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As a film it shows up the inadequacies of something that was originally designed for the tv screen. A film must be a complete entity for the 90-120 minutes it holds the audience in its thrall and cannot afford the familiarity with characters and scenario that a tv series develops over a longer period. On the screen the film seems to be developed with almost a complete indifference to any characterization Solo and Kuryakin are totally blank, it is just assumed that we know who they are. The film also suffers from a cluttered and frequently absurd plot the red herring about the theft of the belongings is far-fetched and the Wild Goose chase just that. The lack of location work also shows up quite markedly on the screen to stand in for the Himalayan locations, the filmmakers seem to have bizarrely gone and shot in the desert instead of the mountains. Nor does the Hollywood pool locations for the T.H.R.U.S.H. base suggest the Himalayas either. Although in its favour there are some reasonably budgeted sets and shoots on a futuristic looking city location. Still it is a likeable film and is sometimes played with a stylish wit. Theres a rather deadpan wit to it all David McCallum says Luckily I have something up my sleeve,.. and pulls up his trouser cuff; or the ship they pursue to sea, which, as it is seen leaving, reveals its name as The Wild Goose. The two leads invest the absurdities with a patient deadpan. Robert Vaughn plays with an urgent importance and David McCallum, who became a teen sex symbol as a result of the series, a clipped coldness. Some of the shots designed to look up through glass tables, even an action sequence with a car being attacked swung on the end of a hook or the credits which dramatically freeze-frame over action shots to give the names of cast and crew, are quite smart. The other theatrically released The Man from U.N.C.L.E. films, all recut from tv episodes, are The Spy With My Face (1965), To Trap a Spy (1966), One of Our Spies is Missing (1966), One Spy Too Many (1966), The Spy in the Green Hat (1966), The Helicopter Spies (1967) and The Karate Killers (1967). The series was also revived as the tv movie The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E.: The Fifteen Years Later Affair (1983).
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