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Shadow of a Doubt (CBS tonight at...

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Shadow of a Doubt (CBS tonight at 9 p.m.) is a new TV movie remake of Alfred Hitchcock’s favorite among his own movies, a 1943 classic. Mark Harmon and Margaret Welsh take over roles created by Joseph Cotten and Teresa Wright.

With the 1988 Rambo III (ABC tonight at 9 p.m.), Sylvester Stallone made what may be a $60-million monument to himself, an awe-struck memorial to his musculature, a would-be pop “Iliad” loony with self-love--a carnival of carnage that reduces history, politics and warfare to foils for the greater glory of Sly. This third exploit of one-man attack squad John Rambo--spreading his worldwide vendetta to Afghanistan--may never be surpassed for sheer self-regard.

The 1988 Die Hard (Channel 11 Monday at 8 p.m.) is the archetypal big-deal Hollywood exploitation picture, like a giant war toy that is a triumph of well-oiled mechanical precision that performs miracles of destruction. As a human drama it is disgusting and silly, a mindless depiction of carnage on an epic scale. Yet it was easy to predict that it would make Bruce Willis a star, cast as a New York police detective with a sense of humor who takes on a bunch of terrorists who have occupied a Century City skyscraper.

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A Death in California (Channel 13 Monday at 8 p.m.) is a notably effective 1985 TV movie starring Cheryl Ladd as a Beverly Hills socialite who becomes involved with a man (Sam Elliott) who rapes her and kills her lover in her presence; based on a true story.

Columbo and the Murder of a Rock Star (ABC Monday at 9 p.m.), a new TV movie, finds Peter Falk’s rumpled detective pitted against criminal attorney Dabney Coleman, who has killed his own mistress.

Jodie Foster won a well-deserved Oscar as a resilient victim of gang rape in The Accused (CBS Tuesday at 9 p.m.). This 1988 release plays better than it is, thanks to Foster’s luminous portrayal of a scrappy waitress in a northern Washington community that distracts us from strange glitches in logic and a preachy, empty tone. Kelly McGillis is the regal deputy D.A. in the case.

Whoopi Goldberg, cast as a computer programmer inadvertently caught up in international intrigue, makes the mild 1986 thriller Jumpin’ Jack Flash (Channel 11 Wednesday at 8 p.m.) seem much hipper than it really is.

In the delightful Superman II (Channel 13 Saturday at 8 p.m.) our hero (Christopher Reeve) must at last confront his invincibility, choosing between the woman he loves, Lois Lane (Margot Kidder), and the world he has vowed to protect.

Chevy Chase returns as a smug, supercilious L.A. journalist once again caught up in adventure in Fletch Lives (CBS Saturday at 9 p.m.), a sorry sequel to the 1985 “Fletch,” which was pretty obnoxious itself. Strictly for Chase fans.

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