The pilot for the TV series "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.," re-edited and released to theaters as a feature.The pilot for the TV series "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.," re-edited and released to theaters as a feature.The pilot for the TV series "The Man From U.N.C.L.E.," re-edited and released to theaters as a feature.
Robert Vaughn
- Napoleon Solo
- (archive footage)
Pat Crowley
- Elaine May Bender Donaldson
- (as Patricia Crowley)
David McCallum
- Illya Kuryakin
- (archive footage)
Robert Brubaker
- Assault Force Member
- (uncredited)
John Bryant
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Rupert Crosse
- Gen. Molte Nobuk
- (uncredited)
Sharyn Hillyer
- Stewardess
- (uncredited)
Roy Jenson
- Assault Force Member
- (uncredited)
Kenner G. Kemp
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Richard Kiel
- Thug in Vulcan's Factory
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
The Pilot for an Entertaining Television Series
This film begins with a man named "Lancer" (Miguel Landa) running through the night to an isolated house in the woods near Arlington, Virginia to escape from other armed men who are chasing him. Once inside he is greeted by a beautiful woman named "Angela" (Luciana Paluzzi) who notices that he has been shot and urgently advises him to seek hospital care by escaping through a window to a nearby car. However, once he gets to the window ledge she turns on a spotlight which reveals his figure to the men and he is shot and killed immediately. Not long after that some men break into a secret entrance to a clandestine agency known as the United Nations Command for Law Enforcement (U.N.C.L.E.) which has been established by several governments to maintain legal order in the world. Having penetrated the first layers of security the men are caught but soon die due to a slow-acting poison they took prior to entering the complex. However, after an examination the conclusion is reached that these men are somehow connected to the murder of Lancer who was one of their agents and that everything points to an assassination plot against the leader of a small South African nation who is due to arrive in the United States shortly. As a result, "Agent Napoleon Solo" (Robert Vaughn) is sent to Arlington to investigate. What he doesn't know is that a secret society known as WASP is behind everything and that they are well aware of his identity and are waiting for him to make his move. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this film was initially made as the pilot for a television series known as "The Man from UNCLE" which played in both the United Kingdom and United States during the mid-60's. Although the television series obviously couldn't consistently compete with the James Bond movies appearing during this time, this theatrical version was quite enjoyable on its own with Robert Vaughn performing quite well in the lead role. Likewise, having two beautiful actresses like Patricia Crowley (as the housewife turned Napoleon Solo's accomplice "Elaine May Bender") along with the aforementioned Luciana Paluzzi certainly didn't hurt in any way either. That said, while it may not have the same recognition as any of the James Bond movies, I enjoyed this film and have rated it accordingly. Above average.
When spies were spies and not gadget men
As a loyal follower of the Man from U. N. C. L. E. When first broadcast on NBC in the 1960's, I recently had the chance to revisit "To Trap A Spy" on a compendium DVD set of films from this series. Several people have referred to the notion of Pat Crowley as a weak link in the film. In the first year of this TV series, the weekly story usually revolved around an outside person being drawn into a spy caper either by accident or deliberately (as in this film). The lack of gadgetry in the film is a reflection of it being based on the earlier Bond films where Bond's skills were the focus rather than exotic gadgetry. As the Bond films moved into the gadgetry obsession, "The Man from U. N. C. L. E. Followed suit. As a result, the earlier 1st year episodes of this TV series tended to be more serious and believable than in the later years of the series. "To Trap A Spy" serves as a snapshot of a TV series that attempted to be appealing to both young and old during its outset. The music as one person mentioned was not jazzy and swinging. This was as Jerry Goldsmith envisioned. It was to be a hard hitting, serious TV theme that did not try to be cute or swinging. I imagine you "had to be there" to truly appreciate the intent of this show and the movies derived from the TV episodes. Just my thoughts!
A Man Called Solo
The original pilot episode of 'The Man from UNCLE' - when it was intended to be called just 'Solo' - first transmitted in black & white but with additional footage featuring future Bond bad girl Luciana Paluzzi for theatrical release.
The bad guys were then called WASP; presumably changed when White Anglo-Saxon Protestants protested. Mr Waverley isn't yet in charge and Ilya Kuryakin appears only briefly. But it already has that memorable theme by Jerry Goldsmith.
The bad guys were then called WASP; presumably changed when White Anglo-Saxon Protestants protested. Mr Waverley isn't yet in charge and Ilya Kuryakin appears only briefly. But it already has that memorable theme by Jerry Goldsmith.
"One of the best UNCLE movies."
Top UNCLE agent Napoleon Solo (Robert Vaughn) is assigned to prevent THRUSH hit-man Andrew Vulcan (Fritz Weaver) from assassinating Premier Ashumen (William Marshall), the leader of a primitive African nation who is visiting the States on a tour of Vulcan's factory. Solo enlists the help of Vulcan's former girlfriend Elaine May Donaldson (Patricia Crowley) and plants her as a rich widow in order to get close to Vulcan and prove to her that he is the evil doer that Solo says he is.
The Man From UNCLE was such a cult success in the UK that eight feature length films (made up of previously unaired episodes) were released in cinemas with virtually the British box office in mind. TO TRAP A SPY was the first film in the series and it is actually an extended version of the pilot episode, THE VULCAN AFFAIR (First aired: 22/09/1964), with extra footage that was considered too "adult" for television. Other changes were made such as in the TV version, THRUSH were the enemy organisation, but in the film they were renamed WASP. Also in the film, actor Will Kuluva plays UNCLE chief Mr Allison, whereas in the TV episode, Leo G Carroll played Mr Waverley and would do so for the remainder of the series.
To Trap A Spy stands as one of the best feature length outings from the TV series even though David McCallam fans will be disappointed as Illya Kuriyakin only appears in two scenes early on. Robert Vaughn is outstanding as Napoleon Solo portraying him as a super suave playboy and interestingly Luciana Paluzzi turns up as a beautiful THRUSH villain who attempts to seduce Solo to his death would later play much the same role in the Bond spectacular Thunderball. The plot may be thin but it is the nostalgia value that holds this film up after nearly forty years since it was first released.
Followed by: The Spy With My Face*, One Spy Too Many*, One Of Our Spies Is Missing, The Spy In The Green Hat (all 1966), The Karate Killers*, The Helicopter Spies* (both 1967) and How To Steal The World* (1968). The titles marked with an asterisk have now been released on DVD in the UK as a box set.
The Man From UNCLE was such a cult success in the UK that eight feature length films (made up of previously unaired episodes) were released in cinemas with virtually the British box office in mind. TO TRAP A SPY was the first film in the series and it is actually an extended version of the pilot episode, THE VULCAN AFFAIR (First aired: 22/09/1964), with extra footage that was considered too "adult" for television. Other changes were made such as in the TV version, THRUSH were the enemy organisation, but in the film they were renamed WASP. Also in the film, actor Will Kuluva plays UNCLE chief Mr Allison, whereas in the TV episode, Leo G Carroll played Mr Waverley and would do so for the remainder of the series.
To Trap A Spy stands as one of the best feature length outings from the TV series even though David McCallam fans will be disappointed as Illya Kuriyakin only appears in two scenes early on. Robert Vaughn is outstanding as Napoleon Solo portraying him as a super suave playboy and interestingly Luciana Paluzzi turns up as a beautiful THRUSH villain who attempts to seduce Solo to his death would later play much the same role in the Bond spectacular Thunderball. The plot may be thin but it is the nostalgia value that holds this film up after nearly forty years since it was first released.
Followed by: The Spy With My Face*, One Spy Too Many*, One Of Our Spies Is Missing, The Spy In The Green Hat (all 1966), The Karate Killers*, The Helicopter Spies* (both 1967) and How To Steal The World* (1968). The titles marked with an asterisk have now been released on DVD in the UK as a box set.
Young U.N.C.L.E.
I came to this movified "The Man from U.N.C.L.E." feature after faithfully watching four other much later similar concoctions, so that I was feeling a bit "uncled-out" by the time I decided to watch "To Trap A Spy". I'm pleased to say that I was pleasantly surprised to learn that this was the expanded pilot episode (before the "Man" became effectively the "Men" as David McCallum quickly gained co-star status and better balanced out the entertainment).
There are a few curios on-view here for the discerning fan - no Mr Waverley, for one, the word "T.H.R.U.S.H" replaced by "W.A.S.P." with fairly ugly overdubbing, for some legal reason or other and as stated , Illya in only a very minor bit-part at the beginning of this episode. More pertinently are the stylistic differences; the fare here is certainly grittier and less comic-book than the more sanitised mid-late 60's seasons, exemplified for one thing by actual blood-stains on bodies when shot and mildly shockingly when Robert Vaughn gets dressed on camera after obviously bedding the treacherously beautiful Angela played by Luciana Paluzzi.
Now I've seen the difference, I think I prefer this less gimmicky approach but encouraged by James Bond's gadgetry, obviously the producers of "U.N.C.L.E." felt they had to follow suit as the swinging 60's progressed. There's a reasonably suspenseful death-trap which Solo resourcefully escapes and I liked the idea of the Cinderella housewife whom Solo coerces into U.N.C.L.E.'s employ due to a past relationship with "T.H.R.U.S.H. / W.A.S.P."'s Mr Big. Some of the settings and plottings reminded me, probably deliberately of "Dr No" and I was also amused by the coy finishing scene with Solo down-playing his Lothario urges on a mildly suspecting air-stewardess.
Okay, so you'd still take "Goldfinger" or "Thunderball" any day of the week, but it was good to see Robert Vaughn at the birth of his own cool and "U.N.C.L.E." before it started aiming too much at teenagers also getting their kicks from "Batman", "Get Smart" and "The Green Hornet".
There are a few curios on-view here for the discerning fan - no Mr Waverley, for one, the word "T.H.R.U.S.H" replaced by "W.A.S.P." with fairly ugly overdubbing, for some legal reason or other and as stated , Illya in only a very minor bit-part at the beginning of this episode. More pertinently are the stylistic differences; the fare here is certainly grittier and less comic-book than the more sanitised mid-late 60's seasons, exemplified for one thing by actual blood-stains on bodies when shot and mildly shockingly when Robert Vaughn gets dressed on camera after obviously bedding the treacherously beautiful Angela played by Luciana Paluzzi.
Now I've seen the difference, I think I prefer this less gimmicky approach but encouraged by James Bond's gadgetry, obviously the producers of "U.N.C.L.E." felt they had to follow suit as the swinging 60's progressed. There's a reasonably suspenseful death-trap which Solo resourcefully escapes and I liked the idea of the Cinderella housewife whom Solo coerces into U.N.C.L.E.'s employ due to a past relationship with "T.H.R.U.S.H. / W.A.S.P."'s Mr Big. Some of the settings and plottings reminded me, probably deliberately of "Dr No" and I was also amused by the coy finishing scene with Solo down-playing his Lothario urges on a mildly suspecting air-stewardess.
Okay, so you'd still take "Goldfinger" or "Thunderball" any day of the week, but it was good to see Robert Vaughn at the birth of his own cool and "U.N.C.L.E." before it started aiming too much at teenagers also getting their kicks from "Batman", "Get Smart" and "The Green Hornet".
Did you know
- TriviaThis film is a re-edited version of the pilot episode for The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964), plus footage from at least one other episode, with several changes (e.g., the famous character of Mr. Waverly is not in this film).
- GoofsNapolean Solo refers to his handgun as an "X38 automatic, also improved." It is actually a standard issue Luger.
- Quotes
Angela: Now what would you like me to change into?
Napoleon Solo: Anything, but a boy.
- Alternate versionsThe film was re-edited from the pilot episode of the TV series The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964) For the TV version, broadcast as The Vulcan Affair (1964), all of Will Kuluva's scenes as Mr. Allison were cut and re-shot when it was decided to replace him with Leo G. Carroll as Mr. Waverly. But his scenes were left intact in To Trap a Spy (1964). As this film version of the TV pilot was being prepared, there was legal wrangling over the use of the name THRUSH for the enemy organization. As a result, the word WASP is overdubbed in the theatrical version whenever THRUSH is mentioned.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Man from U.N.C.L.E.: The Vulcan Affair (1964)
- How long is To Trap a Spy?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Vulcan Affair
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 32m(92 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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