
In the 1960s with the Cold War in play, CIA agent Napoleon Solo successfully helps Gaby Teller defect to West Germany despite the intimidating opposition of KGB agent Illya Kuryakin. Later, all three unexpectedly find themselves working together in a joint mission to stop a private criminal organization from using Gaby's father's scientific expertise to construct their own nuclear bomb. Through clenched teeth and stylish poise, all three must find a way to cooperate for the s... (Full plot summary below)
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In the 1960s with the Cold War in play, CIA agent Napoleon Solo successfully helps Gaby Teller defect to West Germany despite the intimidating opposition of KGB agent Illya Kuryakin. Later, all three unexpectedly find themselves working together in a joint mission to stop a private criminal organization from using Gaby's father's scientific expertise to construct their own nuclear bomb. Through clenched teeth and stylish poise, all three must find a way to cooperate for the sake of world peace, even as they each pursue their own agendas.
Leave your thoughts about The Man from U.N.C.L.E..
| Village VoiceStephanie ZacharekThough it's made with lots of modern tricks and technology, it's old-fashioned in the best sense, and not just because it's set in the Sixties. |
| Philadelphia WeeklyZaki HasanThough The Man From U.N.C.L.E. lacks the wit of Kingsman and the spectacle of M:I-Rogue Nation, it nonetheless sits comfortably alongside its spy movie siblings. |
| Consequence of SoundSarah KurchakThis clearly isn't a film by or for U.N.C.L.E. nerds and while that's frustrating from the perspective of an overly possessive fan, it's understandable when you remove that bias. |
| Newark Star-LedgerStephen WhittyHolding out for a fun summer film? Resist no longer. Just say "U.N.C.L.E." |
| The Movie MinuteJoanna LangfieldEven if it isn't as much of grabber as the TV series, Guy Ritchie's reboot sure gets points for style. |
| CinemaBlendMike ReyesThe chemistry between the three leads is magnificent, and the film doesn't run so much as glide through its entirety; taking you, the audience, along for the ride. |
| Georgia StraightJanet SmithIt's got style and charm, baby, not to mention buckets of liquid eyeliner and an old-fashioned Wartburg car chase. |
| What She SaidAnne BrodieIts fifty years ago and unfamiliar and worlds away from the one we inhabit now. But it's just as intense. Ritchie dials up the tension in each successive sequence the way he did it so well in his earlier pictures and it is excruciating at certain points. |
| Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)Ken HankeIt's a little calmer than most Guy Ritchie movies, but it's just right for the material. Terrific to look at, brisk, stylish, funny (but just serious enough) and beautifully cast. |
| The Daily Review/CrikeyLuke BuckmasterThe Man From U.N.C.L.E. excels at these moments: character-based comedy executed with lightness of touch, capable of extracting laughs without mocking the film's internal realities. |