The Dark Stairway | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ken Hughes |
Written by | Ken Hughes |
Produced by | Alec C. Snowden executive Nat Cohen Stuart Levy |
Starring | Russell Napier Vincent Ball |
Narrated by | Edgar Lustgarten |
Cinematography | J. M. Burgoyne-Johnson Ron Bicker |
Edited by | Derek Holding |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Anglo-Amalgamated (UK) |
Release date | March 1954 |
Running time | 32 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Dark Stairway is a 1953 British short film.[1] It was one of a series of shorts made for British cinemas as second features in the 1950s made by Anglo-Amalgamated at the Merton Park Studios as part of the Scotland Yard film series.[2] They are narrated by crime writer Edgar Lustgarten, and were subsequently broadcast as television episodes.[3][4]
The film was also known as The Greek Street Murder.[5]
Plot
A blind man, George Benson, witnesses the murder of Harry Carpenter by Joe Lloyd. Benson finds himself accused of the murder. Inspector Jack Harmer finds the murder weapon and discovers Carpenter was murdered because he betrayed Lloyd to the police. Benson manages to identify Lloyd by his ring, voice and hair products' smell.
Cast
- Russell Napier as Inspector Harmer
- Vincent Ball as Sergeant Gifford
- George Manship as George Benson
- Edwin Richfield as Joe Lloyd
Napier reappeared as Inspector Harmer in the 1954 episode The Strange Case of Blondie, but subsequently went on to play Inspector Duggan in thirteen episodes between 1956 and 1961.
References
- ↑ "The Dark Stairway (1953)". BFI. Archived from the original on 13 July 2012.
- ↑ The Dark Stairway at Sydney Film Festival
- ↑ http://dvdcompare.net/review.php?rid=2769
- ↑ Vagg, Stephen (14 November 2020). "Ken Hughes Forgotten Auteur". Filmink.
- ↑ Scotland Yard at CTVA accessed 25 June 2014
External links