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The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E.: The Fifteen Years Later Affair

  • TV Movie
  • 1983
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
822
YOUR RATING
Robert Vaughn and David McCallum in The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E.: The Fifteen Years Later Affair (1983)
SpyActionAdventureCrimeDramaThriller

When THRUSH steals a nuclear weapon and demands a ransom delivered by Napoleon Solo, UNCLE recalls him and his partner to duty.When THRUSH steals a nuclear weapon and demands a ransom delivered by Napoleon Solo, UNCLE recalls him and his partner to duty.When THRUSH steals a nuclear weapon and demands a ransom delivered by Napoleon Solo, UNCLE recalls him and his partner to duty.

  • Director
    • Ray Austin
  • Writers
    • Sam Rolfe
    • Michael Sloan
  • Stars
    • Robert Vaughn
    • David McCallum
    • Patrick Macnee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    822
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ray Austin
    • Writers
      • Sam Rolfe
      • Michael Sloan
    • Stars
      • Robert Vaughn
      • David McCallum
      • Patrick Macnee
    • 22User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Robert Vaughn
    Robert Vaughn
    • Napoleon Solo
    David McCallum
    David McCallum
    • Illya Kuryakin
    Patrick Macnee
    Patrick Macnee
    • Sir John Raleigh
    Tom Mason
    Tom Mason
    • Benjamin Kowalski
    Gayle Hunnicutt
    Gayle Hunnicutt
    • Andrea Markovitch
    Geoffrey Lewis
    Geoffrey Lewis
    • Janus
    Anthony Zerbe
    Anthony Zerbe
    • Justin Sepheran
    Keenan Wynn
    Keenan Wynn
    • Piers Castillian
    Simon Williams
    Simon Williams
    • Nigel Pennington-Smythe
    John Harkins
    John Harkins
    • Alexi Kemp
    Jan Tríska
    Jan Tríska
    • Vaselievitch
    Susan Woollen
    Susan Woollen
    • Janice Friday
    Carolyn Seymour
    Carolyn Seymour
    • The Actress
    George Lazenby
    George Lazenby
    • J.B.
    Judith Chapman
    Judith Chapman
    • Z
    Lois De Banzie
    Lois De Banzie
    • Mrs. Delquist
    Dick Durock
    Dick Durock
    • Guiedo
    Randi Brooks
    Randi Brooks
    • The Model
    • Director
      • Ray Austin
    • Writers
      • Sam Rolfe
      • Michael Sloan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.3822
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    Featured reviews

    10chebeebennett

    Return Of The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

    I have got Return Of The Man From U. N. C. L. E. On DVD starring Robert Vaughan-I say my sister Toni"s favourite actor & very gorgeous David Mc Callum my all time favourite. I really like David, I always have & I will do in the future, an excellent movie indeed.
    7Russ Davis

    Fun reunion flick with other fond and sad memories

    Good for a reunion show that deserves special allowances for auld lang syne that otherwise would not fly for a regular show, a time to reminisce on the impossibility of twenty years flying by! and even worse another twenty since that yet again to 2006! Will someone quit turning the calendar instead of the second hand! Though McNee was truly good as Sir John, the sorrowful part was the loss fourteen years before, in '72, of inestimable and quite irreplaceable stellar veteran Leo G. Carroll/Mr. Waverly they were kind enough to acknowledge. What wasn't mentioned in other descriptions of the film was how Sir John's entrance into the fray was due to the death of Mr. Waverly whom he was replacing (I believe he was supposedly killed in a THRUSH attack, which while stretching the bonds of credibility that they only just now managed to kill him after so many years is still a well-deserved tribute to dear old Leo G.). As sharp as Carroll was, he deserved a larger role had the oversexed dolts of that age not been such abysmal failures at appreciating the treasure in their midst, though perhaps Vaughn & McCallum may have.

    A fascinating connection most don't realize, including me, until today, thanks to the IMDb, is that in the '50s show Topper in which Carroll starred as Cosmo Topper, Robert Sterling played George Kerby, the debonair husband of the ghost couple that could be so frustrating for Cosmo, wife Anne Jeffreys playing Mrs. (Marion) Kerby, but Sterling also later played Captain Lee Craine in the Irwin Allen's movie, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, the part later taken by David Hedison in the TV version as Richard Baseheart took Walter Pigeon's place! Interesting connection: Man from UNCLE and Voyage to the Bottowm of the Sea by way of Topper! What Topper!
    9daved-3

    surprisingly good reunion flick

    Reunion TV-movies based on old series rarely capture the spirit of the original, but Return of the Man from Uncle taps into the campiness of the series as if it never was off the air. The leads have fun acknowledging their age, and the whole thing neatly turns into a parody of spy films without becoming a parody of itself. I rated it a "9" not because it is great art but because compared to all other TV reunion movies it is head and shoulders above the rest!
    9januszlvii

    Really Fun Reunion Movie

    I really enjoyed The Return of The Man From UNCLE-The 15 Year Affair. Which I watched today on YouTube. The first thing I noticed is how much fun Robert Vaughn ( Napoleon Solo) was having. In fact, much more then on the original series and much more then co-star David McCallum ( Illya). The next thing is how much respect they had for deceased cast member Mr. Waverly ( Leo G. Carroll). It was even noted how the main villain ( Anthony Zerbe), said "He had style." Who replaced him? Someone else with style: Patrick Macnee ( aka John Steed from The Avengers TV series) as UNCLE head Sir John. Did I forget George Lanzeby ( who once played James Bond) as JB. He even drove an Aston-Martin and said "Shaken Not Stirred." Is the movie perfect? No but there are a lot worse options then to spent 90 minutes. 9/10 stars.
    6erapka

    A fun reprise, but cheesy

    Those super-agents of the spy-era "Man from U.N.C.L.E." Robert Vaughn & David McCallum reteam in this 1983 sequel, reprising their characters admirably & accurately, but the overall tone of this (one of the earliest of the TV "reunion" movies) falls flat. The scripting and helming fail to match the jaunty tongue-in-cheekness of the original, despite screenplay credit by series-creator Sam Rolfe, and regrettably it lacks any hint of the original hep score by Fried & Goldsmith.

    The plot is predictable and typical of the '60s series: U.N.C.L.E.-vs-THRUSH, with an innocent bystander conscripted into the fray. But beyond the two leads, nothing remains of the original U.N.C.L.E. mythos. By 1983 the MGM backlot had been bulldozed for a condo development, so this was shot entirely on location -- even the interiors. The result feels a little too raw to recreate the fantastical "U.N.C.L.E." franchise. And sadly, the production design ditched the sleek steel-panel walls of the original headquarters, the cute miniskirted G3s and the gee-whiz technology that made the show such fun. It would seem the old HQ "somewhere in the east '40s" was boarded up some years back (perhaps a downsizing?) and operations moved to new offices that smack of a modest corporation somewhere in Wisconsin, with cheap wood panelling and fluorescent overheads and the full "United Network Command for Law and Enforcement" emblazoned billboard-size on the hallway walls; apparently U.N.C.L.E. has moved heavily into branding these days). In fact, the only recognizable elements reprised from the series are the pen-radio, the briefing-room TV sequence and a few blinking "old-world" computer consoles which must have been languishing in the prop warehouse since the Nixon Administration.

    The shtick of this remake is that the current staff of U.N.C.L.E. comprises vanilla-bland PC yuppies fresh out of prep school, to a man possessing none of the silky suaveness of Napoleon Solo, and the entire agency seems to have a bureaucratic malaise hanging over it. Perhaps with good reason: the international terrorist agency, THRUSH, is said to have been disbanded some years ago. My feeling watching this setup was that with Waverly gone, and without a worthy adversary, U.N.C.L.E. had lost its way.

    But suddenly, unexpectedly, THRUSH rears up Phoenix-like, precipitating Solo's return to the fold...where he finds himself very much a fish out of water (a riff used, perhaps more effectively, some years later by Pierce Brosnan in "The World Is Not Enough" in which JB's predatory sexual mores clash with the PC feminism of the late 20th century).

    Patrick McNee ("John Steed" of the Avengers) has been drafted to replace the late Leo G. Carroll in a clever bit of cross-casting, and there's a cameo by an even earlier "Bond," but otherwise the show is unremarkable. Our aging heroes, drawn out of civilian retirement (explained for Ilya, but not for Solo), start out making a few slips what with being so long out of practice, but they're still in reasonable shape and eventually find their old groove. Both see lots of action, toss off many witty comments & wind up regaining to a comfortable camaraderie. Curiously, it's never explained what kept them out of touch through the years (had there a falling out, maybe over a woman?), nor is it ever made clear why top-agent Solo didn't get promoted to an admin position within U.N.C.L.E. (perhaps even to succeed Waverly?), and what events led to the ultimate demise of THRUSH years back.

    Technically, the show is low-budget with a heavy '70s kitsch (film stock quality is marginal, typical of the era, with lots of stock footage -- one clip through an airplane window shows unprocessed blue-screen!). The audio is poorly dubbed in places, with lots of distracting background noise. The stuntwork is pedestrian: a few cars get rolled "A-Team" style, dazed henchman stumbling from the wrecks; a villain dangles precariously from a helicopter skid, but only a few inches from the ground; an U.N.C.L.E. swat team rappels down Boulder Dam, a supered title identifying it as "Somewhere In Syria." This was a made-for-TV movie and everywhere it definitely shows up as made on the cheap.

    Come to think of it, though, that was the perverse charm of the '60s series, a four-year romp through cheeseboard sets and cheap pyrotechnics. This sequel may ring more true to the series than I originally gave it credit.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      George Lazenby's character "JB" was intended to be James Bond, and a nod to Ian Fleming, who helped in the creation of the original The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964). Legal concerns resulted in explicit references to Bond being dropped, though there was little doubt who the character was supposed to be. A female character, on seeing "JB," says "it's just like Her Majesty's Secret Service," a reference to the Bond film that starred George Lazenby.
    • Goofs
      After shooting the Armour plated door in Thrush's headquarters, Napoleon kicks the door in. As he enters, a person can be seen be seen by his feet, in the room beyond. They quickly duck out of shot.
    • Quotes

      Nigel Pennington-Smythe: You must be an old hand at this.

      Napoleon Solo: Actually, I'm new at this... again.

    • Connections
      Follows The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 5, 1983 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Fifteen Years Later Affair
    • Filming locations
      • Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
    • Production companies
      • Richard Sloan Productions
      • Viacom Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,200,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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