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IMDbPro

Tödliche Kriegsspiele

Originaltitel: Columbo: Grand Deceptions
  • Fernsehfilm
  • 1989
  • TV-PG
  • 1 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
1951
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Peter Falk and Robert Foxworth in Tödliche Kriegsspiele (1989)
Cop DramaPolice ProceduralCrimeDramaMysteryWar

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe head of a private military think tank who's been embezzling funds from the institute murders a colleague who's been investigating him, while devising a watertight alibi. Lt. Columbo dism... Alles lesenThe head of a private military think tank who's been embezzling funds from the institute murders a colleague who's been investigating him, while devising a watertight alibi. Lt. Columbo dismantles his alibi.The head of a private military think tank who's been embezzling funds from the institute murders a colleague who's been investigating him, while devising a watertight alibi. Lt. Columbo dismantles his alibi.

  • Regie
    • Sam Wanamaker
  • Drehbuch
    • Richard Levinson
    • William Link
    • Sy Salkowitz
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Peter Falk
    • Robert Foxworth
    • Andy Romano
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,8/10
    1951
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Sam Wanamaker
    • Drehbuch
      • Richard Levinson
      • William Link
      • Sy Salkowitz
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Peter Falk
      • Robert Foxworth
      • Andy Romano
    • 34Benutzerrezensionen
    • 6Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos11

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    Topbesetzung21

    Ändern
    Peter Falk
    Peter Falk
    • Columbo
    Robert Foxworth
    Robert Foxworth
    • Frank Brailie
    Andy Romano
    Andy Romano
    • Sergeant Major Lester Keegan
    Janet Eilber
    Janet Eilber
    • Jenny Padget
    Stephen Elliott
    Stephen Elliott
    • General Padget
    Michael McManus
    Michael McManus
    • Tanzer
    James Lashly
    James Lashly
    • Sidney Winnik
    Lynn Clark
    • Marcia
    Bennett James
    Bennett James
    • Corporal
    • (as Bennett Liss)
    Lee Arenberg
    Lee Arenberg
    • Paramilitary Man #3
    John William Gibson
    • Paramilitary Man #2
    Stephen Quadros
    Stephen Quadros
    • Paramilitary Man #4
    Milt Kogan
    Milt Kogan
    • Medical Examiner
    Christopher Titus
    Christopher Titus
    • Paramilitary Man #1
    Rick Marzan
    • Police Officer
    George J. Peters
    • Mr. Martinson
    Carolyn Carradine
    • Major's Wife
    Norma MacMillan
    • Mrs. Martinson
    • (as Norma Macmillan)
    • Regie
      • Sam Wanamaker
    • Drehbuch
      • Richard Levinson
      • William Link
      • Sy Salkowitz
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen34

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    8Wuchakk

    "Grand Deceptions" (1989)

    PLOT: Col. Brailie (Robert Foxworth) runs a military think tank where he commits fraud against the wheelchair-bound owner, a famous retired general (Stephen Elliott). Brailie murders a blackmailing investigator (Andy Romano) and makes his death look like a military-games accident.

    COMMENTARY: This one has always ranked high on my list of favorites of the latter-day series. Some people don't like it because of the quasi-military setting and Foxworth's supposedly wooden portrayal. But he's no more wooden than Gene Barry in the very first Columbo flick, "Prescription: Murder" (1968). Both roles called for an arrogant, calm, overconfident and inexpressive person.

    Janet Eilber plays the general's much younger wife and her character is genuinely winsome and noble, yet she's taken a foolish path and feels guilty about it. This all leads to a convincing and potent sequence.

    Look for Lee Arenberg in an amusing bit part.

    GRADE: A-/B+
    bob the moo

    Consistently poor delivery pretty much kill it at every step

    Colonel Frank Brailie has been stealing money from a foundation fund and enjoying the benefits of it for years until Sergeant Major Lester Keegan finds out and decides he wants his cut in return for silence. The two men work together at a private military training academy that takes citizens and makes them into soldiers. Not wanting to give up his income, Brailie uses a party for General Padget and the setting up of a gift as an alibi while he slips out to find Keegan on night manoeuvres with his unit. He stabs Keegan unseen and then leaves his body on one of many explosive packs set to simulate mortar attacks. The next day he is called to the scene of the "accident" to find that Lieutenant Columbo is there with this men. It all seems "open & shut" until Columbo finds a flashlight and a reason to doubt the accident.

    As with many TV film series (such as Perry Mason), if you like one or two of them then you'll pretty much like them all. This entry in the Columbo series pretty much follows the usual formula – we know the killer and the "perfect" plan but then watch Columbo follow his hunch and gradually starts to pick holes in the story he is told before eventually finding enough to prove his suspicions. Knowing this ahead of time won't ruin anything for you; it is simply what happens in all the films. With this strict adherence to formula it is usually down to several factors whether or not the Columbo film stands out or if it is just average. Having had my fingers burnt with my first "new" Columbo, I wasn't sure if I should bother going back or should just rewatch the original series from the seventies, but I thought that the formula can't be that hard to pull off and figured that it was worth another pass. Sadly this film continues the trend of just not being as roundly enjoyable as it did in its heyday. The story is OK but it is the delivery where it falls down. We spend too long on the build up and too long on the characters rather than focusing on Columbo. The mood of the originals used to be quite bright and fun but here it is drab and serious – making it harder to enjoy while being too stiff to enjoy as a drama. The mystery unfolds in a quite uninvolving fashion and I didn't get into it that well.

    The delivery problems continue with the characters and the performances. Falk isn't himself and he seems less comfortable in his character than before – a very strange thing considering I'm used to seeing him be so natural. It isn't his fault though that he is almost sidelined by the other characters and I did wonder why the film spent so much time away from him. Foxworth is too dull to interact with Columbo well and he is far from being a good foil for Falk if you use the standard set by the first few series. Romano is OK in a minor role but while the performances from Elliott and Eilber are OK, they don't deserve the focus they are given.

    Overall an average Columbo film at best. The idea is OK but the delivery is roundly poor. The cast are poor, the story uninspiring, the music twee and silly all producing a modern film that doesn't deserve to really share the same character as the originals and will barely do enough to please even fans.
    7Sylviastel

    It could have been worse!

    Columbo always likes to get his man or woman. This time, it's Robert Foxworth who plays a military man. Sam Wanamaker better known and respected for his role in rebuilding the Shakespeare Globe Theater on the Thames in London, England returns to direct a Columbo. He is a veteran director and it shows. Of course, I think it could have been better. The writing was a bit weaker than most and I think it could have been a lot better in the acting department but I love Columbo and I have seen almost all of them many times. I think even the casting would have been better besides just Falk and Foxworth in the roles but I'll take Columbo with the good, the bad, the ugly, and sometimes brilliant episodes.
    5TheLittleSongbird

    Not bad, but for me one of the lesser episodes of the Columbo series

    I have always been a big lover of the Columbo series for the diverting stories, great villains(think Patrick McGoohan, Leonard Nimoy, Nicol Williamson, Jack Cassidy and Robert Culp), intelligent dialogue and of course Columbo himself embodied by the now regrettably late Peter Falk. Grand Deceptions is not a bad episode, but while not as dull as Last Salute to the Commodore or as lame as No Time to Die it is one of the lesser episodes of the series to me. I have heard a lot of people saying that the later episodes don't quite match the pre-1989 episodes. I kind of agree with this, however that is not to say they are bad.

    With a small handful of exceptions, a lot of them are decent and some like Ashes to Ashes, Agenda for Murder, A Bird in the Hand and Death Hits the Jackpot are to a standard worthy of the pre-1989 episodes. I will give credit where it's due, like all Columbo episode it looks great with slick editing and striking locations, and it is solidly directed. The music is nothing extraordinary, but it still has a certain groove and atmosphere to it. Peter Falk tries his best and there are times where he does deliver but there is not him at his best, and it felt as though he was secondary to the rest of the characters. This wouldn't matter so much, if those characters were actually interesting, but on the whole I found them dull, and that is including Brailie.

    Likewise with the story, which instead of bright, breezy and above all diverting, was too drab, too stiff and too serious, complete with an ending that was good in idea but underdeveloped and implausible in execution and build-up that quite frankly takes too long to set up. The scripts I often found intelligent and clever with some good tension and humour. Not here though, it felt stiff and humourless. The acting is not great, though Steven Elliot is quite good. Robert Foxworth has to work with one of the blander villains of the series, and while I have nothing against arrogant characters(Columbo has had its fair share of them and some of them, like Leonard Nimoy's character in A Stitch in Crime are some of the most memorable guest turns) the material is below the usual standards I get from watching Columbo, so I actually found his arrogance got on my nerves. His interaction with Columbo didn't spark much joy either.

    All in all, somewhat watchable, but in my opinion a lesser entry while not the worst. It's not as if Columbo is a poor series, in fact it is one of the finest series of its kind, all the more reason for Grand Deceptions to have been so much better. If I were to say whether it was worth watching, I'd say any Columbo episode is worth watching once, but for me, I'd rather stick to the likes of A Stitch in Crime, By Dawn's Early Light, Any Old Port in a Storm, Etude in Black, Forgotten Lady, Death Lends a Hand, Blueprint for Murder and How to Dial a Murder.

    5/10 Bethany Cox
    5Leofwine_draca

    Average military-themed Columbo story

    GRAND DECEPTIONS is one of the earliest of the comeback Columbo episodes, following on from the superior SEX AND THE MARRIED DETECTIVE. This one's a little dry and stilted for a Columbo episode, not to mention that the military setting is overly familiar from earlier and better instalments (like BY DAWN'S EARLY LIGHT).

    The murder is a typical one with a military angle, but it takes forever to get going and about half an hour of screen time has passed until we get to the meat of the detective investigation. Although the running time overall is only an hour and a half, this story feels very slow and it's a little too serious for its own good; there's no goofiness here, and even though Columbo's dog makes a cameo, he doesn't get to do much.

    Falk is on fine fettle, but I find that Columbo is only as good as his opponents, and Robert Foxworth as the guest villain is a bit of a bore, far too straight-laced to make an impact. Andy Romano (ERASER) as the victim is much better, as Stephen Elliott playing the old-time general. But, in the end, GRAND DECEPTIONS is a very ordinary and average-feeling Columbo story, with a completely spurious ending, and certainly not one to remember.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      (at around 43 mins) This is one of the few Columbo episodes in which the Lieutenant's supposed first name is displayed. Columbo is showing Frank Brailie a plastic evidence bag of leaves and mud retrieved from the collar of the victim, and the name 'Frank Columbo' can be read on the bag.
    • Patzer
      When Columbo looks at the body of Sergeant Major Lester Keegan, he can be seen to be blinking.
    • Zitate

      Lieutenant Columbo: You know, Colonel, the way we always agree with one another, that's amazing, considering the fact that we really don't like one another. Would you agree with me on that?

      Colonel Frank Brailie: I think I'd have to agree.

      Lieutenant Columbo: You see? We agree again.

    • Crazy Credits
      As the program ends and the credits roll, the camera pans across the Civil War miniature figurines on their battlefield. It ends its motion on a tight closeup of a miniature figurine of Columbo himself, complete with trademark rumpled tan raincoat and arms up in his classic pose when interrupting to make a point. Clearly, his figurine is intended not as a Civil War relic, but instead as a little joke for the viewers.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Columbo: Grand Deceptions (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      I've Got A Crush On You
      (uncredited)

      Written by George Gershwin

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 2. April 1991 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Коломбо: Большие маневры
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Universal Television
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 30 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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