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Meurtre en musique

Original title: Columbo: Murder with Too Many Notes
  • TV Movie
  • 2001
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Peter Falk, Scott Atkinson, Charles Cioffi, Billy Connolly, Hillary Danner, Richard Riehle, and Chad Willett in Meurtre en musique (2001)
Cop DramaPolice ProceduralCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

A popular film composer murders his talented protege, who's been secretly ghostwriting most of his compositions in recent years, after he threatened to expose their secret to the public. Lt.... Read allA popular film composer murders his talented protege, who's been secretly ghostwriting most of his compositions in recent years, after he threatened to expose their secret to the public. Lt. Columbo investigates.A popular film composer murders his talented protege, who's been secretly ghostwriting most of his compositions in recent years, after he threatened to expose their secret to the public. Lt. Columbo investigates.

  • Director
    • Patrick McGoohan
  • Writers
    • Richard Levinson
    • William Link
    • Jeff Cava
  • Stars
    • Peter Falk
    • Billy Connolly
    • Richard Riehle
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Patrick McGoohan
    • Writers
      • Richard Levinson
      • William Link
      • Jeff Cava
    • Stars
      • Peter Falk
      • Billy Connolly
      • Richard Riehle
    • 40User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos51

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Peter Falk
    Peter Falk
    • Columbo
    Billy Connolly
    Billy Connolly
    • Findlay Crawford
    Richard Riehle
    Richard Riehle
    • Sgt Degarmo
    Charles Cioffi
    Charles Cioffi
    • Sidney Ritter
    Hillary Danner
    • Rebecca
    Chad Willett
    Chad Willett
    • Gabriel McEnery
    Scott Atkinson
    Scott Atkinson
    • Tony
    Obi Ndefo
    • Nathaniel Murphy
    Randy Oglesby
    Randy Oglesby
    • Joshua Vinten
    Luis Avalos
    Luis Avalos
    • Antonio
    Harry Danner
    Harry Danner
    • Fitch
    Anne McGoohan
    • Marcia
    Herschel Sparber
    • Priestly
    Steve O'Connor
    Steve O'Connor
    • Throve
    Larry Gilman
    • Tomblin
    Michael P. Byrne
    • Schwartz
    Van Epperson
    Van Epperson
    • Photographer
    Joanne Lara
    • Angela
    • Director
      • Patrick McGoohan
    • Writers
      • Richard Levinson
      • William Link
      • Jeff Cava
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews40

    6.72.1K
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    Featured reviews

    onceasalways

    C'mon Columbo - you can do better than that!

    I am a HUGE Columbo fan.. My trusty Tivo has become my best friend, and I never miss an episode! I don't want to criticize a Columbo, for fear that Peter Falk will read the comments and decide it's time to put the old detective away..

    But, I've gotta say - out of the long list of episodes I've seen, this is by far the most disappointing. Not only was it very unrealistic - the forensics (for a 2000 movie) were very out of date, but the plot [the ending specifically] left us dangling.

    I didn't even realize it was over! When he confessed and joked about prison, we were like "huh?? what happened?? why would he confess??".. Columbo is a brilliant detective, and this one sold him short.

    I know future episodes will make up for it.. [hint hint].. he's not ready to be put down.. I hope if the powers that be read this, they will realize that Columbo has a lot of life left in him, but I hope they also choose scripts that really are his traditional style: the Columbo style we've grown to love.

    For this episode specifically, definitely not the best.. but if you're a Columbo junkie, definitely worth a watch - even a bad Columbo makes you smile. =)
    7Wuchakk

    "Murder with Too Many Notes" (2001)

    PLOT: A popular Hollywood composer (Billy Connolly) murders his apprentice (Chad Willett) who's been ghostwriting most of his scores after the young man quits and the threat of exposure looms.

    COMMENTARY: There are many things to appreciate about this installment, like the believable and creative set-up: The apprentice practicing on the roof of the theater, the long dormant elevator and the conductor's motive, which isn't just envy, but the threat of ruin and mass embarrassment. Jealousy goes back to Shakespeare and ancient Greek theater, but I find placing envy and status into the framework of Oscar-winning composition compelling. The episode is also an interesting window into the behind-the-scenes activity surrounding the scores to major films.

    Yet there are seeming problems with the muddled ending, which can be traced to Patrick McGoohan's rewrites as director. He decided to use a musical demonstration at the climax in order to be theatrical, but the way it's done does not lend itself to a satisfying "gotcha" response. The scriptwriter, Jeffrey Cava, included several clues in his teleplay that failed to make it to the screen after McGoohan's revisions. For instance, the ultimate clue in Cava's script was particularly convicting and impossible for the murderer to dodge, but McGoohan prudently eliminated it for practical reasons. On top of this, it's dishonest to say there is "no evidence" in McGoohan's version. For detailed answers Google The Lt. Columbo Forum and punch-in Murder with Too Many Notes.

    Others complain that Columbo's slow drive home with the conductor is filler material. But the rumpled detective already sniffed him out as the murderer and needed to spend time with him to accumulate evidence and start wearing the suspect down in order to eventually break him. Columbo knows that when people get seriously aggravated they start saying & doing things they never intended to and thus reveal evidence against them.

    As shot, "Murder with Too Many Notes" is somewhat of a headscratcher, but the answers ARE there if you look for them. Besides, what's wrong with head-scratching in a murder mystery?

    GRADE: B/B-
    6TheLittleSongbird

    Good if not great

    Murder with too Many Notes(love the title) was a good episode, but it was too flawed to be considered great. Starting with the good points, it is strikingly filmed, the music is delightful, there is some nice scripting and the acting from Peter Falk(not his best mind you, some of the more humorous parts such as "guess the piece" fell slightly flat) and Billy Conolly(toned down but surprisingly effective) is good. However, the plot isn't as strong this time around, the forensics for example as said already is dated and the ending especially was far too abrupt and underdeveloped. The pacing was uneven here, some of it was okay, some of it was slow and other parts felt somewhat frantic. The direction is a tad lacking as well. So overall, it is good, with some good performances, music and title, but the ending and plot fell flat for me. 6/10 Bethany Cox
    7Barginhunterman

    Classical - Not!

    Having seen almost all the Columbo movies I was disappointed by this latest offering. Peter Falk was trying hard to recreate his best form as the raincoat claden detective but sadly fell short.

    The character interaction was predictable and with the likes of Patrick McGoohan directing (again) and the ever 'loud' and 'outrageous' Billy Connolly one would have hoped for a far better script to do justice to this great series of TV movies.
    6The Welsh Raging Bull

    Tepid Columbo story

    The decent assembling of Billy Connelly as the murderer and Patrick McGoohan behind the camera, merely compounds the disappointment of this largely unsatisfying, lukewarm 1999 Columbo TV movie, which sees Connelly play a highly-respected Hollywood composer who is forced to murder the dissatisfied understudy he has used to saved his flagging career.

    Strongly enough plotted; a rather good platform is established in the early stages, but the momentum is barely maintained simply because the supporting clues are patchy in nature and moreover, the screen chemistry between Falk and Connelly is decidedly hit-and-miss; in fact Connelly's portrayal struggles to make an decent impact as he seems to be caught between a serious and a comedic interpretation of his character.

    The finale is also on the bizarre side and is staged at the murder scene on top of a building: Columbo's evidence is not particularly overwhelming and Connelly's character more or less turns round and gives himself up. Also, in an odd error of fact, Columbo asks the deceased's partner to teach him to play Columbo's trademark song "this old man" on the piano, but he says that it is something that his wife hums; when we know that it is actually him who usually whistles the song.

    A largely disappointing effort, which stands to date, as the penultimate Columbo adventure in its history and one that will not be recalled in a positive light.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Billy Connolly's character name, "Findlay Crawford", is taken from his stand-up comedy, in which he mocks the names wealthy parents give their children. "Findlay" and "Crawford" are two separate names he cites as being particularly irksome.
    • Goofs
      When Columbo is on the roof after the body falls, his hair is blowing in the wind and the Sergeant's tie is waving about, but the sheet music remains where it fell.
    • Quotes

      Lt. Columbo: Oh, sorry to disturb you, sir. I realize this is a bad time.

      Findlay Crawford: Have a drink. It's a good time to be drinking.

      Lt. Columbo: Uh, not right now, thank you, sir. Still on duty. Would it be all right, sir, if I, uh, smoked a small cigar?

      Findlay Crawford: Of course. I love a good cigar myself. There's a humidor over there. Help yourself.

      Lt. Columbo: Oh, I'm kind of used to these here, thank you.

      Findlay Crawford: Please yourself. Light up, sit down, and make yourself at home. No more home for poor Gabriel, I'm afraid.

      Lt. Columbo: Oh, that was unfortunate, sir.

      Findlay Crawford: It was a tragedy, Mr. Columbo, a tragedy. A wonderful young man with a great future.

      Lt. Columbo: So I heard, sir.

      Findlay Crawford: He was like a son to me. Let's have some music.

      [classical instrumental music starts playing loudly. Crawford starts acting as a composer and then turns the music off]

      Findlay Crawford: Tchaikovsky.

      Lt. Columbo: Well, uh, sir, I...

      Findlay Crawford: Perhaps you'd rather hear some rock and roll?

      Lt. Columbo: I wouldn't say that, sir.

      Findlay Crawford: [singing] In a cabin, in a canyon, excavating for a mine, lived a miner

      Lt. Columbo: A forty-niner.

      Lt. Columbo, Findlay Crawford: And his daughter, Clementine. Oh, my darlin', oh, my darlin', oh my darlin' Clementine, you are lost and gone forever...

      Lt. Columbo: Dreadful sorry...

      Lt. Columbo, Findlay Crawford: Clementine.

      Findlay Crawford: At least we established part of your taste. But I think it's time for some sad music. More befitting the mood of the evening. A little cello, perhaps. Nothing weeps like a cello.

      [instrumental cello music starts playing]

      Lt. Columbo: Uh, Mr. Crawford... Mr. Crawford, I'm sure you could play wonderful music all night long, but there are a few questions. I realize that this has been a shock to you, but it has to be done.

      Findlay Crawford: What did you have in mind, Mr. Columbo?

      Lt. Columbo: Where were you, sir, when the deceased fell off the roof?

      Findlay Crawford: I was on stage, conducting a concert.

      Lt. Columbo: And when was the last time that you saw Mr. McEnry alive, sir?

      Findlay Crawford: That would be last evening. In here, in the bungalow.

      Lt. Columbo: And sort of mood was he in?

      Findlay Crawford: Since I had just informed him he would be conducting the theme from The Killer in tonight's program, ecstatic.

      Lt. Columbo: Ecstatic day before... Day before. So, uh... Oh, so he wasn't here when you arrived today?

      Findlay Crawford: I arrived at the studio a few minutes before the performance. I didn't see Gabriel. I just assumed, as was his normal practice, he'd be on the roof, conducting along with me, and would appear when he was due on stage.

      Lt. Columbo: So the first time that you saw him today he was on the ground. I can imagine how you felt, sir.

      Findlay Crawford: I was devastated.

      Lt. Columbo: And what did you do right after that?

      Findlay Crawford: Some members of the audience had come outside to gawk. I told them to go back indoors. I announced that the performance for this evening was cancelled, and assured those present that the tickets would be good for next Saturday, when an additional piece would be added to the program. A piece that I would compose myself as a trib...

      [sniffs]

      Findlay Crawford: ... as a tribute to Gabriel.

      Lt. Columbo: Oh, very nice gesture, sir. Uh, tell me, did Mr. Gabriel, when he was conducting, did he always use a baton?

      Findlay Crawford: Of course. We all use batons. Why do you ask?

      Lt. Columbo: Well... Well, you never know, sir. Somebody said he was a bit eccentric.

      Findlay Crawford: [scoffs] Not that eccentric.

    • Connections
      Featured in Columbo: Murder with Too Many Notes
    • Soundtracks
      1812 Overture
      Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 12, 2000 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Mord efter noter
    • Filming locations
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Universal Television
      • Studios USA
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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