"Columbo" Playback (TV Episode 1975) Poster

(TV Series)

(1975)

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9/10
No winners
john_maudlin26 November 2016
My favorite Columbo for so many reasons. Oscar Werner is one of his best adversaries - note the wonderful way he refuses to accept he has been caught and that his fool-proof plan was thwarted by a simple human frailty - carelessness. Gena Rowlands, though restricted by her wheelchair bound role, nevertheless acts as a streak of goodness running against the machinations of her husband. Look at the way she is displayed in flowing robes and long blonde hair, almost angelic.

The real strength of this episode lies in the denouement. 99% of the time we root for Columbo to outwit the murderer but here there is no winner. Gena Rowlands has neither a mother nor a husband at the end, as Werner led is away for incarceration, but there is no victory in Columbo's face, only a deep empathetic resignation and an underlining of what is the true cost when people commit the most heinous of crimes.
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8/10
A classic Columbo
Rosabel20 November 1999
This is one of the best Columbo episodes, with a tightly wound plot, beautiful pacing, and excellent acting from the guest star. Oskar Werner plays an electronics expert who has completely outfitted his house with gadgetry to help his wheelchair-bound wife. His clever plan to murder his interfering mother-in-law and to use a delayed videotape of the murder to establish his alibi seems to be working, until Lt. Columbo starts looking into the case. The unique plot technique of showing the murder and then watching the subsequent investigation gives the viewer the strange experience of identifying with the murderer. Like the killer, we know all the facts ahead of the police, and begin to feel the same anxiety and tension as the net closes in. The climax of this movie is wonderful, as the killer is trapped with the very technology he has set up to establish his innocence.
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8/10
Excellent early Columbo
blanche-210 December 2005
Especially in its early years, the Columbo series often showcased modern technology - the IBM Selectric typewriter (yes, before it was obsolete, it was brand new), the Betamax years before it was available to the public, the digital watch, and in this episode, Playback, it's home gadgetry. In order to help his wheelchair-bound wife (Gena Rowlands), her husband (Oskar Werner) has outfitted their home with doors that open when one claps one's hands, etc. He also has a state of the art security system complete with videotape, which he maneuvers in order to show the killing of his mother-in-law, who's about to close down his business, but not her killer, while he's out for the evening. Columbo finds it terribly convenient that the killer managed to avoid the camera. A little too convenient.

Werner makes an excellent villain. He's smooth as silk, and all the more of a sleaze due to the soft and sympathetic portrayal of Gena Rowlands, who seems to truly love this philanderer/murderer. By the time Columbo's through with him, though, he's toast. A really wonderful entry in the series.
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One of the best Columbo adventures
The Welsh Raging Bull23 April 2002
The two-timing president of an electronics firm uses his expertise in electronic gadgetry to bump off his mother-in-law who has had enough of his wasteful and philandering ways.

A very well-devised Columbo story; Oskar Werner plays a confident, cold-blooded murderer which is fully evident in his excellent portrayal.

The set-up for the murder is fascinating: the script never complicates the story and is clever in using various elements of the electronic gadgetry (not all involved in the murder) to yield Columbo's clues. This is extremely ironic given that the murderer is certain that the hi-tech, modernised equipment in his house will allow him to commit the perfect murder.

The pacing of this adventure is well-judged, the performances are efficient and the conclusion is very thoughtfully executed - the murderer's wife is on hand to confirm that what she can see on the taped version of the murder is the clinching piece of evidence.

Highly recommended - if you haven't seen a Columbo adventure before, this will highlight what you've been missing and it is very representative of the quality of the series as a whole.
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10/10
Electronics expert murders his mother-in-law to retain possession of the family business.
pamhw7 May 2006
This is one of the better "Columbo" episodes. Oskar Werner is excellent as Harold van Wyck. The company name is "Midas Electronics." The previous reviewer misspelled that. Van Wyck is an inventor ahead of his time. The gadgets portrayed are now everyday things so someone on the production staff did a bit of research in '74 when the episode was filmed. It was originally broadcast during the spring of '75. Van Wyck is a complex genius as the character shows. He clearly enjoys creating the new "inventions." But, he is no saint in that he does apparently like the ladies, and has several extra marital relationships going on. The acting is excellent from an excellent cast. Martha Scott as the mother-in-law is suitably nasty as the company owner out for profit over ideas. Gena Rowlands is, as usual, equally good. This episode of "Columbo" is a rarity. It is the only work done by Oskar Werner on American television.
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10/10
One of my favourite Columbo episodes
TheLittleSongbird1 March 2012
Columbo has always been a favourite, it is a lot of fun and very clever. Playback is one of my favourites of the series, alongside Any Old Port in A Storm, A Stitch in Crime, Ashes to Ashes, Etude in Black, By Dawn's Early Light, Blueprint for Murder and How to Dial a Murder. The story is somewhat simple, but because of how intriguing it actually is, how satisfying the ending is and how well the playback worked it was effective in its simplicity. The script is full of suspense and humour, the production values are striking, the music is haunting and adds so much to both the setting and the atmosphere and the direction is adept. The acting is wonderful, Peter Falk continues to be a joy as Columbo apart from his rather fake sneezing and Oskar Werner is very smooth, sleazy and edgy, in short one of the more interesting Columbo murderers. I also think Playback has one of the better supporting casts of the series, Gene Rowlands is excellent and Martha Scott is wonderfully nasty. Overall, classic Columbo and one of my favourites, always was and will continue to be so. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
Don't forget Gena Rowlands!
CoastalCruiser13 July 2012
In this episode Peter Faulk is in great form, as always. And the villain of the week, Oskar Werner, turns a decent performance as well. But for me the real icing on the cake was the performance of Gena Rowlands, who in her role plays the 'innocent audience' (the audience that did not see the opening of the show), as she observes Columbo slowly peel back Werner's alibi and reveal the real perpetrator of her mothers death.

Notice how low key this beautiful, powerful, award winning actress (and wife of John Cassavetes) plays her part. Even with a relatively few number of lines to recite, Gena does not over compensate with on screen affectations in order to get the camera's attention. She is totally understated, and carries out the role almost solely with facial expressions, and of course the well timed flow of tears at the climax of the episode when her character is faced with the undeniable truth she has lost a husband as well as a mother. What a Greek tragedy!

Yes, Gena was the glue sealing the credibility of the story and allowing us, the real audience, to suspend our disbelief and take a nice ride on the murder train. Thank you Gena!
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8/10
A Columbo as it should be
cashimor15 December 1998
Again Columbo seems to be completely out-classed, but again his usual turn around and asking just that one question, harassing the person he thinks has done it until some progress is made. There also is the enjoyable presence of his dog, but as usual, his wife isn't there.
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6/10
Engrossing Classic Columbo With The Pre-Recorded Murder Switch
ShootingShark15 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Harold Van Wick has squandered the resources of his mother-in-law's electronics firm and a day of reckoning has come. Harold shoots her, but uses his electronic know-how and a closed-circuit TV system to give himself a cast-iron alibi. Columbo however is unconvinced. Can he use Van Wick's hi-tech gadgets to ensnare him ?

This Columbo story, beautifully written by David P. Lewis and Booker Bradshaw, is one of the best, with a brilliant modus-operandi (time-delaying the murder footage), lots of clever ideas (the missing mulch, the gunshot opening the door, the light on the doll) and some great comic moments (the air vent gag in the art gallery is a scream). It also has a great killer in the shape of Werner (the star of François Truffaut's classics Jules Et Jim and Fahrenheit 451), whose nervous, edgy performance - all teeth and hair - is a study in paranoia, with a great crack-up at the end. Rowlands (a close friend of Falk's) is also excellent as the trusting, wheelchair-bound wife who holds the key to the case. Director Kowalski (who helmed three other Columbo yarns) effortlessly tells the intriguing story, knowing just when to apply suspense and humour for maximum effect. Falk, as ever, is absolutely bang-on in his signature role, and it's a joy to watch his performance.
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9/10
A very entertaining episode, well played.
What makes this episode high on the list is the avoidance of cliché, and a sense of realism and possibility. For example, Columbo's bedroom door/ clown in the chair discovery which raises doubt but does not constitute proof, as Van Wykke and his wife point out. Also the subtlety and acting restraint, especially in the film worthy performances of Gena Rowlands and Werner, but really all players.

I did wonder about Columbo's alleged "cold" demonstrated by his alleged "sneezing" and assumed the script writer was going to work around a nasal issue of Falk's; but such a condition was not evident. Not a distraction though, with such an engrossing well timed story and fine performances. This is good Columbo, people.
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6/10
Short and sweet
Leofwine_draca22 July 2015
A brisk outing for Peter Falk's Columbo, PLAYBACK sees him going up against Oscar Werner (star of FAHRENHEIT 451). Werner plays a cad of a guy who spends his time cheating on his disabled wife. When his mother-in-law finds out about his nefarious ways, she plans to remove him from the CEO post of the company she runs, but he has other ideas.

PLAYBACK, as the title would suggest, focuses on the then-new technology of CCTV as the murderer plays with the system to give him a perfect alibi. The new technology is incredibly dated (as is the new-fangled digital watch on display) but watching Columbo figure out his way around it is a lot of fun. This mystery is a straightforward one that gets by on the interplay between Falk's bumbling detective and Werner's increasingly exasperated suspect.

Once again, the comedy here is on strong form, particularly in the scenes involving Columbo's dog. An interlude in an art gallery is another highlight, but my favourite moment is when Werner finds Columbo hiding behind a curtain. It had me burst into laughter, something few things do.
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9/10
the most satisfying finale of any episode
kopald-8949415 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I love "Columbo." It's a cat-and-mouse show and is not about emotions. But something I've always missed is a stronger reaction from the murderer when he realizes that he has been caught in Columbo's net of evidence. Usually it is simply a rueful smile and a bowed head. An exception is provided by Oskar Werner in Playback. Throughout the episode he displays an intense anger and irritation at Columbo's persistence. Then the paroxysm of rage he generates at the end, even to the extent of his face flushed visibly red, while ordering his wife to lie for him, makes this, in my opinion, the most satisfying finale of all.
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7/10
I assure you I heard Nahsing!
sol-kay27 December 2005
(There are Spoilers) Lt. Columbo, Peter Falk,matches wits with electronic expert and art connoisseur Harold Van Wick, Oskar Werner, in this made for TV movie about murder and the use of state-of-the-art, circa 1975, electrical equipment to cover up the crime.

Feeling that he's been iced out of his mother-in-law's electronics corporation with his wheelchair bound wife Elizabeth, Gena Rowlads, put in as chairwoman of the board Harold plans to murder her, Mrs.Meadis (Martha Scott), and make it look like it was the result of a break in. Setting everything up with the video camera to be activated by sound to tape anyone trying to break into the mansion. Harold gets Mrs. Meadis to walk into the study and shoots her to death with him being out of camera range. Harold then sets up the video camera , with Mrs. Meadis being shot and lying dead on the floor, to start recording some 15 minutes. Later he safely leaves the mansion to attend a show at an art gallery in Beverly Hills. Harold makes it look like with the security guard Baxter, Herb Jefferson Jr. as a witness that Mrs. Meadis was shot 15 minutes after he left the mansion.

Complicated yes but not that smart on Harold's part since he didn't realize that no matter how smart you are the eye of the camera, or video camera, doesn't miss a thing. What it didn't miss was what Lt. Columbo spotted, by enlarging the video image, that totally destroyed Harold's alibi. In fact it was the very alibi of Harold not being in the house at the time of Mrs. Meadis murder that did Harold in.
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4/10
Ah Nostalgia
CineTigers2 June 2004
I'm a fan of Columbo, especially on a rainy Saturday, and it was fun to see Oskar Werner after Fahrenheit 451, but this episode was very lacking. The original plot and plot twists were obvious and could be guessed way in advance, even years before the modern detective shows of today. But it was amusing to see the crazy couch patterns and "modern" electronics equipment and, of course, the mandatory suburbanite humor poking fun at modern art for sale. The high-tech home is a Jetson's or Disney version of Tomorrowland, and fun to think of writers inventing those "way-out gizmos".

If its sunny outside, go play, as there are much better Columbo episodes. Still, we should be thankful for Cable TV that these episodes are being broadcast.
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An enjoyable and strong Columbo film
bob the moo22 December 2006
Harold Van Wick has landed on his feet by marrying the wheelchair-bound Elizabeth Meadis as he has become the head of the family electronics company. Harold has driven the company to focus on gadgets like the many toys he has in his own home – a direction that mother-in-law blames for the fall in profits of her company. When she decides to fire him, Harold sets it up to kill her, make it look like a burglary and use the CCTV with a recording to make the security guard think it happened while Harold was at a party. It all goes to plan but wet mulch and the precision of Harold's timings make Columbo believe this is not as simple as a robbery gone wrong.

The problem with me having seen so many of the Columbo films is that there are so few left for me to watch without knowing the whole show. This has meant me mostly watching the modern ones which aren't as good as the original films. Playback caught my eye in the TV guide and I had no memory ever seeing it and was thus looking forward to it. This pressure of expectation could have damaged the viewing of it but thankfully this was a typically strong Columbo that sticks to the formula and delivers what the fans love about the series. The plot is the usual cat and mouse game as Columbo tries to piece the mystery together and it is a good example of how to do it. The little details are well worked by Columbo and he has good chemistry with Harold, albeit not quite as good as in the best films. The humour is present as well, which helps things move along entertainingly and makes Columbo fun as a character.

Falk is terrible here when asked to act like he has a cold – for some reason he cannot do it and his sneezes are laughable. However in every other regard he gives great Columbo. He is self-depreciating but always leaves just enough of his cogs turning visible so the viewer knows what he is doing. His turn in the art gallery is an obvious scene but he makes it work by the deftness of his comic touch – the moment where he explains to the gallery owner that his wife paints is probably one of my favourite Columbo moments. He works well with Werner, who himself is good value even if he is given a slighter weaker character than some of the better adversary roles have had. Support is so-so from Scott and Rowlands, mainly because the two men make the film theirs and work their joint and individual scenes well.

Overall then a great example of what the Columbo films do well. The formula is all in place and all parts work well – from the mystery right through to the humour. Apart from a terrible cold, Falk is strong and works well with Werner in a film that will please fans and showcase the film series for first timers.
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8/10
A stellar cast but story weakens a typical Columbo!
Sylviastel20 May 2006
I have to say that I never heard of Oscar Werner until I saw him in this Columbo episode. He plays dashing but strange, charming but unfaithful electronics expert who wants to maintain control of his wife's family company which is what he is an expert in. The house has cameras and security that anybody would envy. When his mother-in-law played by the legendary actress, Martha Scott, announces her plans to give the company control to another family member. Werner's character stages a perfect murder so to say but you forgot that COlumbo is investigating it. Anyway his wife is played by the glorious and beautiful Gena Rowlands as an invalid who needs special care. She describes herself that "she's not that fragile." OF course, your heart breaks for her. I love the scene with Columbo in the art gallery with Patricia Barry, another great actress.
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8/10
Give Columbo Too Much & You Will Go To Jail
DKosty1231 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
The main suspect in this murder is a technological genius who can't run a company for his wife & mother-in-law. He develops a high tech security system for their mansion. Then Mum-In-Law tells him one night that she is removing him from running the company as he is ruining here financially. So he shoots her, but tries to use his hi-tech security system to arrange his alibi.

That is his mistake as he has even more trouble than the problem with the mum-in-law when Columbo gets on his trail. Columbo beats this murderous genius using his own technology. Robert Brown (Jason Bolt on Here Come The Brides) has a small role in this one as the Mum-In-Laws son, brother-in-law to our murderer.
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7/10
Simplistic but fine Columbo entry.
Boba_Fett113822 July 2008
No way that is among the best of the Columbo movies but it s still simply one fine entry in the long and popular running series.

The movie is directed by Bernard L. Kowalski, who is perhaps my favorite director out of the entire Columbo movie series. He directed numerous Columbo movies, of which this one isn't his best or most interesting to watch but there simply is just not such a thing as a bad Bernard L. Kowalski Columbo movie.

The entire movie is mostly set at one location; In and around the house were the murder was committed. Not that this is something unusual for a Columbo movie but this one is perhaps an extreme example of it. But of course when you have such a large 'high-tech' house, it isn't anything to surprising that this approach got picked with its story. It's of course also a real typical approach for a murder mystery to have most of the movie set at a large house. It's of course an approach Agatha Christie novel/movies are best known for. Guess Columbo also wanted to have a taste of this.

The fact that the movie is mostly set at one location is perhaps the main reason why the movie feels rather simplistic. It tried to make the story more interesting and tried to spice things up by inserting lots of modern high-tech gadgets into the movie and weave it into the murdering plot. But of course all of those high-tech gadgets are no terribly outdated and they look quite ridicules honestly. But who knows, maybe in 20 years from now people will also laugh at seeing our 'modern' tools and gadgets in movies. It's at least not as ridicules as the robot in the other earlier Columbo movie "Columbo: Mind Over Mayhem".

The movie is also quite short and just over an hour long. Because of this not everything seems developed and wrapped up properly. Especially the ending just comes too soon and the movie feels as if it could had used some more moments in which Columbo tried to make things tough for his main suspect, played by Oskar Werner and some more moments in which the killer tried to fool Columbo and conceal his crime better for the world in order to avoid getting caught.

Peter Falk is good as always as Columbo, who this time again has a cold. Also present again is his dog. Oskar Werner also plays his role just fine, although the movie also leaves you the feeling that they could had done some more and developed his character a bit better. Austrian born actor Werner is best known for playing the main lead in the original "Fahrenheit 451", which is currently being remade. He quit acting shortly after this Columbo movie, most likely forced due his drinking problems. He also died quite young of an heart attack in late 1984. Also present in this movie is Gena Rowlands. But due to the limited running time of this movie, non of the supporting roles are quite big or interesting enough to be worth mentioning.

Not the worst Columbo movie but there are definitely better ones out there, especially also from Bernard L. Kowalski.

7/10

http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
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10/10
Loved It! Oskar Werner and 70s Tech!
verbusen3 April 2024
This is a really good Columbo episode. I just watched it after frankly giving up on Columbo for a few years after watching it for decades, but I had never watched this one. It was on Roku Channel with very small commercial breaks, much better then we had to put up with on 1970s broadcast TV! I had been watching some Oskar Werner films (The Last 10 Days, about the Berlin bunker) and wanted to see more. Someone on his bio mentioned this and I'm glad I finally watched it 50 years after it was made. For me this had the best Columbo ending I ever remember, except maybe the one with Donald Pleasence, that one is also very memorable. But Oskar's character really takes the bad police news like you can believe it, not like a person automatically admitting guilt like in a Perry Mason. His acting is top notch at the end! 10 of 10.
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6/10
Oskar Werner, Undone.
rmax30482313 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This is the one in which Oskar Werner shoots his interfering mother-in-law in their manse and finagles with the surveillance tapes to alter the time line so that it appears a burglar did it. Werner is smart and confident and believes he'll get away with it, then take over the company. Hah. I say, Hah hah! Enter Columbo, stage right, wearing Salvation Army raincoat and St. Vincent DePaul shoes, amazed by the electronic gadgetry of the place. The doors open at the clap of a hand! Well, okay, two hands -- this being a TV mystery and not a koan.

A few "parlor tricks," a couple of chats with the gate attendant who seems to have witnessed the murder on the surveillance tape, a bit of head scratching while Columbo muses about all the mulch outside the broken entry and the absence of same on the inside floor.

This is pretty much mainstream Columbo. Usually the writers give him some distracting business when he first appears at the crime scene. He hasn't had any coffee, or he's been up all night, or he's hungry and has brought a boiled egg but there is no receptacle for the shells, or he's been hauled out of bed in his PJs. Here, he only has a cold, which he quickly gets rid of and which wasn't very engaging in the first place. One humorous episode. It takes place in a fancy art gallery in which Columbo, while being shown all the expensive modern sculpture, wonder aloud how much that untitled object up there on the wall costs. (It's not an object d'art.)

The story is reasonably well written. There aren't the spectacular logical lacunae found in some of the episodes, and when Oskar Werner gives up at the end, it's because his goose is really cooked, not because the script requires him to shrug his shoulders and hold out his hands in the face of a mere shred of evidence. (Evidence is always measured in "shreds." In some of Columbo's cases, eg., "Murder by the Book," the killer collapses in the face of only a nanoshred of evidence.) Entertaining, but not among the series' best.
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10/10
Quite the Array
Hitchcoc2 April 2024
I was a middle school teacher around the time that videotape became commercially possible. I do remember the first instant replays during football games. So cool. I also remember our school had one videotape player. Those gigantic reels with all the pitfalls of the possibility of breakage or dropouts. I also remember that we had no timer so I would run in at night when a certain show was on that I wanted to show my kids. There were no timers on the thing. Anyway, to see the sophisticated array of video technology was a real treat after all these years. The story is pretty terrific. Oskar Werner is a nasty, self centered guy, who is running a highly sophisticated company. We find out he is a womanizer and is destroying the company with his excesses. He is married to a beautiful invalid in a wheelchair, whose mother discovers what her husband is up to and fires him. Before that can become official, he shoots her and uses his video magic to cover things up. Columbo, who knows nothing about this new technology, uses what he learns, to put together the solution. Werner is really nasty but is a genius. This is partially what gets him caught.
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6/10
"Playback" (1975)
Wuchakk15 April 2019
PLOT: A genius inventor (Oskar Werner) murders his mother-in-law when she pressures his resignation from her electronics company, making it appear like he was at an art gallery during the crime via surveillance wizardry. Gena Rowlands plays his paraplegic wife while Trisha Noble is on hand as a secretary at the art house.

COMMENTARY: "Playback" is a rather obscure episode with a not-too-famous actor playing the antagonist (it was Werner's penultimate role). It's decent, but sorta forgettable because it came after six outstanding, longer Columbo flicks in a row, which represented the series at its apex. Here the series returns to the shorter 73 minutes and it just comes across as an overall downgrade. But, like I said, it's still a worthwhile installment.

Gena still looks great at 44, but the beautiful Trisha Noble steals the show on the female front. She was 30 during shooting and went on to appear as a wild-haired villainess in the Buck Rogers episode "Cruise Ship to the Stars" (1979).

GRADE: B-
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6/10
Playback
Prismark1018 March 2018
Oskar Werner plays Harold Van Wick who after marrying his wheelchair bound wife, Elizabeth (Gena Rowlands) runs the family electronics company.

Harold has taken the company in new directions such as home security gadgets and digital watches. His mother in law Margaret Meadis (Martha Scott) is not happy with declining profits. The worldwide recession is no excuse and she wants Harold to step down as chairman. Harold has murder in his mind and plans to manipulate the cctv recording system he has installed at the house.

Columbo does not buy that the murder was a robbery gone wrong. Nothing was stolen and the intruder seemed to have cleverly sidestepped the security cameras.

This is a nice episode to see the talents of Oskar Werner who made so few movies. Most people would know him from Fahrenheit 451. I could understand his anger at his mother in law. Hasn't she seen Michael Winner's film Death Wish released in 1974? What else will send home security system sales soaring!
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2/10
Dumber and dumber
mekid-331833 January 2023
I used to love Columbo when I was a child. I used to watch it with my mother, every Saturday night. It was great.

Now I'm watching these episodes again and I find the plot holes so numerous, it's ridiculous.

Columbo says he has a cold, he doesn't sound like he has a cold at all, it's just stupid

In this episode, the daughter wants to go back in her room and stay in the same house where her mother was murdered 1 hour before.... Who wrote these scripts? It's just so dumb

Every episode has stupid stuff like that. How come Columbo ALWAYS finds and goes to speak to the murderer straight away.... He never speaks to anyone else before, it's just nonsensical.

It's just pure fantasy. Not even 1 percent of what he does is credible and would happen in real life.
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A good "Columbo" entry, though not especially well shot or staged
J. Spurlin24 January 2007
Harold Van Wick (Oskar Werner) just loves inventing gadgets, and his house is filled with them. But investing in new technology is sending his family's electronics company deep into the red. His mother-in-law (Martha Scott) decides to remove him as head of the company and threatens to show her daughter (Gena Rowlands) evidence of his infidelity. He thinks his inventions will help him commit the perfect murder. Later it seems his mother-in-law was shot by an intruder while he was at an art gallery. But clever gadgets aren't enough to fool our rumpled, redoubtable Lt. Columbo (Peter Falk).

This "Columbo" episode, directed by Bernard L. Kowalski, has several flaws in the way it is shot and staged. An early scene shows Van Wick shaking hands with, and speaking to, his wife's brother (Robert Brown), who is awkwardly kept off screen too long before we get a good look at him. An insert shot, of a toy clown in a chair, is grainy and looks like a still photograph blown up. As we watch the murder tape along with the characters, we feel we ought to see the moment when the recorded footage changes to the "live" footage—but we don't. My least favorite: the mother falls face down when she's shot, but her body is facing up. We see the murder tape several times, and just once we barely see her about to turn around as she falls; but unless we slow down the DVD (which the original viewers couldn't do) it looks like a continuity error.

Even though this shorter-than-average episode stops the story for extraneous comic business (Columbo with his dog; Columbo baffled by modern art), there seems to be a scene missing. I would have liked to see Van Wick return to the house from the art gallery and remove the key evidence. Instead, we cut from him leaving the gallery to Columbo appearing in the driveway.

Still, this is a good entry, with a strong cast, a good script and a satisfying ending. Just don't expect it to look as polished as Steven Spielberg's "Murder by the Book."
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