“Evidence. Find the evidence, Lieutenant. Quit jumping to conclusions and quit trying to take the easy way.” The way Columbo sheepishly nods his head in response to that pompous lecture is priceless.
This lawyer must not have paid much attention in law school, or else he's trying to intimidate Columbo. Any first-year law student would know that (a) the vast majority of convictions are obtained on circumstantial evidence, and (b) a circumstantial evidence case is hardly "the easy way out". Indeed, the cases with direct evidence are the easy ones!
Bad lawyer. He tells his client "You must not say anything that could be construed as an admission of guilt". A good lawyer should say: "You must not say anything".
@@power2084 it is true that a lawyer says "don't talk to the cops" but not answering simple probing questions would make you look just as suspicious. What he was suggesting is something like "the way you are now, answering hello might sound like a confession. Snap out of it."
Prior to Columbo leaving a scene such as this, he'll usually give the perpetrator something to think about, in his absence. Columbo loves to see the evil doers squirm a bit before he goes, lol. Great episode. 👮🔍
I think it’s about getting the perpetrator to a mental state where they both think that they have reason to worry (so they’ll act and speak rashly to try to help their case) while also giving the impression that he himself was incompetent (so they’ll relax their guard) I think that Columbo’s goal most of the time was to make the criminal think something along the lines of: “This dopey buffoon has, by sheer luck, found something that might point to me if he thinks about it any longer. I could to say something to dissuade him. I bet I could do that easily with how simple-minded he is. I would like to just say nothing, but he doesn’t seem to suspect me at all right now, so saying nothing would make him suspicious when he already has this lead that he just hasn’t connected to me yet.” Whatever the criminal says at this point with that mindset will help Columbo. Like, what pieces of evidence they try their hardest to make irrelevant, what points they react to the most, how long they take to think before each line, and their general attitude to the whole encounter and how it changes Columbo’s technique is like, almost hypnotizing, even making people who should really know better give him all of this information. That’s why Columbo talks so slowly and with so many asides as well. Whatever the criminal chooses to say when given those moments tells him what the criminal’s immediately thoughts when presented with this new information, which can be very telling. And even if they choose to remain quiet for those long stretches without saying anything, that’s information as well
Just to say that the raincoat makes Columbo's appearance ageless - if he had worn the fashions of the 1970s he would look outdated today. The close-up shots of his face have the same effect. I wonder whether Peter Falk or the producers knew that or was it a lucky accident? Either way, Mr Falk's performance is funny, cunning and convincing so many years later.
I think Falk knew it In the original Columbo TV movie he just wore a suit Then the raincoat was Falk's own coat, which is why he's so natural and comfortable in it. I think they realized how much it made Columbo different to everyone else and added to his persona
One thing that's really astonishing about Colombo villains is that they are so remarkably consistent and somehow able to show almost zero trip ups. Colombo can roll out every last detail and they remain in fervent, consistent denial until the *one* detail that damns them. (And that one detail they'll *never* deny.) I can't imagine that criminals are really like that. They'll avert gaze, or stammer, or feign ignorance, or something, they'll repeat the same thing over and over again, they'll act nervous, etcetera. And when confronted with the damning evidence they'll still deny. Columbo villains never do.
The LAPD never sends Columbo to a gangbanger beef. They send him as their secret weapon to the politically sensitive cases whose suspects are highly accomplish or well-connected people that can manage their emotions.
LOL, "Oh, thank-god I have this alibi that I was unaware of because I was out driving and got in an accident due to my being black-out drunk. What a relief!" The 1970s were a very different era... Love the Cassidy Columbos. He's such a perfectly smarmy villain.
I had always loved Peter Falk after seeing him in The Princess Bride and Corky Romano (I know, an awful early 00s movie, but really still a very guilty pleasure) and only recently discovered Columbo. Such a wonderful series!
It's honestly pretty clever, as alibis go. An excuse that makes you look cool ("I was late because I had to save a kitten up a tree") isn't very likely to be believed by most people. But an excuse that makes you look terrible will probably be accepted as true, because otherwise, why would you say it?
A long time ago, when I was living in Ottawa, Canada, there was a French-language TV station that aired Columbo mysteries. And I am disappointed that the DVD's have only an English dialogue track.
Beth Davenports apartment from the Rockford Files stock footage film that scene also showed up on a episode of Matlock you watch all these shows long enough you will even see same streets houses bussiness
Statement Analyst. If what I heard is true the police employ statement analysts all the time to go through a suspect or witness' statement to check it for truth or lies. Most people have a vocabulary of about 20,000 words and in a split second we choose the words we use when talking, a lie interrupts that process. Search for Peter Hyatt. Columbo is just a good listener.
He goes for the facts, especially the ones that others miss. He picks up on body language/discrepancies in what the prime suspect says and how they interact with him. Annoys and grates on the suspect, until they trip themselves up. Goes for the "kill."
@@paulevans6403 No Paul it doesn't help. Do you know, this is the social network were people come to be sociable. Maybe you'd have more success on the unsociable network, haha!
Unless you are based in the US you only option to buy the DVD/BD(or illegally download them, don't know where though so don't ask). Several UK channels screen Columbo episodes on a regular basis. 5USA is one. I hate adverts though.
The scolding the lawyer gives Columbo from 8:41 is a bit silly. "When are you police going to realize that it takes more than circumstantial evidence to convict a man of a crime? Evidence. Find the evidence, Lieutenant." First of all, it's not the police's job to convict anyone. It's their job to find likely suspects and pursue those leads. And what better evidence is there than a man's gun found at the scene of the shooting with only his fingerprints on it? Is THAT circumstantial? What better evidence could the police hope for?
It's not silly though. Quite a few people get put behind bars under suspicion of a crime (or if a cop doesn't like them), then they plead guilty for a reduced sentence because they're unable to pay the bail or the cost a trial would incur, or in some cases they're put in prison and made to work while awaiting trial. If the lawyer is at all familiar with this (and he absolutely should be) then his speech has sound justification, since throwing somebody behind bars without enough to convict them can and does ruin innocent lives. Also yes, the gun actually is circumstantial evidence, especially since the guy the gun belonged to was literally in a drunken argument with other drivers at the time of the shooting (and nowhere near the murder).
It was when this was filmed. European cars were not as big a deal back then. I'd also love to have that Cadillac today - even with the scratch and the damage.
I feel like her explanation of the contract is not believe able, and her making the author out to be a victim (outside of the murder) feels off to me. I believe any judge would have granted him the rights to the books and revenue earned from it in a lawsuit.
First, Alan Mallory is a victim of the threats that were made by Riley in front of multiple witnesses, so I don’t see what’s off about that. And there’s no way Riley Greenleaf could lay claim to a book that wasn’t even completed yet, and wouldn’t have been until after the contract expired. Once the contract expires, a publisher has ZERO claim for anything after that.
@@SciTrekManmytreker The fact that Mallory would have been paid already for his work if you start work while under contract that rights to that work doesn't expire if it finished after the terms of the contract.
@@CheoWalker Works are only paid for once they are published, not while the author is writing it. Plus the fact that Riley knew nothing about the book, since Mallory wouldn’t discuss it with him which mean Riley couldn’t have been paying him for something he knew nothing about; he only knew about it because he bribed the Transcription service employee to give him a copy. Riley even said himself that Malory was leaving him and taking his best selling book to another publisher.
I don't believe if you are really that blotto(drunk) that you can't remember a thing the next day then you are in no condition to drive or walk for that matter, well not without falling over or being sick while that drunk. And besides what bar tender would allow a customer to get that drunk? There should be laws restricting how many drinks you can have in a certain amount of time. One pint of beer every 2 hours for example.
@@daviniarobbins9298 First he was lying about how drunk he was and using it as his alibi, second the bartender didn't let him drive that drunk, because this was a plot of his and he's lying about yesterday. Thirdly, he actually did make a mistake by insinuating there was more than one person and Columbo jumped on that, because he was nowhere near drunk enough to not remember what happened.
1. There is no Mrs. Columbo. She's not real and Columbo isn't really married. Just cannot believe that any woman could put up with his lifestyle, 100% career-focused and never home. He just invented an imaginary wife so that he could tell amusing, very relatable stories that would trick the perp into underestimating the lieutenant even more than they do already, while dropping their guard and revealing hints as to their guilt. I am convinced that is the reason why we never see "Mrs. Columbo" appear. 2. That lawyer wasn't the least bit impressed by Columbo's clumsy and indirect way of accusing his client of murder, but unlike the bad guy he is representing, this lawyer is right to stand up to Columbo for lacking hard evidence linking his client to the crime. I like how after standing up to Columbo and threatening to get lost, Columbo just gives him a look that screams "Yeah yeah, f you pal--it's MY show"
Columbo's wife was real, as in episodes he is seen speaking to her on the phone. In the episode "Exercise in Fatality" he is seen speaking to her on the phone. Also in "Any Old Port In A Storm" he rings her to ask about the weather when they planned to go on a picnic and it became too hot. This was key in the case, as the weather played a key role in solving the murder. So she was real.
Continuity was pretty good in this series but occasionally they got it really wrong. Riley's Cadillac magically changes years in the blink of an eye. The one we see the most of is a '69, but the one seen through the window behind the Lt. is a '68. And, don't get me started on the helicopters in 'A Friend in Deed'.
I'd like to see a reboot with Tom Cruise as Columbo. They could update it for modern audiences with cool action scenes replacing some of the boring talky bits. Who's with me?
No...put down the pipe. And Tom Cruise doing action scenes....instead of the "talking parts"?? You mean the interplay between Columbo and the suspect that is the heart of this brilliant show?? Even Jesus wept....and I'm not with you either!!
There's 2 shows that come to mind for that, Hawaii 5-0 and Magnum PI which were both cop/detective shows I used to watch with my parents on some channel that played a bunch of these older shows.
“Evidence. Find the evidence, Lieutenant. Quit jumping to conclusions and quit trying to take the easy way.” The way Columbo sheepishly nods his head in response to that pompous lecture is priceless.
This lawyer must not have paid much attention in law school, or else he's trying to intimidate Columbo. Any first-year law student would know that (a) the vast majority of convictions are obtained on circumstantial evidence, and (b) a circumstantial evidence case is hardly "the easy way out". Indeed, the cases with direct evidence are the easy ones!
The way he says "That must be it, his subconscious!" is stunning to me everytime
The lawyets sence
Bad lawyer. He tells his client "You must not say anything that could be construed as an admission of guilt". A good lawyer should say: "You must not say anything".
No He said corrwct
@@samisami-qb5tl huh what ? Explain yourself.
you don't talk to the police- ESPECIALLY if you're innocent.
Yeah, a good lawyer would be telling their client don't talk to the police, period.
@@power2084 it is true that a lawyer says "don't talk to the cops" but not answering simple probing questions would make you look just as suspicious.
What he was suggesting is something like "the way you are now, answering hello might sound like a confession. Snap out of it."
Columbo legend
Peter Falk was outstanding
May he rest in peace
Dude is dead?
@@tirokopita 2011 at the age of 83 .
So close to an accidental haiku!
@@tirokopita All of the actors in this video are now dead.
@@terracottapie I changed it just for you fam
Jack Cassidy horribly overacts, and I love it! I really love it!
Prior to Columbo leaving a scene such as this, he'll usually give the perpetrator something to think about, in his absence. Columbo loves to see the evil doers squirm a bit before he goes, lol. Great episode. 👮🔍
I think it’s about getting the perpetrator to a mental state where they both think that they have reason to worry (so they’ll act and speak rashly to try to help their case) while also giving the impression that he himself was incompetent (so they’ll relax their guard)
I think that Columbo’s goal most of the time was to make the criminal think something along the lines of:
“This dopey buffoon has, by sheer luck, found something that might point to me if he thinks about it any longer. I could to say something to dissuade him. I bet I could do that easily with how simple-minded he is. I would like to just say nothing, but he doesn’t seem to suspect me at all right now, so saying nothing would make him suspicious when he already has this lead that he just hasn’t connected to me yet.”
Whatever the criminal says at this point with that mindset will help Columbo. Like, what pieces of evidence they try their hardest to make irrelevant, what points they react to the most, how long they take to think before each line, and their general attitude to the whole encounter and how it changes
Columbo’s technique is like, almost hypnotizing, even making people who should really know better give him all of this information. That’s why Columbo talks so slowly and with so many asides as well. Whatever the criminal chooses to say when given those moments tells him what the criminal’s immediately thoughts when presented with this new information, which can be very telling. And even if they choose to remain quiet for those long stretches without saying anything, that’s information as well
Nothing more suspicious than a perfect alibi.
Jack Cassidy played great villains
Just to say that the raincoat makes Columbo's appearance ageless - if he had worn the fashions of the 1970s he would look outdated today. The close-up shots of his face have the same effect. I wonder whether Peter Falk or the producers knew that or was it a lucky accident? Either way, Mr Falk's performance is funny, cunning and convincing so many years later.
I think Falk knew it
In the original Columbo TV movie he just wore a suit
Then the raincoat was Falk's own coat, which is why he's so natural and comfortable in it.
I think they realized how much it made Columbo different to everyone else and added to his persona
"I must be grateful those nice people..." oh, oh!
You just said something very suspicious my good friend!
One thing that's really astonishing about Colombo villains is that they are so remarkably consistent and somehow able to show almost zero trip ups. Colombo can roll out every last detail and they remain in fervent, consistent denial until the *one* detail that damns them. (And that one detail they'll *never* deny.) I can't imagine that criminals are really like that. They'll avert gaze, or stammer, or feign ignorance, or something, they'll repeat the same thing over and over again, they'll act nervous, etcetera. And when confronted with the damning evidence they'll still deny. Columbo villains never do.
The LAPD never sends Columbo to a gangbanger beef. They send him as their secret weapon to the politically sensitive cases whose suspects are highly accomplish or well-connected people that can manage their emotions.
Season '' Episode '' : is my favorite episode of | Columbo
The subconscious will get you every time 😄
LOL, "Oh, thank-god I have this alibi that I was unaware of because I was out driving and got in an accident due to my being black-out drunk. What a relief!" The 1970s were a very different era...
Love the Cassidy Columbos. He's such a perfectly smarmy villain.
Also, "My car was broken into, and they stole the gun I was keeping in the glove compartment."
With facial expressions you'd like to smack.
Too bad columbo isn't the investigator in the Pelosi dui
Rest in powerful peace Peter Falk 🙏
16 September 1927 ~
23 June 2011⚘
I had always loved Peter Falk after seeing him in The Princess Bride and Corky Romano (I know, an awful early 00s movie, but really still a very guilty pleasure) and only recently discovered Columbo. Such a wonderful series!
Just one more thing
Steve Jobs adapted from Columbo
Pretending not to be a murderer by pretending to be a disgusting black out drink driver .Well done saintly dude 😜
It's honestly pretty clever, as alibis go. An excuse that makes you look cool ("I was late because I had to save a kitten up a tree") isn't very likely to be believed by most people. But an excuse that makes you look terrible will probably be accepted as true, because otherwise, why would you say it?
To be fair, at this point he hadn't killed anyone, he'd only hired a hitman (who he later kills).
The attorney here is portrayed by Alan Fudge. He portrayed “Jesus Christ” aka, Arnold Chandler, in the M*A*S*H episode “Quo Vadis, Captain Chandler”
Alan was in alot of shows and movies in the 70s
Thanks for pointing that out; I hadn't realized it.
Had to think for a second.
The Candid Camera guy was Alan Funt.
Please! Make Columbo available to be purchased on UA-cam or iTunes. I can’t believe there is no way to watch this outside the US
You can buy the box sets on Amazon for not too much...
If you're in the UK, it's on 5USA every Sunday.
A long time ago, when I was living in Ottawa, Canada, there was a French-language TV station that aired Columbo mysteries. And I am disappointed that the DVD's have only an English dialogue track.
Somebody's trying very hard to frame Mr. Greenleaf. I'm so happy he's got an iron-clad alibi after all.
Beth Davenports apartment from the Rockford Files stock footage film that scene also showed up on a episode of Matlock you watch all these shows long enough you will even see same streets houses bussiness
Jack Cassidy in two episodes of Columbo that featured a murdered author.
Immediately after this show, Mariette disappeared into a frozen wasteland, somewhere in the distant Vulcan past.
It's hard to put my finger exactly on Columbo's method. He seems to be able to get right in the face of his suspects.
@@chad6080 No, no. That's no factual Chad.
Statement Analyst. If what I heard is true the police employ statement analysts all the time to go through a suspect or witness' statement to check it for truth or lies. Most people have a vocabulary of about 20,000 words and in a split second we choose the words we use when talking, a lie interrupts that process. Search for Peter Hyatt. Columbo is just a good listener.
He goes for the facts, especially the ones that others miss.
He picks up on body language/discrepancies in what the prime suspect says and how they interact with him.
Annoys and grates on the suspect, until they trip themselves up.
Goes for the "kill."
It's a TV show. They're actors. They're working from a script. Does that help?
@@paulevans6403 No Paul it doesn't help. Do you know, this is the social network were people come to be sociable. Maybe you'd have more success on the unsociable network, haha!
Key and gun together near a gigantic scratch on the door. Lol.
Funny how the lawyer forgot he got his client out of the drunk tank earlier that morning until he gets a phone call. Why didn't he mention it before?
Script plot hole
Lovely Mariette Hartley - now 82. Stunning Lady .. Great Actor.
like a cat playing with a mouse.
Still impossible to stream it anywhere in most of Europe :(
In hungary about six episodes every day
Not in Canada either!😩
@@patbannister1 canada is one of the horrible place over the plánet 😁
Unless you are based in the US you only option to buy the DVD/BD(or illegally download them, don't know where though so don't ask).
Several UK channels screen Columbo episodes on a regular basis. 5USA is one. I hate adverts though.
@@daviniarobbins9298 beautifull méri an women. Sharon stone first of áll.
YOU can see my columbo DVD s😁
Found this under Season 3 Episode 5 "Publish or Perish"
Thank you very much, I was about to ask where it was from.
The scolding the lawyer gives Columbo from 8:41 is a bit silly. "When are you police going to realize that it takes more than circumstantial evidence to convict a man of a crime? Evidence. Find the evidence, Lieutenant."
First of all, it's not the police's job to convict anyone. It's their job to find likely suspects and pursue those leads.
And what better evidence is there than a man's gun found at the scene of the shooting with only his fingerprints on it? Is THAT circumstantial? What better evidence could the police hope for?
It's not silly though. Quite a few people get put behind bars under suspicion of a crime (or if a cop doesn't like them), then they plead guilty for a reduced sentence because they're unable to pay the bail or the cost a trial would incur, or in some cases they're put in prison and made to work while awaiting trial.
If the lawyer is at all familiar with this (and he absolutely should be) then his speech has sound justification, since throwing somebody behind bars without enough to convict them can and does ruin innocent lives.
Also yes, the gun actually is circumstantial evidence, especially since the guy the gun belonged to was literally in a drunken argument with other drivers at the time of the shooting (and nowhere near the murder).
I agree, it is silly. People get convicted everyday on circumstantial evidence.
Is Jack Cassidy’s convertible really that luxurious? I mean, it’s not a European sports car or anything.
Ah yes those "amazing" European widow makers 😂
It was when this was filmed. European cars were not as big a deal back then.
I'd also love to have that Cadillac today - even with the scratch and the damage.
Best show ever
Some lawyer to admit to a client's crime in front of a cop, even if it's a much lesser one.
Cassidy's sporting the original trump comb over hairstyle...
Poor David 😂
Ohhhh ouch. At 3:45 when Jack Cassidy says that "30 years ago WWII stories were a gold mine" ... I counted and Gulf War I was 30+ years ago
She's been in another episode...
Yes, she was in the one with Ruth Gordan as the book writer who killed her late niece's husband. She was her secretary.
@@GillAgainsIsland12 yes, Mariette Hartley. "Try & Catch Me" is the one with Ruth Gordon. Standout episode!
@@Richard-xo2gm That’s the one. Thanks.
David Cassidy's father...
And Shaun Cassidy
But not related to Ted "Lurch" Cassidy.
Cassidy lefts David's mother for Shirley Jones
One of the best Columbo villains ever. Was the cabin in Big Bear Lake?
Yes. Same actor, and the cabin was at Big Bear.
I really must stop watching these "snippets", it will ruin when i watch the whole film,,, but isn't Columbo just great, from a fan in England.
I love these short clips. They complement our enjoyment of the full episodes in my opinion.
Oh, you'll enjoy it, immensely, just the same ;)
Where is the title?
Publish Or Perish.
Columbo
| Columbo
does anyone know the season and episode?
S3, E5, Publish or Perish.
Title?
Publish Or Perish.
No other prints on the gun, couldn't he have had gloves on 🤔🤔
The butler did it
I feel like her explanation of the contract is not believe able, and her making the author out to be a victim (outside of the murder) feels off to me. I believe any judge would have granted him the rights to the books and revenue earned from it in a lawsuit.
First, Alan Mallory is a victim of the threats that were made by Riley in front of multiple witnesses, so I don’t see what’s off about that. And there’s no way Riley Greenleaf could lay claim to a book that wasn’t even completed yet, and wouldn’t have been until after the contract expired. Once the contract expires, a publisher has ZERO claim for anything after that.
@@SciTrekManmytreker The fact that Mallory would have been paid already for his work if you start work while under contract that rights to that work doesn't expire if it finished after the terms of the contract.
@@CheoWalker Works are only paid for once they are published, not while the author is writing it. Plus the fact that Riley knew nothing about the book, since Mallory wouldn’t discuss it with him which mean Riley couldn’t have been paying him for something he knew nothing about; he only knew about it because he bribed the Transcription service employee to give him a copy. Riley even said himself that Malory was leaving him and taking his best selling book to another publisher.
@@SciTrekMan It is called Conspiracy to Defraud, the fact that Mallory, while under contract, conspired to sell the book to another publisher.
@@CheoWalker That absolutely has nothing to do with this. The book is owned by Mallory UNTIL he decides to publish it.
Columbo.
Banned from Facebook for describing a different Columbo scenario.?? A country that has the death penalty WTF
Facebook put me in jail for the word "moron". I was shocked. I believe the "moron" reported me. A so called instigator. Go figure.
Just one more thing!
Love you and that will be fine by me so no problem!
lol they forgot to title it
How a drunk person remembers how many persons were in the car ?.
Columbo got greenleave from this point ?.
I don't believe if you are really that blotto(drunk) that you can't remember a thing the next day then you are in no condition to drive or walk for that matter, well not without falling over or being sick while that drunk. And besides what bar tender would allow a customer to get that drunk? There should be laws restricting how many drinks you can have in a certain amount of time. One pint of beer every 2 hours for example.
Maybe he could have explained it as a way of avoiding saying "he" or "she".
@@daviniarobbins9298 First he was lying about how drunk he was and using it as his alibi, second the bartender didn't let him drive that drunk, because this was a plot of his and he's lying about yesterday. Thirdly, he actually did make a mistake by insinuating there was more than one person and Columbo jumped on that, because he was nowhere near drunk enough to not remember what happened.
If the book was written while they were in a contract wouldn't Greenleaf be entitled to a share in it ?
That’s why he wouldn’t discuss the book with him. Can’t claim ownership of something you don’t know about.
All good fun but so unreal ..no perp would engage with a police detective in informal situations this much..but just good TV
Realize how to move 2 ways. ..come n go. as anaesthesia breaks away. Explanation for those from Saigon
Alun Fudge was also in Columbo goes to collage..
Hm. The father worried about Roe VS wade?
Oh it was brilliant
And Mr hartow CIA man in guillotine episode.
There are original ly american chatacters.
He was one of them
1. There is no Mrs. Columbo. She's not real and Columbo isn't really married. Just cannot believe that any woman could put up with his lifestyle, 100% career-focused and never home. He just invented an imaginary wife so that he could tell amusing, very relatable stories that would trick the perp into underestimating the lieutenant even more than they do already, while dropping their guard and revealing hints as to their guilt. I am convinced that is the reason why we never see "Mrs. Columbo" appear.
2. That lawyer wasn't the least bit impressed by Columbo's clumsy and indirect way of accusing his client of murder, but unlike the bad guy he is representing, this lawyer is right to stand up to Columbo for lacking hard evidence linking his client to the crime. I like how after standing up to Columbo and threatening to get lost, Columbo just gives him a look that screams "Yeah yeah, f you pal--it's MY show"
Columbo's wife was real, as in episodes he is seen speaking to her on the phone. In the episode "Exercise in Fatality" he is seen speaking to her on the phone. Also in "Any Old Port In A Storm" he rings her to ask about the weather when they planned to go on a picnic and it became too hot. This was key in the case, as the weather played a key role in solving the murder. So she was real.
But he does go home, plenty of times he either arrives from or leaves to go to his house for some reason or other.
@@johnking5174 We never actually see her, do we?
@@polreamonn No, but there are scenes were he is speaking to her on the phone.
@@polreamonnNot until Mrs. Columbo
Unalive 101:🤐
Any chance you Peacock people can make available these episodes in Spanish dubbing? I mean the good one made in Mexico. Come on…do it for us!!
Ah yes, the classic "" scene from Episode "" !!
Did you forget to put a title too?
COLUMBO MUMBO JUMBO
Does Cassidy look kinda like a much better looking Trump or am I crazy?
Continuity was pretty good in this series but occasionally they got it really wrong. Riley's Cadillac magically changes years in the blink of an eye. The one we see the most of is a '69, but the one seen through the window behind the Lt. is a '68. And, don't get me started on the helicopters in 'A Friend in Deed'.
I'd like to see a reboot with Tom Cruise as Columbo. They could update it for modern audiences with cool action scenes replacing some of the boring talky bits. Who's with me?
No...put down the pipe. And Tom Cruise doing action scenes....instead of the "talking parts"?? You mean the interplay between Columbo and the suspect that is the heart of this brilliant show?? Even Jesus wept....and I'm not with you either!!
There's 2 shows that come to mind for that, Hawaii 5-0 and Magnum PI which were both cop/detective shows I used to watch with my parents on some channel that played a bunch of these older shows.
nope nope nope nope.
| Columbo