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Columbo - The Complete First Season
But don't hold me to that. They were all murder mysteries and, like all murder mysteries, were formulaic. It's the formula that makes them appealing as well as the main character(s) and their particular approach to solving the case. Anyone who saw them, particularly when they were originally broadcast, would have a hard time forgetting the rumpled, seemingly absent-minded Lt. Columbo, played by Peter Falk.
It was also a delightful intelligence dance between Columbo and his opponent as the movies usually pitted two keen and clever minds against each other, one of which was the self-effacing Columbo. While I haven't watched all the episodes on yet on Columbo - the Complete First Season, I have watched the first three and they are quite fascinating. The first two movies in the disc set aren't part of the series itself. They were the two Columbo TV movies that preceded the series. The third is the season's first episode. What makes these three interesting, seen in sequence, is the development of both the character of Columbo and the formula of the movies (two things that go hand in hand). While the first season belongs to 1971-1972, the first movie (Prescription: Murder) is actually from 1968 and it is quite a bit different than the other movies.
First of all, Columbo looks considerably younger and neater. While he's certainly not nattily dressed, he isn't quite as rumbled and seemingly puzzled as he eventually would be. He's much more of a standard issue detective in this first film. Maybe the most striking difference is that Columbo displays a tough, hard edge at one point - something completely absent from the subsequent movies. Seen in isolation, it's a passable characterization though pretty predictable and not all that interesting. Seen now, after we're familiar with what Columbo was to become, it's wildly inappropriate. It's also a great relief in knowing this aspect of the character was tossed out. Columbo was to become much more interesting than this.
In this one, he's after Lee Grant, a lawyer who has killed her husband. Here, as in later episodes, one of the ways the story develops is that while everyone tends to see Columbo as dull-witted, the killer (in this case Grant) realizes long before anyone else that the detective isn't as slow as he appears; that he is really the only one who is a match for them in a struggle of wits. It's when this happens in the films that they really become engaging. It's the battle of wits that is so compelling.
When the series itself launched, it opened with Murder By the Book, directed by a young Steven Spielberg. It's one of the better episodes of the first season and you can see how Spielberg adds a little something through some interesting camera work, angles and so on. It's much better than most of the conventional TV direction of the period though nothing spectacular either. But it does give it a more dramatic quality, particularly a few low angle shots and certainly the long pull back of the opening. Of the episodes that follow in the first season, all are quite good though there was one that fell a bit flat (I no longer recall which one).
Watching the first season is entertaining for the shows themselves but also for seeing the development of the character and seeing how much of what made the series successful was Peter Falk's characterization. The speech patterns, the postures and some of the lines, (like, "Just one more thing ...") all added up to what may be the most memorable detective to appear on the small screen. Episodes: 1) Prescription: Murder (1968) © 2004 Piddleville Inc. |
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