you.

Doctor, we cannot afford to have
our working model fall into enemy hands.

Precisely what can you do, Pertwee?

Well, it might take me a little time,
but, uh, I can cut in the self-destruct.

Now, that will stop the model,
and then, uh...

Don't worry, Napoleon, just think
about all those Nordic women...

...waiting to, uh, massage
your poor tired body.

You'll return as good as new.

I'm as good as new now.

I admit I'd enjoy having
a few Nordic women...

...massage my poor tired body
occasionally.

But not...

lllya.

Illya!

[GUNSHOT]

It's no use, lllya. It won't do any good.

[GUNSHOTS]

I think the bullets
did some good after all.

No, it wasn't the bullets.

There were some holes in her clothing,
but not a single shell entered her body.

They must have bounced off.

- Uh, what else did you discover?
- Well...

[FINGERS SNAPPING]

For openers, this cupcake
hasn't got an appendix.

Well, what's the big deal?
ll don't have one either.

Well, not only has she no appendix,
but she has no spleen, no liver...

...no kidneys, no larynx,
no salivary glands.

And in case this
hasn't reached you sufficiently...

...she only has two-thirds of her brain.

[DOCTOR LAUGHS]

But that doesn't really matter,
because the other two lobes...

...are composed chiefly of colloid plastics
and permeable animal matter...

...liberally seeded
with printed circuits, electrodes...

...ceramic breakers,
and various other odds and ends...

...you might find among the paper clips
of your desk drawer.

That's a robot?

Mm-mm. Not by any means.

A living creature with artificial parts.

A composite, something Burke and Hare
might have gathered in graveyards...

...if this were Edinburgh, 18th century.
Heh, heh.

A sort of do-it-yourself dreadful.

And, uh, as an added attraction...

-...this incredibly--
- Oh!

This unbelievably gorgeous face.

Oh, poor Muriel.

Well, I don't know what the proper thing
to do is in a case like this...

...but, uh, I suggest you arrange
a decent funeral for her.

Come, my dear.

It's too much.

I'm afraid we'll have to ask you
a few questions, Miss Francis.

Oh, yes, of course.

As for you, Mr. Solo, it would seem
you are neither delusionary nor overworked.

Well, since my sanity
is no longer in question...

...I'll be off to the spa.

Cease the flummery, Mr. Solo.

You're formally back on this affair.

Miss Francis, could you tell us
a little more about that, uh...?

The unfortunate young lady
we've just left?

Well, I lived with her for two years,
and her name was--

Is. Was, I guess.

Anyway, her name was Muriel Bollinger.

And she just ran off
about three months ago...

...and left me
with a whale of a phone bill.

I mean, I don't even know anyone
in Cleveland, Ohio.

And I never even heard
of Weeki Wachee Springs, Florida.

- Mean, it was almost a $200 bill--
- Yes, yes, yes, quite, quite.

Mr. Kuryakin, take Miss Francis with you.
Follow up this affair.

In some curious way, it seems to be tied in
with Mr. Solo's assignment.

Try to look like a banker.

Herr Toeffler?

Solo?

I was supposed you have been contacted
by Mr. Zwingli.

Yes, well, he was indisposed.
I was sent in his place.

Way I see your credentials, please?

Of course.

Your credentials are acceptable,
but your arrangements are not.

Our contact person was to meet us here
precisely at noon, Mr. Solo.

It is now seven after.

Punctuality is the blood and gristle
of our business.

- Sorry.
- Oh, Mr. Toetfler?

Oh, Mr. Toeffler, how do you do?

I'm Margo Hayward,
I was sent to meet you.

[TOEFFLER SPEAKS FRENCH]

Miss Hayward, this is Mr. Solo
of our American branch.

- How do you do?
- How do you do?

Would you care to join me?
Our car is waiting to take us to the plant.

Why., I'd be delighted to. Mr. Solo?

Certainly.

All right, Distil, you may seal up.

What is this? What's going on?

Security measures, Mr. Toeffler.

[FOLK MUSIC PLAYING]

Are you sure this is the place?

Muriel would rather go out
on a Saturday night with her hair in rollers...

...than miss an appointment
with her fortune teller.

And she never came back?

No, that's the last I saw her, until...

- Until this morning--
- Ooh.

Have I got a heartburn
you wouldn't believe.

Madame Hecubah?

The past, the present, the future.

I know the truth frontwards,
backwards and heretofore.

Sit down.

We're looking for a friend of ours.
Been missing for quite a while.

- She was last seen in--
- What is this, a bust?

I'm clean.

I told that creep
to take his hot radio parts...

...and sell them to Waldo
down the next block.

You can put your mind at ease.

- We're not from the police.
- Honest.

This ain't a shuck?

- Mm-mm.

[HECUBAH SIGHS]

That will be a finif, 5 bucks.

- What?
- I'm telling you the past, ain't I?

Now, she's leaving here, see,
and I hears this screech of a truck.

I goes to look.

She must have stepped right out
in front of the thing...

...because, ooh, it bounced her good.

- She was killed?
- No, uh-uh.

I guess not.
An ambulance came and got her.

That would've been reported to you,
wouldn't it, Andy?

- Not if she didn't have no ID.
- How did you know she didn't?

[SIGHING]

HECUBAH:
Just a guess.

You appropriated her purse, didn't you?

This is a very precarious living,
reading the stars and stuff.

What hospital, you old shrike?

Eh...

I'm a fortune teller.
I'm not supposed to be reliable.

[TOEFFLER SIGHS]

Terribly sorry, gentlemen,
but I must subject you...

...to still another inconvenience.

Oh, this is intolerable, mademoiselle.

In the car for four hours without an idea
where we're going., and now this.

I'm certain Miss Hayward has her reasons,
Mr. Toeffler.

Why, Mr. Solo is very perceptive.

Our project head, Mr. Lash.

The most profuse apologies
for the melodramatics, gentlemen.

Please be seated.

You see, what we have here
is a ripe plum.

Mm, well, just what is this new project,
Mr. Lash?

LASH: My firm intends to free human beings
from ever again having to work...

...on a production line.

I gather you have developed
some new assembly-line principle.

On the contrary, Mr. Toeffler.

It's a completely new concept
of automation.

The use of, uh, shall we say,
artificial humans.

Artificial humans?

But it I had known this...

There is nothing of the crackpot
about this concept, Mr. Toeffler.

We've been in experiment
with our Model A-77 for almost two years.

The results have been compiled
in a brief...

...which I'm sure
you'll find most enlightening.

Call Denise.

The matter seems a little more complicated
than we had anticipated.

What you're after, then,
is not funds for further experimentation?

Exactly, Mr. Solo.

The experimentation
is virtually concluded.

My company wishes
to start production immediately.

TOEFFLER: Uh, precisely what amount
are you seeking from my bank?

A billion dollars, Mr. Toeffler.

A mere billion dollars.

Something wrong., Mir. Solo?

Ahem, no, no, no, I...

I just sometimes get unnerved
when I see pretty ladies.

TOEFFLER:
A billion dollars?

You can do this? Artificial people?

Not only production-line personnel,
Mr. Toeffler...

...but maids, gardeners, street cleaners.

Just think of the potential.

Inexpensive and indestructible.

Slaves that would simply be programmed
to do your bidding.

Think. The day of Aladdin's lamp
is upon us.

A brilliant conception.

Man could at last be a creature
of true leisure.

But they could also be made
to serve as, say, soldiers?

Hmm, no, no, no,
we must remain strictly neutral.

We'd never consent to that use
for our A-77s.

Hmm, but they could be reprogrammed,
couldn't they?

Well, of course, that's possible,
but who would be so imprudent as to do it?

The thought is ridiculous.

Hundreds of thousands
of walking slaves...

...indestructible, armed,
and marching, marching, marching...

...sweeping everything before them.

Taking a country in 29 days.

Invincible.

Not bullets nor bombs nor tanks
could stop them.

Mindless, soulless soldiers
of an army so vast...

...would blacken the land
with its marching, marching, marching.

[MARGO CLEARS THROAT]

Of course, we only wish
to serve mankind.

What a marvelous conception.

[STAMMERING]

But of course, uh, only commercial uses
could be considered in this loan.

And we are neutral--

Ahh, how can we be certain
that this project is far enough advanced...

...to guarantee a loan of this size?

But of course, you need a demonstration.

Denise?

The bar, please.

Hydrofluoric acid, gentlemen.

Please, drink their health, Denise.

Oh, no, no, no, dear me.

What response from Mr. Solo?

Message reads,
"Cat's in the bucket, bucket's in the well."

We received that just before he entered
the Thrush limousine...

...then all transmission went dead.

Have we been able
to triangulate a location of any kind?

They have it jammed completely, sir.

Nothing from any of our stations?

South America? Europe? Nothing?

Wherever their base is, sir,
they've damped it effectively.

They could be anywhere.

What was that message again?

"Cat's in the bucket,
bucket's in the well."

Well, well, well.

Now, gentlemen, I'll show you
the inner heart of our project.

You're a spendthrift, Dr. Pertwee.

I am, uh, um, um, a genius.

Now stop annoying me.

I was hired to cut down
on these ridiculous expenditures.

I am not annoying you.

It says very little for the efficiency
of your operation.

Ninety-seven percent of our project
is within three decimal places...

...of top-point efficiency.

What of the remaining three percent?

PERTWEE:
Oh, Mr. Lash.

Qop. Ha, ha.

Hello, I'm Pertwee.

Well, it's a pleasure to meet you, Pertwee.
Are you all right?

- All right?
- Yes.

Oh, yes, it certainly is.

- Nice meeting you. Goodbye.
- Uh-huh.

That is the head of the project?

He is a genius.

[ILLYA CLEARS THROAT]

Anybody home?

Kind of eerie.

Why would the hospital
send Muriel here?

Well, they said it was at the request
of one of their pathologists...

...a, uh, "Dr. Ansel Pertwee."

This is his private clinic.

But the whole thing
smells very fishy to me.

Well, you know, I feel like one of the
all-time great finks of the western world...

...worrying about a phone bill.

And poor Muriel.

And I was beginning to wonder
it there was anything behind that, uh...

...pretty face.

Well, being a symbol of the consumer culture, ll...

I sometimes forget to be a human being.

[PHONE RINGING]

PERTWEE [ON ANSWERING MACHINE]:
Good afternoon, this is Dr. Pertwee's office.

As, um, a matter of fact,
this is Dr. Pertwee speaking.

I am out right now.

But if you will, uh, recite your message
into your telephone...

...it will be recorded.

Please, uh, uh, wait for a beep tone,
and then begin to speak.

[TONE BEEPS]

You know, I've always--

You better call UN.C.LE.

I can't. The line's busy.

This is the supply room.

We use that area
to store our replacement parts.

I would like to see
the Accounting Department.

- Ow.
- My pleasure.

- Is something the matter, Mr. Solo?
- Uh, yeah, I got a pebble in my shoe.

Will you excuse me for a moment?

- Of course.
- Unh.

Open Channel D.

Control, this is Sheep's Clothing.

Come in, Control.

Open Channel D.

[WHISPERING]
Jammed.

[IN NORMAL VOICE] How about Channel F?
Is there anything new on Channel F?

ILLYA [OVER RADIO]:
Not much, what's new with you?

Illya, is that you?
What are you doing on Channel F?

Don't be presumptuous. You called me.

SOLO [OVER RADIO]:
Where are you?

I'm tied up right now.

I get the feeling
you're not telling me everything.

Well, Miss Francis and I were detained
by the Thrush welcome wagon.

Ah, you've been captured.

It's amazing how you grasp the picture
with such unerring clarity.

Well, I'm all jammed up here.

I can't get through to Waverly,
but I can get to you.

We must be inside
the same jamming umbrella.

For all I know,
we might be under the same root.

What's it look like where you are?

Frankly, it looks like a slow,
unpleasant end to an outstanding career.

Well, I'd like to help you out,
but I've got problems of my own right now.

Can you get out of wherever you are,
get through to Waverly?

Nothing would please me better.

All right, keep in touch.

And thank your mother
for the chicken soup.

[FOOTSTEPS APPROACHING]

-2?
- Solo, there you are.

What took you so long?

Well, it was a bigger, uh, pebble
than I thought.

Did I miss anything?

Well, actually, nothing.

Mr. Lash had something to attend to...

...and Mr. Toeffler's
in the Accounting Department.

- Ah.
- But I'm all yours.

Oh, that's more than I can hope for.

[MARGO CHUCKLES]

Uh, tell me something.
Uh, this gizmo here, what is it?

Well, these multiple-phase selectors...

...pick the most advantageous combinations
of malleable factors...

...working on a thermocouple principle
of analogue differentiation.

- Ah.
- On a one-to-one variant, of course.

Of course, naturally.

Side errors in chromosome translation
are warped through that bank...

...of digital analyzers over there.

Same retention index
as in a simple log-log desatrig duplex slide.

That's what I like about you,
Ms. Hayward. A women of system.

Business-like, orderly, disciplined.

A keen sharp mind
in a soft voluptuous body.

Why, Mr. Solo, I thought bankers
only dealt with one kind of figure.

Hmm. How little you know, my dear.

Excuse me, this needs some adjustment.

If you'll, uh, forgive me,
that correction you just made is a trifle off.

It should've been to the 40th power
instead of the fourth...

...if you'll forgive my impertinence.

Why, you're right.

Ah, Mr. Solo, you're right,
I made a miscalc.

Well, that's my first in many years.

You're taking my mind off my work.

By looking at it dispassionately,
do you suppose it could possibly be...

...because I'm attracted to you?

I think that's just possible,
and if that is the case...

...want you to know
that the feeling is mutual.

- Mr. Solo.
- Hmm?

You see, I work in a very lonely
and restricted field.

Mm-hm.

- Romance is not common with us.
- Mm-hm.

My relations with men
are strictly business.

Well, would that ours
could be a little more than that?

Oh, Mr. Solo.

- Call me Nappy.
- Heh.

How did you come to join Thrush?

How could you possibly have known that?
There's no way you could've known.

Margo, I have aspirations also.

Do you think I wanna be
a white-collar worker all my life?

An appraiser for foreign banks,
a toady for totalers?

I want more than that.

I've been watching,
waiting for something big.

A large rock to help me
across the bigger pond.

You've known all along
this was a Thrush operation?

Yes, and I've always wanted
to join Thrush.

Now that I met you,
I can't wait any longer.

Oh, Napoleon Solo,
you want to join Thrush?

- Yes.
- Unh.

I understand.

But what can you offer Thrush, Mr. Solo?

Mm, initially, I can perhaps
help convince Toetfler...

...to grant you a loan.

- Ah.
- He respects my opinion.

He need not ever know that this project
is for an invincible army...

...of tacked-together soldiers.

Subject to a thorough check
of your past, Mr. Solo...

...let me welcome you to Thrush.

Now if you'll just to Mr. Toeffler.

My pleasure.

What do you think
they're gonna do with us?

That's their problem.

Our problem is to get out
of this little mousetrap.

Heh, heh. Don't be silly,
we're completely helpless.

I was beginning to think
you hadn't noticed.

If only I had something I could use.

I've got a gun.

- You do?
- Mm-hm, it's in my pocket.

Then give it to me.

All right, you two.

Open the gate, or I'll spatter you
all over the walls.

[WHISPERING] Are you crazy?
That's just a prop, it's just a toy gun.

Come on, we haven't got all day.

[WHISPERING]
It's not supposed to be this easy.

You've made a financially brilliant decision,
Mr. Toeffler.

Well, I must confess, I had my reservations
until Mr. Solo spoke to me.

I suggest you get Mr. Toeffler
to a telephone.

Have him advise his bank to get that money
to you before he changes his mind.

- Yeah.
LASH: Ha-ha-ha.

Well, unfortunately, we have only one way
of communicating from this location.

By wireless. We'll have to take Mr. Toeffler
up to the communicating room.

Uh, perhaps I could speak
to Zurich for you, hmm?

Excellent. Mir. Lash and I can discuss
his specific terms while you tend to it.

Take Mr. Solo up to the tower,
unjam the frequency.

Will you excuse me tor a moment?
There's something I must see to.

Of course.

Find them.

I don't care if they're dead or alive,
but find those two.

[GUNSHOT]

Don't move or I'll have to kill you.

I knew Mr. Lash was unhappy with me.

But sending, uh, assassins to kill me
is in very poor taste.

I beg your pardon, sir,
but we're not assassins.

- Who are you?
- Dr. Ansel Pertwee.

Muriel. He's the one who killed Muriel.

Muriel? Killed Mu--?

No, no, honestly.

She was quite dead
when they brought her in to me.

I only used her face
because it was such a lovely face.

So right for my base model.

Oh.

And what did you expect to achieve
with your creation?

Good. Nothing but good things.

I wanted to free men from the--

The drudgery of the assembly line,
give them back their souls.

I don't know how much you know
about Thrush, doctor...

...but they're not in the habit
of giving men back their souls.

Well, what else would they want to do?

Turn your models into assassins, doctor.

- No.
- Instruments of war.

What a pity that history will label
Dr. Ansel Pertwee...

...as the man who streamlined slaughter.

No.

Not "no," doctor, the word is "yes."

What can I do?

You know
where the jamming controls are.

You can start by helping us
get a message out of here.

Okay.

- Okay.
- Okay.

[MACHINES HUMMING]

SOLO:
Hmm.

Well, that looks like, uh...

Manhattan. It is.

I see.

All round the mulberry bush,
right back where you started.

Right again.

And would you unjam, uh, tor Zurich
so I can make my call?

Now, just give them the message.

They'll relay it through Thrush Central.

SOLO:
All right.

Let me write this down so I have it right
when you get transmission started.

[MUMBLING INDISTINCTLY]

All right, go ahead.

Recognition code is as follows:

"William Tell's tale is told.

Toeffler approves $1 billion loan...

...final negotiations under way
at this moment."

Uh, "You may begin preparations
for the underwriting of funds.

Signed, Toeffler and Napoleon Solo."

Are you finished?

- You better go.
- Oh.

Not yet. No, no, I'm not quite finished.

[MARGO SIGHS]

[MARGO MOANING]

Impetuous boy.

I know, but I can't contain myself
any longer.

You see, I have a bright blue flame
that's burning tor you.

Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.

Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.

- Wait.
- Wait for what, Napoleon?

Huh? What?

[BOTH LAUGHING]

SOLO:
Yeah, yeah.

[BOTH MOANING]

Signal frequency from Mr. Solo, sir.

Can you triangulate?

If the channel stays unjammed
long enough.

How do I love thee?

[OVER RADIO]
Let me count the ways.

MARGO [OVER RADIO]: No computations
now, please, Napoleon. Ha, ha.

He used the same miserable line on me.

Triangulation, Miss Townsend,
not alienation of affections.

Sorry, sir.

SOLO: Mm.

[SIGHS]

Your eyes are like two black
Babylonian pearls.

[BOTH GIGGLE]

SOLO [OVER RADIO]:
And your smile...

...is like the smile of a sphinx.

Beast.

Miss Townsend, feed that
through the computer, not out here.

SOLO: Hmm?
MARGO: Feel...

-...tingly all over.
- Mm.

[MARGO GIGGLES]

Drink to me only with thine--

Mr. Solo, what are you doing here?

ILLYA:
Sorry to intrude, but this is an emergency.

Where is the jamming control?

You beast, you're from U.N.C.L.E.

[CLEARS THROAT]

[ANDY SCREAMS]

Mr. Lash, Mr. Lash,
I made a terrible mistake.

[SCREAMS THEN GRUNTS]

- Everybody on the bed.
- Why?

Don't question it, just do it.

After them!

What's going on? Oh, no.

Mr. Lash, Mr. Lash, you promised.
Please, I beg of you.

[STAMMERING]

The channel went dead,
but we had a fix, Mr. Waverly.

Where are they?

New York. They're six blocks from here.

TOEFFLER:
Solo, what are you doing here?

Neutral. We must remain neutral.

SOLO: Ugh.
- Stop.

Solo, I'm neutral.

- Mr. Lash--
LASH: Unh.

Oh, oh, I can't stand it. Oh.

What's going on? No.

I got them where I want them,
caught in the lab.

Seal all doors. Clear the corridors.

Go on, go on.

I'm turning loose the A-77s.

And they're not programmed
to distinguish between friend or foe.

I forgot to ask,
where did you come from, hmm?

I came up from the bargain basement.

[ANDY SCREAMS]

The name of the game, friends,
is Unhinge the U.N.C.L.E. Man.

Come on.

SOLO:
lllya, get him.

He's controlling them from up there.

[LASH SHOUTS]

[LASH GRUNTS]

SOLO:
What are you doing up there?

[ANDY SCREAMING]

[CRASH FROM BELOW]

Illya! lllya!

It's no use, Napoleon. I can't stop them.

Illya, the door!

Can't you do something, doctor?
They're your inventions.

I'll try. Outside.

Look here, Solo, I'm strictly neutral.

Oh, no.

[ANDY SCREAMS]

[TOEFFLER GASPS]

Oh...

TOEFFLER:
Oh, I-- I can't stand it. Look.

I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Unh.

[TOEFFLER GASPING]

SOLO:
I see we lost him.

Like Dr. Frankenstein,
the victim of his own creation.

Well, gentlemen.

It seems you've been able
to settle matters by yourselves once again.

I don't know who you are, sir...

...but I wish
to lodge a most emphatic protest.

Oh, you're Mr. Toeffler, I take it.

Oh, my apologies, Mr. Toeffler.

But I assure you that any discomfort
you may have suffered...

...was in a truly noble cause.

As for you, Mr. Solo,
it was very ingenious...

...the way you managed
to keep the channel open.

But, uh, if the circumstances
should ever arise again...

...may I suggest that you play
your love scenes with a bit less ardor.

Has a very disconcerting effect
on our female employees.

Get somebody to clean up that mess.

DIRECTOR:
Okay, Andy, yeah, yeah, that's good.

Okay, now, yeah, look towards. That's it.

Okay, Andy, make this real good, huh?

Look-- Look real irresistible, you know,
so if any man sees you...

...he'll-- He'll just grab you.

Yeah, that's it.

[ENGLISH SDH]