Undercover (TV Movie 1994) Poster

(1994 TV Movie)

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8/10
Ed McBain fans take note:
bradnfrank23 February 2002
When you watch this movie, you will immediately notice that it does not follow the standard "Columbo" formula in which you know who the murderer is right from the start. Instead, we get a genuine mystery. That's because this movie is based on Ed McBain's novel "Jigsaw", originally published in 1970. This was one of his 87th Precinct mysteries, which did not originally feature Columbo.

Columbo is substituted for several different characters from the book, alternating from scene-to-scene. Sometimes he's the book's Detective Carella, other times he takes over for Detective Brown, who also appears in the movie. As confusing as this may sound, the movie is actually a very faithful adaptation of the book - even the pieces of the photo are identical to the illustrations in the book.

BTW, this isn't the only recent Columbo movie to be based on an Ed McBain novel -- "Columbo: No Time To Die" is an adaptation of the novel "So Long As You Both Shall Live".
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7/10
Columbo goes undercover
TheLittleSongbird30 March 2012
I reasonably liked Undercover, but I can think of better and perhaps more interesting episodes. My complaints are some moments where the script, while mostly amusing and fun, loses lustre especially towards the end, the last 15 minutes doesn't hold that many surprises and feels unsatisfying and while Ed Begley Jnr is good actually I found the character underwritten. However, it is beautifully filmed with a fitting score and an intriguing, well paced and fun story. Columbo is different to how he's usually written, but Peter Falk puts his versatility to the limit and is as always entertaining. The support cast manage to be more memorable than Begley, with Tyne Daly just as good as with her performance in the Columbo episode A Bird in the Hand, Burt Young is amusing but faring best is Harrison Page who is a delight as Columbo's partner. Overall, entertaining and solid if not one of the better episodes. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
Going on a treasure hunt with Lt. Columbo.
Boba_Fett113822 November 2008
This is definitely an original and different Columbo movie. Just like the previous "Columbo: No Time to Die", this movie its story got based on an Ed McBain novel. Not sure what the story was behind adapting these McBain novels, since its stories, atmosphere and settings have basically very little to do with the familiar usual Columbo franchise. Nevertheless, this is a movie that works out pleasantly because of its fine story.

Might be difficult to really see this movie as a Columbo movie entry but as a stand alone movie its simply a fine one. It's also a nicely directed movie, that has a totally different look from the usual Columbo movie entry and breaths a totally different atmosphere. It has a more theatrical- and professional movie look so to speak. Vincent McEveety was a director who tried out many different things for the Columbo series and he succeeds with this movie at were Alan J. Levi failed with his other Ed McBain adaptation "Columbo: No Time to Die".

It has a good detective mystery story, with a sniff of adventure to it, thanks to the whole jigsaw puzzle concept, that when put together shows the place were 4 millions dollars from a bank robbery-gone-wrong are hidden. The whole movie is about finding this pieces of the puzzle and the people that are holding them. At times the movie even has a touch of film-noir. It all sounds odd and out of place for a Columbo movie and yes it probably also is but nevertheless this concept, story and approach makes this simply a very fine and enjoyable movie to watch.

It has really story that could had also been used for a successful full length theatrical released movie, having many big names in it. I must say that perhaps it would had been better all together if it indeed got made that way. Not that it's a bad movie right now but it would had worked out better all if it featured some original and fresh character and wasn't a part of the Columbo franchise, with Peter Falk in it as the famous police lieutenant. The story doesn't always connect well with the character and the movie also has some weaker, slower moments in it, when Lt. Columbo goes investigating and interrogation his suspects in his trademark own manner, which again, doesn't always correspond well with the style and atmosphere of the entire movie.

Because of that for a part of the movie Lt. Columbo also needs to go undercover (hence the title; "Columbo: Undercover"), it means that Peter Falk's role is also different from any other thing he has done in any other Columbo movie. Guess he really enjoyed playing in this one! You could say that Columbo is not himself during this movie and he spends halve of the time pretending he is an Italian gangster. So no trademark Columbo moments really in this movie, which might disappoint you when you're expecting simply a Columbo movie like any other, that follows the usual successful formula and has all the familiar ingredients in it.

There is also a load of some good and well known actors within this movie. Ed Begley Jr., Burt Young and Tyne Daly all show up. It definitely gives the movie something extra and they also really did one fine job playing their roles. Same also goes for Harrison Page, who I liked as Columbo's partner in this one. Sort of a shame and perhaps a missed opportunity that he didn't got featured in any other later Columbo movies.

Really different from any other Columbo movie you'll ever see but it all works out fine and makes this a pleasant, different, Columbo movie experience.

7/10

http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
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OK try at something different but Columbo fans will miss the character and the formula
bob the moo11 December 2005
Columbo is called to a clear-cut case of double homicide in a dead end apartment block, where a robber has been shot at the same time as stabbing the owner in the neck. The only thing not clear is the motive as all Columbo can find is a section of a photograph that has been neatly cut out. Stumped by what it all means Columbo and his partner listen with interest when an insurance investigator tells them that the photograph in question will lead to a stash of stolen cash. With Columbo's Italian background, Krutch suggests that Columbo help out by going undercover and trying to recover all the elements and recover the cash.

The last couple of "new" Columbos that I've watched have messed around with the formula with, at best, mixed results. So with the title clearly telling me that things are very different from normal I must admit to approaching this film with a certain amount of trepidation. I assume that the changes are down to the influence of Peter Falk as executive producer for the series – no matter how much I enjoy it, it must be a bother to him to be stuck with one performance in one character in one formula. This change isn't great but it does still produce a so-so story that moves along well enough despite having nothing of the original Columbo about it. What it does lack though is mystery and the steps just feel flat and be more about the undercover gimmick rather than the plot.

Columbo fans will probably find it difficult to get past the fact that he is such a different person here than normal – he plays bad cop, he puts on accents and he plays Italian stereotypes like it was going out of fashion; it is all a far cry from the cat n' mouse stuff while his brain whirrs along in the background. Falk seems to enjoy playing the different roles and getting to be tough etc and that helps the film but I still didn't think it was a good idea to move away from not only the formula but the character himself. Begley is OK but hardly a good foil for Columbo. Young is amusing, Page does OK with the unenviable role of Columbo's partner. Tyne Daly follows up her performance in "Columbo A Bird in the Hand" where she was a drunken lush with a performance as a drunken prostitute. She is OK but not as amusing as another person making a return to the Columbo series – Donner.

Overall this is an OK Columbo that I suppose deserves some credit for trying to do something different. However different does not mean good and it isn't as engaging as the classic episodes were and the undercover thing does become a bit of a gimmick after a while. It is distracting enough and certainly not as bad as some of the other new Columbo films but you can't help but look back more fondly on the classic series.
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7/10
Irving Krutch
bkoganbing7 May 2017
What Peter Falk thinks might be a quick one though the case piques his curiosity turns out to be long and complex when Ed Begley, Jr. comes into his office. The case involved a break in of one criminal breaking into the room of another and each killing the other. The one breaking in has a carefully cut out piece of a photograph.

Begley who plays one Irving Krutch and who always refers to himself in the third person is an insurance investigator who has another piece and wants Columbo and his partner Harrison Page to look into this jigsaw puzzle like photograph which shows the location of stolen bank loot from a robbery several years earlier.

The usual Columbo formula departs radically as the man himself goes undercover and without the usual rumpled raincoat. It nearly gets him killed which sets up a very funny scene when a nurse won't let him out of the hospital.

In the meantime two other murders occur of piece holders, eight pieces in all. Breaking an alibi witness is at the climax of this story.

Burt Young is one of the piece holders and later a victim. Peter Falk goes undercover to smoke him out among others. Watch Falk assume a different guise to relate to Young on his level.

All in all a fine episode.
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6/10
An Underwhelming Columbo Entry
Bond0071931 July 2012
Even though the majority of people find the new (1989-2003) Columbo movies inferior to the classic episodes from the 1970's, I actually find them usually to be on par with the originals. For one thing, the newer episodes have much better production values; the cinematography and original musical scores are often striking and skillfully done. That being said, this particular "new" installment was a disappointment for me.

The premise of the movie is certainly intriguing - two men are killed in a seedy apartment and one of them has a jigsaw like piece of a picture. This leads Columbo into a complex mystery which involves finding the many pieces of a photograph that reveals the location of $4 million worth of stolen loot. This money was attained from a heist many years ago, where all four of the robbers were shot to death after they had already hidden the cash. Columbo then goes "undercover" to try to gain all the pieces of the puzzle from many different colorful characters before someone beats him to the punch.

The plot originated from an Ed McBain novel (Jigsaw) and it is an odd choice to mold the Columbo character into a seemingly unrelated novel. This results in a drastic change from the usual Columbo formula we all love and the results are lukewarm. While it was nice to see Peter Falk exercise his acting range in this movie by playing many different characters while undercover, the movie doesn't have the essential ingredient that made the Columbo franchise successful in the first place - the cat and mouse game. Without this dynamic the movie's momentum drags and by the end of the movie when the villain was revealed I really didn't care much. The "who-dunnit" aspect was not strong enough for me to care and the killer was not convincing nor exciting enough for this movie to be a success.

Some bright spots of the episode was the brilliant (but much too short) performance of Tyne Daly as the pitiful, sleazy ex-hooker Dorothea McNally. The scenes between her and Peter Falk crackle with electricity and their one scene together is the highlight of the movie. The musical score by Dick De Benedictis has a film-noir sound to it and adds to the atmosphere of the movie. The cinematography is uncharacteristically gritty and dark for a Columbo movie - which commonly focuses on the life of the rich and elegant.

Overall, this was an enjoyable but mediocre Columbo entry. Still recommended despite its shortcomings.
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9/10
Fun -- a B-plus series entry
aromatic-223 June 2001
This is a "B+" series entry. Burt Young and Tyne Daly are marvelous in their supporting roles. This is another one that does not play by the normal rules of the Columbo formula, allowing for some element of mystery. And, all the performers are having quite a bit of fun, even though the last 15 minutes are a bit weak. Certainly, if you like Columbo, this one is worth watching.
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6/10
kind of late to be messing with the formula at this point
blanche-227 November 2017
It seems that Peter Falk didn't mind veering from the "Columbo" formula from time to time, but the attempts weren't always successful. "Undercover" from season 12 is one example.

The big problem is that it isn't a script meant for Columbo, and very little was done to adapt it to our rumpled lieutenant. It begins in a precinct and concerns the hunt for pieces of a photograph, cut to resemble jigsaw pieces, that will tell the police where $4 million was hidden after a robbery six years earlier. When they are approached by the insurance agent (Ed Begley, Jr.) who couldn't recover the money, the captain says that Columbo and another detective (Harrison Page) can take it on.

It's not an altogether unsuccessful episode, but the beginning is offputting. It's not just the precinct set and a 67-year-old man getting permission from his captain, it's the fact that the dialogue and setup are just not the character in any way, shape, or form.

Later it becomes fun, when Columbo actually goes undercover as a low-life to track down the photo pieces and then as a Mafia godfather. Also, he has good scenes with the real-life Mrs. Falk, Shera Danese, and a fun scene with Tyne Daly, who plays an old hooker. However, this scene wasn't in tune with Columbo either as I don't think he would have kissed her on the lips.

Burt Young, who once played Columbo in Murder Can Hurt You - but the name was changed to Palumbo - is one of the people looking for the puzzle, and the absolutely gorgeous Kristen Bauer, now Kristen Bauer von Straten is Begley's girlfriend.

There is a little Columboism at the end.

I can't say I didn't enjoy this episode because it's hard not to enjoy Columbo and I always took him any way I could get him. I'm just disappointed that a little more effort wasn't put into the script -- it actually could have been a Movie of the Week with Falk playing a completely different character.
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8/10
Columbo's Jigsaw Mystery.
s-duddy128 February 2009
A good Columbo yarn and based on one of Ed MacBain's better 87th Precinct Mysteries called Jigsaw. The story revolves around the hunt for the loot from an old bank robbery which went disastrously wrong for the perpetrators. They were killed in a shoot out with the cops but no one knows what they did with the missing proceeds from the heist. Up steps Irving Krutch, years later, with a 'piece' of a photograph (cut jigsaw style) which supposedly shows where the missing cash is stashed! He enlists the help of the law in his quest but is he all he claims to be? Who will find the other pieces first? The cops or the bad guys? Great stuff for Columbophiles.
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6/10
I love Columbo
kimredhotchilis14 March 2021
This episode is worth watching for Tyne Daly. Another fabulous performance from her. I love Columbo though this different formula isn't my favourite.
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3/10
A Loser.
rmax30482327 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
You know what this is like? It's like a story that has been lying around for twenty years or so and the producers of "Columbo" have run out of ideas and somebody has a brainstorm and says, "Let's adapt this thing we aren't using anyway and stick Columbo in as the principal detective." Peter Falk does his best with a routine detective yarn but he's lost most of his charm. For one thing, it's a little depressing to see him older and slower than in early episodes. Of course that's not Falk's fault but, still, it jars the viewer's sensibilities.

Another thing is that Falk is no longer "Columbo" as we know him. He's forced to go undercover and play several different characters. His bum, prowling the seedier parts of Los Angeles, only convince us that the writers have no idea whatever of what the life style of the poor is. Falk wears a fedora, for instance. The writers were much better with the relatively high-end milieus of the early stories. They knew how screenwriters and producers lived. They do not know how the poor live, or even what they look like.

Columbo must carry a gun in this episode. He gets bopped on the head and knocked out for as long as the script requires, a convention in every second-rate private eye story from the 1930s.

The formula is dropped. Nobody commits a clever murder, followed by the raggedy, working-class Columbo being called in to unravel it. A splashy minor performance by Tyne Daly, who manages to be good in spite of it. And Columbo has a partner here, who gives perhaps the best performance in the movie. The chief villain, Ed Begley, Jr., has virtually nothing to do.

It's pretty sad. The charm and wit of the original plots is completely lacking.
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8/10
Cigars all around!
punishmentpark29 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
One of my favorite Columbo episodes that starts off pretty fast, and does not really follow the usual Columbo structure. Yes, there is a murder (lots of them, actually), but it is not áll about that. It is apparently based on a book, though I don't if and how much may have been changed. It doesn't matter much anyway.

There's a whole string of wonderful supporting actors and characters in it. Ed Begley Jr. is the overly eager insurance man who has to retrieve four million dollars from an old heist, and Columbo is the one to help. Harrison Page plays his one-time colleague and does a fine job. Then, there's (Peter Falk's wife) Shera Danese again, and she and Columbo look like they had great fun doing these parts (she even reminded me a little of Frances McDormand, before she did 'Fargo'). Tyne Daly returns as well, as the aging hooker - top job. Burt Young's part as the old-timer career criminal is wonderful, too, as is Edward Hibbert's as the devious sidekick to Danese's character.

Then, there's the fun in the little details. The piecing together of the puzzle of course, the use of useless blow-ups for the list of names, all the fuzz about one particular parking meter coin that would usually go into a big bag and would never be seen again I would assume (but perhaps it is all a ruse to trick the beautiful Ms. Endicott...?). To top it all off, Columbo does a little 'Godfather' thing here as well. In the end, of course, the case is cracked and Frank does not care much to see the big money. He's done with it, and wants to take his dog for a walk in the park.

A big 8 out of 10.
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6/10
Luke-warm new Columbo series entry
The Welsh Raging Bull12 June 2006
A 1994 Columbo story that goes out of its way, even by modern Columbo standards, to remove the entrenched shackles of the style and execution exhibited in the original series.

The puzzling plot involves a piece of a black and white photograph found at the scene of a double murder in an apartment. An insurance investigator later comes forward providing Columbo with a ripped piece of paper partly showing the names of people who possess the other pieces of the photograph, which when wholly assembled, will identify the whereabouts of a hidden loot stemming from a bungled robbery a few years ago.

Undoubtedly, plenty of energy and ambition was plunged into this Columbo adventure at the conception stage, but the plot's positive properties are undone by a script which drags it's revelations around with it rather mundanely rather than inserts them with conviction. Also, the characters also lack a certain lustre and fail to raise the profile of the whole episode.

Columbo's donning of disguises means that he is hardly in his trademark mac and for die-hard fans this is a little hard to stomach, despite Falk's obvious self-pleasure in diversifying his character on screen.

Not a total washout by any means and mildly entertaining in its own way, the identity of the culprit (revealed about 5 minutes from the end) is however unsurprising and moreover, there is absolutely no opportunity for a battle of wits between Columbo and murderer, which was the hallmark of the original series.

A warning to all fans of the old 70's Columbo series: extreme broad-mindedness (or amnesia) might allow you to partially enjoy this episode, but it simply builds up the plot and fails to sustain it's intensity.
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5/10
Columbo's most bizarre case
Leofwine_draca19 July 2016
UNDERCOVER is an odd entry in the late-stage COLUMBO, probably the episode with the least of a general COLUMBO feel ever. That's because it's based on a novel by Ed McBain that has nothing to do with Columbo whatsoever, but which was adapted to try to fit into the Columbo mould. It doesn't work very well, as at an hour and a half the plot feels padded and dragged out and there are some of those annoying moments where plot elements are being spoon-fed to the audience. But the fact that UNDERCOVER remains watchable and - to a degree - oddly enjoyable at all is a testament to the skill of the actors involved.

It's clear that Peter Falk is relishing the chance to play 'dress up' here, appearing as a gangster and even mafia don at one point. He gets beaten up and even threatens someone with a gun. The supporting cast is very good too, even though Ed Begley Jr. gives a horrible turn as the insurance man. Burt Young (ROCKY) is pretty much playing Paulie here and as lovable as ever, and Tyne Daly is an arresting sight as a washed-up hooker. Finally, it was great for me to see Harrison Page (A.W.O.L.) in support. UNDERCOVER isn't an entire successfully production, but COLUMBO fans will probably enjoy it just for the sheer oddness of it all.
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Columbo or Mike Hammer?
searchanddestroy-120 November 2015
I was astonished to watch such a Columbo episode, so different from all the others. And since the beginning of the whole show, which I have seen every episode, I have often seen some elements different from the usual and recurrent schemes: for instance Columbo appears before the crime is committed: a crime committed by two persons; Columbo lets the murderer gets away; even one episode when there is no murder but only a disappearance... But here, there is a real mystery scheme, the audience doesn't see the murder occurring, a mystery scheme as we could see in any other mystery crime scheme. Columbo doesn't look like Columbo, different outfit, he carries a gun and handles it, he receives a hit in the face, he kisses a gal - Tyne Daly - on the mouth...

That's totally different, but after all why not?
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6/10
Huge Plot Hole
idave28 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Another non-typical Columbo episode, this one is based on a story by Ed McBain (according to the screen credits), it features the annoying time stamp feature of a previous episode based on another story by the same author. It definitely diverts from the standard Columbo formula and seems more focused on being a treasure hunt than solving a murder (or, in this case, several murders).

The story concerns a double homicide where two men kill each other and one is found clutching and cut out piece of a photograph. A man claiming to be an insurance investigator comes into the police station as Columbo and another detective are discussing the case and fills them in about their being a robbery which ends in a car crash where all four robbers are shot dead. The piece of the photograph is one of many that is supposed to identify where the money was hidden.

Now here's the problem and the giant plot hole (a spoiler?): The photograph when reassembled near the end of the episode turns out to be an aerial shot of a pier with an "X" on it marking the place where the money is hidden. There are a number of problems with this, considering the information given about the robbery. Why is it an aerial shot? The pieces were given BEFORE the robbery. How could it mark where the money is hidden if the money hadn't even been stolen yet? In the time between the bank robbery and their car slamming into another with them dying in a shootout with police, just when would they have the opportunity to hide this money in this remote location? The episode is entertaining but not really a Columbo episode. It was fun seeing Columbo go undercover, especially with the first criminal type he encountered, but he never seemed like he was trying to solve a homicide, which what he's all about. It was only near the end of the episode where he tried to do this and I saw little effort on his part to examine the scene of the crime for most of the murders that happened.

It's definitely not the worst episode but hardly the best. It's a fun diversion from what we expect from a Columbo episode at best.
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7/10
Remembering Burt Young
safenoe4 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The first I heard of McBain was Ranier Wolfcastle's rendition of him in The Simpsons, so imagine my surprise to learn of a real life author by the name of Ed McBain and that this 1994 instalment of Columbo is based on an Ed McBain novel. Anyway, this instalment ain't for everyone but I enjoyed it for what it was and the fact that it was released in 1994 and set in Los Angeles meant it was a big year for murders and the trial of the century. I can imagine Colombo would have solved that double murder with much ease really.

Tyne Daly makes a return to Columbo but playing another character. Ed Begley, Jr also guest stars.

More significantly, when I saw Undercover, I didn't realize Burt Young, who had a role in Undercover, had passed away just a month earlier.
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10/10
Read the book
pierrebezukhov14 July 2021
...when I was a kid. Loved it, and this episode did it justice.
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6/10
RIDICULOUS
vgingerspice11 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
What is stupid is the fact that the woman who owned the art gallery told Columbo that she had a piece of the snapshot in her safe. Would Columbo actually think she would keep it in there after she told him that? And, of course she would lie about where it was to begin with. He got a search warrant for the safe...YEAH RIGHT! ABSURD!
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10/10
One of my favorites
akeykina3 January 2019
The only episode where Columbo has a gun. And plays so many roles
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6/10
Photographic Lighting
mtworkowski9 April 2018
The photographic lighting for this production is outstanding. George Koblasa was the DP and therefore responsible for the final image. But I have worked with extremely talented lighting electricians and know that the possibility exists that someone else also had a hand in this remarkable piece of work. It's done in the style that was popular years ago when you could just blast the crap out of a set with softlights and call it a day.
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5/10
Not at all typical of other "Columbo" episodes....it's more like a scavenger hunt!
planktonrules14 August 2021
"Undercover" is not an especially good episode of "Columbo". Much of it is because the usual formula isn't there...and the rest of it is because I could figure out who the baddie was the instant he came onto the screen!

When the story begins, two men apparently have killed each other in a crappy room on skid row. On them, they find a piece of a photo--cut up like a giant puzzle piece.

Soon after this, an insurance investigator (Ed Begley Jr.) arrives and tells Columbo he's investigating the theft of $4,000,000 several years ago. But to find the money, they need to find the other 7 puzzle pieces. And, to do this, Columbo needs to go undercover.

The show is not dull. But the mystery isn't very mysterious. Now it didn't bother me much that Columbo acted very differently in this episode, though it also wasn't logical for a homicide detective to be doing all these things...that I must admit. Overall, disappointing but not terrible.

By the way, there is one portion of the show that is terrible. After Columbo is attacked and put in the hospital, he awakens and tells the nurse he MUST get a phone to make a call, as his partner is in danger. She responds by insisting he cannot leave nor make any phone calls....which makes zero sense. He IS a cop and he says a man's life is in danger...and she responds that he cannot make a call nor leave??? This is just dumb...and the scene needed to be written better.
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8/10
OK, overall.
wkozak22119 May 2015
Not a bad episode. Nice to see a change of pace. Too bad vito scotti isn't in the episode. Tyne daly is OK but she is like william shatner. I can only watch him in small doses and infrequently. The only role I find that fits him well is captain kirk. He did not really overact in the role. Tyne daly is the same way. She was fine on cagney and lacey. She and shatner seem to have started to begin overacting once their series ended. I wish their was more ed begley in this episode. I enjoy his acting very much. He can act serious or with a comic touch. I remember him in st. Elsewhere. I enjoyed the series very much. This episode should have spawned more episodes in the same vein with reliable character actors and actresses.
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7/10
RIDICULOUS!
skarylarry-934007 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I already have one review on this episode. I want to add: Would Colombo really tell everyone where he is staying? 4 million dollars is at stake. He is inviting injury or murder. Also, Columbo says the coins spilled on the table had been put in meter between 1-6PM because parking is free after 6PM. The fact is many people put coins in meters well after the time it is free; they don't read the meter. Irv could have went much later than 6PM! And...when Columbo was talking to the known burglar, he says, "you had nothing to do with it." He says it with the wrong tone (it doesn't sound right). He has said the same line in other episodes and it isn't said the way cColumbo would say it!
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2/10
Sad
spuddcw2000-128 June 2021
I get what the minds behind Columbo were trying to do (I hope). Change it up a little? Well they changed it. To understand this episode....picture Helen Mirren being a lifeguard on BayWatch. Ms. Mirren is a giant in acting and you COULD cast her as a lifeguard but really...SHOULD you? Peter Falk was probably just cashing checks at this point and that's cool.

I gave it a 2 based on effort alone.

But this is one terrible, terrible.... TERRIBLE...episode of a very good TV show. I'll give you a good example of just how terrible. Columbo changes clothes in the back of a car. And they decided to show the audience his changing clothes. He kisses Tyne Daly...on the lips...someone he literally met 3 minutes before.

Very odd...very strange....very forgettable. I literally felt sad for Falk.
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