Columbo - S/D

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (210 of them)
I mean!! Their knitwear and handbags!!

Sarah (starry), Monday, 9 September 2002 14:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

Re last Saturday's Columbo: "Call waiting" was mentioned by the murderer also, and "Last number redial" was a key episode-progresser!

zebedee, Monday, 9 September 2002 14:06 (twenty-one years ago) link

Harvey Jr?

Pete (Pete), Monday, 9 September 2002 14:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

dud.

jel -- (jel), Monday, 9 September 2002 15:08 (twenty-one years ago) link

kill the unbeliever

Alan (Alan), Monday, 9 September 2002 15:22 (twenty-one years ago) link

someone had to do it, someone has to be the anti-canon.

jel -- (jel), Monday, 9 September 2002 15:24 (twenty-one years ago) link

Kill the unbeliever
but make sure your secretary says she knows you were in San Diego at the time because you called her at 2.37pm from the station, just as the train announcement was made. She heard it distinctly over the phone...

zebedee, Monday, 9 September 2002 15:34 (twenty-one years ago) link

'someone has to be the anti-canon'

Cannon! Wasn't that the show w/William Conrad?

lawrence kansas, Monday, 9 September 2002 17:30 (twenty-one years ago) link

haha when w/conrad has to run is the best!! even t.j.hookah had a more plausible burst of speed!!

mark s (mark s), Monday, 9 September 2002 18:55 (twenty-one years ago) link

Magnum PI is the best, and Kojak.

jel -- (jel), Monday, 9 September 2002 20:07 (twenty-one years ago) link

Quincy, Columbo, Diagnosis Murder, The Equaliser, and TJ Hooker = all classic. Magnum PI and Kojak = rub. I'm sorry but the truth is where it's at.

david h (david h), Monday, 9 September 2002 20:33 (twenty-one years ago) link

Ur, perplexment and the "fuzzled brow" look as I haf no idea what this Shoestring thing might have been.

I loved Shoestring. 1979-80, BBC1 - dishy Trevor Eve is a mentally unstable computer op who gets fired after smashing up a hooj mainframe-type thing, and *somehow* ends up as Radio Bristol's 'Private Ear', solving foax call-in probs (this is years before Midnight Caller or whatever it was) in a quirky lovable aw-shucks-down-on-his-luck kinda way. It effectively spawned Bergerac, as the show's creator, Robert Banks Stewart, was allowed to do whatever he bloody liked once Eve quit after two series - so he came up with a neato reason to spend a financially advantageous chunk of each subsequent year in Jersey (NB to googling screenwriter: I am joshing; I'm sure you weren't hanging out with Jim and Liza anyhow).

Shoestring did have a daytime run on the Beeb last year.

Now hooked by (slightly rubbish) Waking The Dead because of looming Eve presence. No shots yet of yer man eating chips in a Cortina though. Shame.

Michael Jones (MichaelJ), Monday, 9 September 2002 20:49 (twenty-one years ago) link

I always thought it would be a funny comedy sketch to have Columbo playing chess with Boris Spassky.

Anyway, I remember one nicely written episode by Stephen "The A-Team" J. Cannell, starring (yep)...Robert Culp as the murderer. Culp was a scientist who murders a guy by inserting a thirst-inducing subliminal message into a film, getting the guy into the lobby where he shoots him (while the other people are inside watching the film).

Has anybody caught Law & Order: Criminal Intent? Vincent D'Onofrio is totally classic in that...very Columbo-ish.

Joe (Joe), Monday, 9 September 2002 21:29 (twenty-one years ago) link

Michael J, thank you for that v. informative post - I too felt sure that Shoestring had been re-shown on afternoon telly quite recently. My flatmate has a cpl of Shoestring novelisations written by Paul Ableman!

Andrew L (Andrew L), Tuesday, 10 September 2002 06:31 (twenty-one years ago) link

The Shat! The Shat!

The Shat as Ward Fowler as Detective Lucerne!

'Let. Us. Assoooomm, Looootenant - and I'mspeakingasDetectiveLucerneherenotasWardFowler' etc.

The one with Roddy McDowell as Galen as the murderer with the exploding cigars is also tops, as is the abovementioned Faster, Fido, Kill, Kill!

And wasn't one written by Mickey Spillane?

Tim Bateman, Tuesday, 10 September 2002 15:35 (twenty-one years ago) link


Gary Bloom to thread!

the pinefox, Tuesday, 10 September 2002 16:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

I just saw Woman Under the Influence. Bestest movie (by Cassavetes) EVAH? Ya damn ROIGHT.

nathalie (nathalie), Thursday, 12 September 2002 13:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

eleven years pass...

Man so enjoying the Johnny Cash EP right now. Love that he never gets angry w/him (probably playing off against a perception of Cash as a 'hellraiser' is my guess).

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 22 December 2013 12:25 (ten years ago) link

one month passes...

Netflix finally has the full lineup of series episodes up.

Matt Armstrong, Friday, 21 February 2014 07:10 (ten years ago) link

two months pass...

columbo = they are ALL THE SAME STORY!! (= "i wd rather confess than put up with this absurd little fellow for the rest of my life")

― mark s (mark s), Monday, September 9, 2002 11:32 AM (11 years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

truthbomb!

Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 14 May 2014 20:35 (nine years ago) link

That one story rules though

polyphonic, Wednesday, 14 May 2014 20:42 (nine years ago) link

The salient thing about Columbo is that the basic premises entertained. It may have been the same story each time, but that's like going into a few dozen houses at Christmas and exclaiming, they are ALL THE SAME TREE!!

epoxy fule (Aimless), Wednesday, 14 May 2014 20:42 (nine years ago) link

Girlfriend and I were watching these on Netflix a lot, loved season 1, kinda burned out though (or maybe just got our rhythm thrown by the extra-long season 2 opener, with John Cassavetes as the orchestra conductor). Should pick it back up though, Falk is just great. Love the vision of class here: the murderers lose to Columbo not because his method is so foolproof but because they're rich and underestimate this working-class schmoe who knows how to play up his schmoe signifiers. Also interesting how so many of the millionaire killers are old-school scions of wealthy families - dissipated dilettantes and socialites, or people after the inheritance of same. Nobody's ever a stockholder or arbitrageur. Columbo's effective because he's able to get access to these people (hard to really picture now) and everything about his mannerisms short-circuits their codes of conduct, leaves them struggling for the correct way to brush him off, which only tips their hands more thoroughly. Feel like that world has kind of disappeared... the singular personifications of wealth vs. the corporate system as a whole.

Gee, I dunno. It's just this theory I had - but you've had a very long day, it can wait. I'm sorry.

Doctor Casino, Thursday, 15 May 2014 04:31 (nine years ago) link

Often they don't confess though, they are often found out in the most ludcrous manner, or sometimes its downright nasty. The EP where he frames the murderer's son (he confesses because he is "a strange little fellow" who is unpredictable), for example.

Sat afternoons watching these, having a 20 min nap and still knowing you haven't missed much (you know who did it) as oposed to some other crime show where you'd miss a plot point that might be key in working it out is a pleasure for me. But I also like bcz it is such an anti-crime show. Morse, or Holmes, you get bored by it.

re: class. yeah its an excellent point. He also works much harder than other police officers. A few times where he orders chilli and doesn't eat it => sign of a lower middle class thing "well if I work harder than poeple who are supposedly smarter than me" type guff.

Also note his interactions with culture. One murderer he gets on a "he must be the one - there is no way anyone could like both country and classical music" tip, then where he visits the art gallery to ask questions and mistakes a radiator I think for an art object. He talks about his wife doing watercolours. Art -- one could say -- promotes attentiveness and a heightened awareness. But that isn't on Colombo's radar (unlike Morse where it is part of his make-up), its noise and a sideshow. He gets his killer by working hard. Somtimes he'll pick their version of culture or pretentiousness (learning about wine to trap Donald Pleasance), he shows he is thinking, or he'll pick up an enthusiasm, but with the end goal in mind. You never feel he has interests.

Above all Falk is just great to watch. Feel that a bit more after he passed away.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 15 May 2014 08:56 (nine years ago) link

On the other hand, Columbo's inner life is basically kept a mystery by Columbo himself - the vague references to family and friends which he just made up on the spot. Sometimes he seems to know enough about the murderer's culture stuff to know what would annoy the shit out of them - like playing "Chopsticks" on the concert piano for Cassavetes, or bringing half-dead hardware store plants in to the orchid guy.

And yeah, they're not all confessions - actually I like it best when he really does lay out the case at the end and explain what tipped him off, how he got the guy, etc. The nasty ones are cool too. I love the one where he makes Roddy McDowell think they're trapped in a ski lift with a bomb that's about to go off.

Recently watched The Great Race, which stars Falk alongside Natalie Wood, Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis, though unfortunately he's relegated to being Lemmon's "duh, okay boss" sidekick. But he wasn't famous yet, and actually Lemmon's talents aren't really exploited either. Always a pleasure to see him doing anything though, really. Growing up on The Princess Bride, I figured he was just some one-off guy that played the grandfather in that, and nothing else!

Doctor Casino, Thursday, 15 May 2014 14:26 (nine years ago) link

Falk was pretty much the only good thing in Wings of Desire.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 16 May 2014 10:50 (nine years ago) link

He's allowed to be funny in the Frank Sinatra/Dean Martin vehicle Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964)

Josefa, Friday, 16 May 2014 13:50 (nine years ago) link

seven months pass...

http://thecitydesk.net/justonemorething/

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Sunday, 4 January 2015 17:50 (nine years ago) link

Well that's my life down the bin ;-)

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 4 January 2015 18:39 (nine years ago) link

http://thecitydesk.net/justonemorething/2014/10/thats-a-lot-of-fruit-salad/

Agreeing with Carolita on the way the divorcee is written up although I think Columbo is really nicer in the final dialogue than what this panel is given credit for - its more like a "shutting yourself off is what you don't do! you're gonna be ok" even if the niece was probably made up.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 4 January 2015 19:15 (nine years ago) link

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/30/nyregion/timothy-dowd-detective-who-led-son-of-sam-manhunt-dies-at-99.html

Obit for the detective in charge of Son of Sam case....he basically said all detective shows were bullshit except Columbo which got it exactly right

Iago Galdston, Sunday, 4 January 2015 20:07 (nine years ago) link

Podcast is tempting, though the first one I've just listened to (on the Roddy McDowall one) kinda bugged me - little too much unfocused chatter, awkward mix of people who know the show and don't know the show, meaning we don't really get any profound readings or connections made. But I may just be not well-suited to the group podcast format.

Also I loved that episode and they didn't. I mean Roddy's tailoring is so great!

Doctor Casino, Sunday, 4 January 2015 20:12 (nine years ago) link

i will CONFESS.... i have not listened to it

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Sunday, 4 January 2015 20:17 (nine years ago) link

In the EP I've just heard it was def unstructured chat, it just happened to have a couple of interesting readings and then some info of the other actors and what else they did.

So yes it might not last. Also doubt I'll get to any of the 90s Columbo. Makes me angry just looking at it (like Simpsons after season 8 or so).

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 4 January 2015 20:46 (nine years ago) link

I'm conflicted on 90s Columbo mostly because that's when I started watching them (Rest in Peace, Mrs. Columbo) was my first episode), but obviously they are uneven, to say the least. The Silence of the Lambs wannabe episode was just flat-out wrong.

MaudAddam (cryptosicko), Sunday, 4 January 2015 23:51 (nine years ago) link

The ones with Patrick McGoohan as the murderer are especially worth seeking out, he's such a weird + powerful screen presence, he directed at least two so was able to slip in some Prisoner references ("Be seeing you"). Also there's a good one with Oskar Werner.

The World's Strangest Man 2014 (Tom D.), Monday, 5 January 2015 00:25 (nine years ago) link

The digital watch! I love those bits where tech is shown off and it proves to be their undoing (the ward fowler ep with the vhs recorder).

xyzzzz__, Monday, 5 January 2015 10:50 (nine years ago) link

I saw a similar one with Ian Buchanan as the murderer, the "tell-tale heart" was a grotesque gold-plated wrist-pager thing.

Ratt in Mi Kitchen (Neil S), Monday, 5 January 2015 11:16 (nine years ago) link

That reminds me of the Sherlock Holmes story where the crim describes what he did in a room where Sherls is next door playing the violin, but he's not he's hiding behind the curtain listening, and the violin is actually a "record" playing on a "Gramophone" ..

Modern Technology!

Mark G, Monday, 5 January 2015 11:45 (nine years ago) link

I saw the McGoohan spy episode ('Identity Crisis') pretty recently for the first time – really great, loved the opening third especially – builds with images, moments, rhythm more than usual – Nielsen & McGoohan at the fairground, the dark beach, Columbo's oddly paced chat with the ex-cop at the bar. Lot of silence, it felt like. Enjoyed the plot - not just the luxury/money/pride order that Columbo's gritting up, but phantom world of intrigue. Nice irresolution too.

90s Columbo has its moments, but they're really moments from what I've seen lately (and remember) - Falk and a good murderer will usually make it watchable, however shoddily built and appointed. They're sort of doomed by that comfortable "It's our old friend Detective Columbo" air – we all know what's coming, and want the references to Mrs Columbo etc. Nothing really odd or mesmerising.

woof, Monday, 5 January 2015 11:52 (nine years ago) link

four years pass...

where he visits the art gallery to ask questions and mistakes a radiator I think for an art object.

... it's a ventilator. This one was on this morning, Oskar Werner was the murderer, Gena Rowlands was his wife, it was all about video technology. Yesterday we had a McGoohan starring/directing one where Leslie Nielsen was the victim and McGoohan kept shoehorning little Prisoner references into the script. It's TV bliss.

Wee boats wobble but they don't fall down (Tom D.), Sunday, 17 February 2019 14:04 (five years ago) link

... as discussed by woof in the post immediately preceding mine.

Wee boats wobble but they don't fall down (Tom D.), Sunday, 17 February 2019 14:05 (five years ago) link

Obligatory

https://i.imgur.com/eYAQSU9.jpg

gray say nah to me (wins), Sunday, 17 February 2019 14:14 (five years ago) link

^This show had four titles in its 13-episode run, which I’d guess is a record

gray say nah to me (wins), Sunday, 17 February 2019 14:16 (five years ago) link

Thought this revive would be Wings of Desire-related.

Only a Factory URL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 17 February 2019 15:04 (five years ago) link

It's always fun trying to spot when Columbo knows or at least suspects whodunnit. Maybe there isn't always an obvious moment but season 5 episode 5 Now You See Him (currently available on 5 USA) has a real humdinger of one.

large bananas pregnant (ledge), Saturday, 23 February 2019 20:59 (five years ago) link

Really great episode all round, Jack Cassidy as the stage magician villian doing legit sleight of hand himself, bar one scene with a hand double and a couple of disappointing edits; the final reveal has Columbo one-upping the showman and he does it with glee.

large bananas pregnant (ledge), Saturday, 23 February 2019 21:33 (five years ago) link

Yeah, that's a good one.

Wee boats wobble but they don't fall down (Tom D.), Saturday, 23 February 2019 22:25 (five years ago) link

all the jack cassidy ones are classics. robert culp too iirc.

|Restore| |Restart| |Quit| (Doctor Casino), Sunday, 24 February 2019 00:53 (five years ago) link

This one was on this morning, Oskar Werner was the murderer, Gena Rowlands was his wife, it was all about video technology. Yesterday we had a McGoohan starring/directing one where Leslie Nielsen was the victim and McGoohan kept shoehorning little Prisoner references into the script. It's TV bliss.

― Wee boats wobble but they don't fall down (Tom D.), Sunday, 17 February 2019 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I loved Gena Rowlands as the suffering wife and daughter - her acting in this is just superb.

The last scene on that McGoohan EP (one of three as the murderer) is also so re-watchable (even for me). Falk was great but its so often the case that he could create some great chemistry with so many co-stars who were there for the once. Seems like everyone was really enjoying themselves for that short period and that really shows up on the McGoohan EPs. Partly the acting chops but the EPs are so goofy script-wise (very little makes sense) and it just encourages that.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 24 February 2019 08:45 (five years ago) link

I was initially mildly lamenting the fact that I already owned the DVDs and couldn't really justify rebuying the series just for the commentaries but welp. Super weird stuff, though.

Prop Dramedy (Old Lunch), Saturday, 26 August 2023 23:55 (seven months ago) link

Transfers & packaging elements aside, they've lost the everything that separated this from being a Mill Creek-style budget release.

KL like “just one more thing…”

(⊙_⊙?) (original bgm), Sunday, 27 August 2023 02:06 (seven months ago) link

strange. people keep saying "probably a rights issue" but these were all-new commentaries, presumably commissioned by Kino-Lorber themselves

Tracer Hand, Sunday, 27 August 2023 09:41 (seven months ago) link

Weird

The Thin, Wild Mercury Rising (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 27 August 2023 13:55 (seven months ago) link

maybe they were just really shit lol

Tracer Hand, Sunday, 27 August 2023 14:29 (seven months ago) link

In a couple places, I've read it might be related to the current strikes. But that's just speculation.

omar little, Sunday, 27 August 2023 14:32 (seven months ago) link

ah I could believe that

Tracer Hand, Sunday, 27 August 2023 14:39 (seven months ago) link

Good news, shared in the BluRay forum:

All is not lost! I'm Jim Benson. When my writing partner Scott Skelton and I recently found out our months of exhaustive research, new interviews, and treasure trove of never-before-revealed facts we uncovered about Columbo were NOT going to appear on the new Blu-Ray release (due to a bizarre technicality) we were devastated. And so were the fans. How could all this amazing content be buried forever, never to see the light of day?

Which gave us an idea for just one more thing: What if we took all that incredible material, added even more that we couldn't fit in the commentaries, including behind-the-scenes photos, news clips, and more...and made it into the greatest TV book of all time? (Just like we did with our ultimate 800-page, nine pound, "Rod Serling's Night Gallery" hardcover coffee table book?)

By popular demand, we've decided to do it. You may not be able to listen to our content, but you WILL be able to read it, in The Ultimate Columbo book!

We did get the Hardy Boys and (my favourite) Alfred Hitchcock's Three Investigators in the UK, but have never even heard of Encyclopaedia Brown before!

― Ward Fowler

i was gratified to look up encyclopedia brown's sidekick, sally kimball, on wikipedia and find that one of the cites is to a work called _The Disappearing L: Erasure of Lesbian Spaces and Culture_. probably my first lesbian crush!

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 27 August 2023 20:41 (seven months ago) link

due to a bizarre technicality

I really need to know more about what the fuck this technicality is! It's starting to approach a 'if you name it, a demon sucks your soul away' territory, just say what it is.

Ned Raggett, Sunday, 27 August 2023 21:23 (seven months ago) link

*sees softball coming over the plate, takes a swing*
Is a bizarre technicality similar to a bizarre gardening accident?

The Thin, Wild Mercury Rising (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 28 August 2023 20:05 (seven months ago) link

two months pass...

These episodes are on 5USA tomorrow - any favourites?

10:05 Murder In Malibu (1990)
12:00 Murder - a Self Portrait (1989)
13:55 Short Fuse (1972)
15:25 Murder Under Glass (1978)
17:00 Grand Deceptions (1989)
19:00 Murder, Smoke and Shadows (1989)

the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Saturday, 11 November 2023 13:10 (five months ago) link

Murder Under Glass is pretty fun.

Cow_Art, Saturday, 11 November 2023 13:14 (five months ago) link

That's the Demme one? It is wonderfully dated, with the worst 1970s food you can imagine.

I wouldn't bother with the ones from 1989+.

formerly abanana (dat), Saturday, 11 November 2023 18:52 (five months ago) link

I have been known to enjoy some of the later ones, though 70s are generally better of course.

the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Saturday, 11 November 2023 19:24 (five months ago) link

Short Fuse has Roddy McDowall and an unusually tense climax.

not the one who's tryin' to dub your anime (Doctor Casino), Saturday, 11 November 2023 19:28 (five months ago) link

four months pass...

Started watching this with our kid, first episode we watched was MURDER BY THE BOOK, directed by Spielberg (!) and really good twisty story with a particularly nasty villain played by Jack Cassidy. Also co-starring Barbara Colby as a lovelorn store owner who blackmails the bad guy in an ill-advised scheme.

Within a few years, and real life, those two guest stars would be tragically killed in a fire and unsolved homicide, respectively, Colby murdered in a random double murder (three episodes into her new supporting role on the first season of the sitcom Phyllis.)

omar little, Saturday, 16 March 2024 17:55 (one month ago) link

*in real life

omar little, Saturday, 16 March 2024 17:56 (one month ago) link

have also been watching this, but only selected episodes, the Columbophile blog a good curator

corrs unplugged, Saturday, 16 March 2024 19:36 (one month ago) link

All of the original run is pretty good, I don’t remember a bum episode.

Cow_Art, Saturday, 16 March 2024 19:45 (one month ago) link

Pretty sure there isn't one.

man in suit and red tie raising his fist (Tom D.), Saturday, 16 March 2024 19:46 (one month ago) link

"Old Fashioned Murder" is pretty weak. Conceit is that the murderer acts older than her age, but Columbo always had old villains so it isn't obvious.

there's an episode set in a "think tank", back when that didn't have crackpot political connotations, with a kid named steve spielberg as a tribute to their boy genius director.

adam t. (abanana), Saturday, 16 March 2024 20:04 (one month ago) link

The one where he goes to Jolly Old England is bad

Josefa, Saturday, 16 March 2024 21:02 (one month ago) link

Oh yeah, that one isn't good.

man in suit and red tie raising his fist (Tom D.), Saturday, 16 March 2024 21:24 (one month ago) link

the columbo-goes-to-a-rave episode is exactly as good as you'd expect

mark s, Saturday, 16 March 2024 21:30 (one month ago) link

i.e. at least 10 times better than the Morse goes to a rave episode

Morris O’Shea Salazar (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 16 March 2024 21:33 (one month ago) link

That's right

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 16 March 2024 23:21 (one month ago) link

also just recently started watching this for the first time. it rules so hard. crazy that every episode is over an hour long

flopson, Sunday, 17 March 2024 03:09 (one month ago) link

^^It was originally presented as part of a series of weekly TV Mystery Movies, rotating in a shared time slot with similar film-length episodic shows like McMillan & Wife with Rock Hudson and Susan Saint James, and McCloud with Dennis Weaver. That's why the seasons seem so short.


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.