IMDb RATING
7.5/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
A respected funeral home director murders his ex-lover after she threatened to expose him as a thief. Lt. Columbo investigates.A respected funeral home director murders his ex-lover after she threatened to expose him as a thief. Lt. Columbo investigates.A respected funeral home director murders his ex-lover after she threatened to expose him as a thief. Lt. Columbo investigates.
Ron Masak
- Eddie Fenelle
- (as Ron Másak)
Conrad Bachmann
- Henry Chalfont
- (as Conrad Bachman)
Featured reviews
This episode is just great...Peter Falk's acting is great. He obviously liked doing the show and it is enjoyable to watch it. I saw it several times and I love seeing it again and again. The more often you see it, the more you discover. Columbo...just great, nothing can be compared...and the "undertaker"...my sympathy was with the killer in this case. This episode is a great piece of entertainment...all the actors doing an excellent job...there are so many little things in this episode worthwhile noticing. I really do love this episode...Thank you, Sir Peter!
Walter
To be honest: I love every single episode of the 69!
Walter
To be honest: I love every single episode of the 69!
10Barry-44
I'm a great Columbo fan and Ashes to Ashes certainly didn't disappoint me in any way, shape or form. Peter Falk, as usual is splendid as Lt. Columbo. Patrick McGoohan, as stern and sometime wry undertaker Eric Prince, plays his role precisely and believably. He had played in previous Columbo movies. Rue McClanahan plays gossip columnist Verity Chandler with such magic and charm that we want to see much, much more of her. Sally Kellerman plays Liz Houston convincingly. Along with the rest of the actors in this wonderful movie, the viewer will not be disappointed at the end of the movie. If you adore mystery and Columbo, this movie is for you! It's to be noted that it's not just the main actors that make this movie work. All actors play their parts exceptionally.
"Ashes to Ashes" from 1998 is a great Columbo episode, with Falk coming up against repeat offender from past years, Patrick McGoohan, as a murderous funeral director.
McGoohan plays Eric Prince, an ex-actor turned funeral director who sold gossip to a Louella Parsons-type TV columnist Verity Chandler (Rue McClanahan) while they were having an affair.
The affair over, Verity has done some investigation and learned that when a great screen star, Dorothea Page died, a million-dollar necklace that accompanied her to the funeral home disappeared and is what enabled Prince to buy more and more funeral homes. While attending the funeral of an old cowboy star, Verity makes the mistake of announcing to Prince that she'll be exposing him on national television in a few days.
McGoohan is terrific, perfectly controlled in his internalized anger.
It's time for Lieutenant Columbo to investigate, and we all know the rest. McGoohan and Falk play off one another perfectly.
Very entertaining episode, certainly as good as any from Columbo's golden years. Falk was 71 here - most lieutenants would have retired by then, but not this guy. Good thing.
McGoohan plays Eric Prince, an ex-actor turned funeral director who sold gossip to a Louella Parsons-type TV columnist Verity Chandler (Rue McClanahan) while they were having an affair.
The affair over, Verity has done some investigation and learned that when a great screen star, Dorothea Page died, a million-dollar necklace that accompanied her to the funeral home disappeared and is what enabled Prince to buy more and more funeral homes. While attending the funeral of an old cowboy star, Verity makes the mistake of announcing to Prince that she'll be exposing him on national television in a few days.
McGoohan is terrific, perfectly controlled in his internalized anger.
It's time for Lieutenant Columbo to investigate, and we all know the rest. McGoohan and Falk play off one another perfectly.
Very entertaining episode, certainly as good as any from Columbo's golden years. Falk was 71 here - most lieutenants would have retired by then, but not this guy. Good thing.
A tremendous cast, by latter-day Columbo standards, including Rue McClanahan, Sally Kellerman, Edie McClurg, Richard Libertini, Aubrey Morris, and Ron Masak have a field day chewing up the scenery in clever scene after clever scene. Legendary tap dancer Arthur Duncan even shows up to add the proper element of theatre d'absurd to the proceedings. The dialogue is well-above average in the cleverness department as well. The twists and turns are ingenious. McGoohan has a field day as director and actor. The last line puts the proper icing on the cake. This is one of the very best of the latter-day Columbo movies.
Did you know
- TriviaThe final television and final on-screen performance for Patrick McGoohan.
- GoofsColumbo says that diamonds can't burn, but that is not true. Diamonds burn at 850° Celsius (1562°F).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Columbo: Ashes to Ashes (1998)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Коломбо: Звезда и месть
- Filming locations
- Mount Lee, Santa Monica Mountains, California, USA(cremated ashes spread over the Hollywood Sign from helicopter)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content