Make Me a Perfect Murder
- L’episodio è andato in onda il 21 feb 1982
- TV-PG
- 1h 40min
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAn executive secretary for a TV network kills her boss and lover after he broke up with her and passed her over for a promotion she believes she deserves. Lt. Columbo is on the case.An executive secretary for a TV network kills her boss and lover after he broke up with her and passed her over for a promotion she believes she deserves. Lt. Columbo is on the case.An executive secretary for a TV network kills her boss and lover after he broke up with her and passed her over for a promotion she believes she deserves. Lt. Columbo is on the case.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Walter Mearhead
- (as James Mc Eachin)
- Jonathan
- (as Kenneth Gilman)
- Director
- Sceneggiatura
- Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
- Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro
Recensioni in evidenza
This is a decent episode (though my wife disliked it quite a bit) but it was heavily padded. For example, in one worthless scene, Columbo is staring at some computerized graphics...and it went on and on and on. Unnecessary and evidence that there just wasn't enough plot. It's a shame they didn't make the show 10-15 minutes shorter....it would have improved it.
By the way, if you DO watch the episode I'd love to know your opinion, as in some ways I think they were vaguely hinting at Kay having a lesbian relationship.
This would have been a top-notch "Columbo" episode if about twenty minutes had been trimmed off. The first section of the film—the murder sequence and everything leading up to it—is some of the best stuff in the series. Freestone's use of a tape recording is an especially effective dramatic device.
After the murder there are two impressive scenes—one in an elevator with Freestone and Columbo, and another surreal sequence, where he harasses her via the multiple TV screens in her control booth. Most everything else is slack. There is a long, pointless scene where Columbo fools around with the TV equipment. There's a needless subplot with Lainie Kazan (who is too young to be playing an aging Judy Garland-like has-been). There's a limp scene where Columbo confronts Freestone at her old, now-abandoned home and offers sympathy.
Some of these scenes seem to be an attempt to make the villain more human than usual. That's fine, but the "Columbo" formula demands that any confrontation between detective and quarry be tense. "Columbo" works because of its formula, not in spite of it. The closer it hues to it, the better it is.
The formula also demands that what finally trips up the killer be a surprise. The ending here is very predictable. "Columbo" fans will want to watch this one, despite its flaws. Others, beware.
Quite a freshly plotted Columbo episode considering it was made at the tail-end of the original series; it features quite an engaging and gritty performance from Trish Van Devere as the murderess who is very good at exhibiting her character's misfiring and impatient ambition.
The plot is cleverly and systematically developed: the murderess's grip on the prize job she temporarily acquire's after her lover's demise is dramatically loosened by the ironically erratic decision-making that her lover alluded to prior to his death, in line with the other harassment of Columbo's increasingly revealing investigation.
The main weakness of this Columbo adventure is that it wreaks of padding to satisfy a 120 minute slot - it could easily have been done in 90 minutes: the plot is bloated with prolonged scenes that add no value to the story, particularly the misjudged sub-plot involving a trouble-stricken actress on a TV show.
The circumstantial clues stack up against the murderess quite entertainingly and many of Columbo's intuitive observations are of a reassuringly high-standard, but the murder weapon scenario is rather unconvincing to say the least.
A Columbo story that probably would have had a higher mark but for its damaging protractedness; nevertheless, a story that is not without its merits.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe Playland Arcade scenes were filmed at the Santa Monica, California Looff Hippodrome. This ___location also was used as the carousel where Henry Gondorff (Paul Newman's character in La stangata (1973)) lived and worked. In The Sting, the carousel was located in Chicago.
- BlooperThe image of Columbo's car sitting in the parking lot can be seen reflected in the glass of the CNC building as Kay enters it before she commits the murder.
- Citazioni
Columbo: [entering Kay's office] That's a very impressive desk, Ma'am. You can run the world from a desk like that.
Kay Freestone: The world doesn't count - just the West coast.
- ConnessioniFeatures Bolero (1934)
- Colonne sonoreThis Old Man
(uncredited)
Traditional English children's marching song
Whistled by Columbo (Peter Falk)
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Dettagli
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- Celebre anche come
- Mord in eigener Regie
- Luoghi delle riprese
- 26646 Latigo Shore Drive, Malibu, California, Stati Uniti(Mark McAndrews' beach house)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
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