This week's Columbo revival episode on MeTV was "Murder, Smoke and Shadows," starring Fisher Stevens as the killer, a wunderkind movie director who was modeled on Steven Spielberg. Which was something they could get away with doing since Spielberg was part of the Columbo family, the director of the first regular episode of the original series. Although this one was directed by TV veteran James Frawley and written by Columbo veteran Richard Alan Simmons.
I remember liking this one a lot, but I'd forgotten that it's really very, very padded, a perennial problem of 2-hour Columbo installments. It really goes in for heavy stylization, to the point of throwing reality out the window on a couple of occasions, and though that's kind of fun, it's also a bit pretentious and a bit of a distraction from the story. It's also a bit self-conscious for Columbo and the director to keep talking about whether his meticulous, detail-oriented detective work would be interesting to modern audiences accustomed to big action and spectacle, as though the series is trying to justify itself as still being relevant -- although that turned out to be unnecessary, since it would continue on and off for another 14 years beyond this. Plus it's pretty clearly a budget-saver, relying so heavily on Universal Studios itself as a location. (Under the fake name ACM Studios, from MCA, who owned Universal at the time.) Still, Fisher Stevens is pretty good, and Molly Hagan is very good as his love interest in the subplot.