I have been watching an episode of Columbo. It’s the one starring Gene Barry. I think it was the first one, made . It’s hard to believe it’s over 50 years ago.. I like Columbo, and I have seen them all
It is amazing to think 59 years, bobbie. I looked up Gene Barry tonight, he died in 2009, aged 90. I enjoy the programme too. I wondered what the fascination was that Patrick McGoohan had with the series, appearing in 4 episodes and directing 5 in all.
The Columbo TV series started 50 years ago, in 1971. The storyline you've been watching ('Prescription Murder) was actually filmed as a one-off TV movie three years earlier, as a re-working of a 1962 stage play which, in turn, had been derived from a single 1960 episode of a TV mystery series.
The movie spawned a successor movie and then 67 episodes of the TV series. So it obviously had some merit to it in the eyes of TV executives ;-)
They are always interesting shows. I really like his "trade-marks": his rumpled rain-coat; the old car; the ever-present stogie' the "Oh, yes Sir, there's just one more thing bothering me" (as he's about to leave); and his pretended deference to the suspect leading to their feeling of superiority towards this mere detective, and which in turn, leads to their eventual down-fall.
Out of interest, can anyone think of any other TV crime series which always started by telling its viewers who committed the crime and how they did it? I can't!
This has reminded me of another programme from that era, one my father absolutely loved: The Rockford Files. Haven't seen one of them for a long, long time.
Not a film but a novel. The first Ruth Rendell book I read, 'A Judgement in Stone', has the opening sentence, "If Eunice Parchman could read she would not now be serving a life sentence for murder." I was fascinated.