The seventh episode of A Man Called Sloane
(original airdate, November 17, 1979) begins with Sloane in London, where he is to meet another UNIT agent at
a planetarium. When he arrives, he discovers his contact – an old
friend – murdered, with strange markings on his neck. Noticing a
beautiful woman apparently fleeing from the scene, he follows, and is
attacked by a couple of thugs.
Investigating the agent's death, Sloane discovers that an old adversary, Jefferson Crane (Eric Braeden, The Rat Patrol),
a man that Sloane believed he had killed some years before, is behind a
plot of cosmic proportions. Using two stolen nuclear missiles, he plans
to divert a comet (the fictional Caesar's Comet, which the script would
have us believe was first spotted at the time of Julius Caesar's
assassination, and which has returned every 100 years since) and crash it into
the Earth.
Soap opera veteran and popular heavy Braeden makes a satisfactory villain, and Nancy DeCarl,
as the dead agent's sister, is a lovely girl of the week, but the story
is pretty unspectacular. For one thing, while the script goes to great
lengths to emphasize how involved and difficult it was to calculate the
comet's trajectory, it also posits that the U.S. military transports
nukes around on the back of easily hijack-able trucks. (Actually,
stealing nukes is made to look very easy throughout the series!)
Not
one of the stronger episodes, unfortunately... though the scene where a
bunch of polo players on horseback attack a van containing Sloane,
Torque and the girl is both kinda cool and damned weird.
• This episode was written by Stephen Kandel, a frequent contributor to various spy-fi shows, including Mission: Impossible, The Wild Wild West, It Takes A Thief and MacGyver.
For some reason, this is the one episode about which I remember something. That is, I remembered that there was an episode with Eric Braeden as the villain, and that the plot had to do with him trying to divert a comet. Also the part about the heroes thinking that he'd been killed years before. And I remembered that Nancy DeCarl was in it, but I didn't remember offhand if she played the heroine or the villainess.
ReplyDeleteFirst, I presuming that UNIT was an acronym. And since you haven't mentioned it in any of your reviews so far, did they ever state what UNIT stood for?
ReplyDeleteUnless it's stated in the T.R. Sloane pilot, which I haven't watched in a very long time, UNIT doesn't appear to stand for anything.
ReplyDeleteI'll be re-watching and reviewing the pilot film when I finish up with these episode reviews, so we'll see then.
So UNIT didn't stand for United Nations Intelligence Taskforce? ;)
ReplyDelete