Murder Anonymous

1955 British film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Murder Anonymous is a 1955 British crime short film directed by Ken Hughes and featuring Edgar Lustgarten, Peter Arne and Jill Bennett.[1][2]

Directed byKen Hughes
Screenplay byJames Eastwood
Roy H. Lewis
Produced byAlec C. Snowden
Quick facts Directed by, Screenplay by ...
Murder Anonymous
Directed byKen Hughes
Screenplay byJames Eastwood
Roy H. Lewis
Produced byAlec C. Snowden
StarringEdgar Lustgarten
Peter Arne
Jill Bennett
Narrated byEdgar Lustgarten
Production
company
Distributed byAnglo-Amalgamated (UK)
Release date
  • November 1955 (1955-11) (UK)
Running time
31 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
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It was made by Anglo-Amalgamated as part of the Scotland Yard film series, as support for feature film screenings in cinemas .[3][4]

Plot

The death of a playboy points the finger of suspicion at Bowman, in whose divorce suit the dead man had been named.

Cast

Critical reception

Kine Weekly wrote: "This taut mystery featurette, the latest of the highly popular real life Scotland Yard series, shows how the police unravelled a particularly tricky muider case, involving a blind man and a woman Judo expert. Edgar Lustgarten, the BBC authority, explains salient issues, and the Right Honourable Sir Travers Humphries, a former judge, gives his opinion on the finer points of law. Their contributions underline the thrills realistically presented, and put the seal on first-class crime reporting. Very good quota."[5]

Sky Movies noted "Another dip into the Merton Park Studios filing cabinet that housed their short Scotland Yard mysteries, hosted by mournful-faced criminologist Edgar Lustgarten. The director is Ken Hughes, who briskly illuminates the case in question and was later to go to on bigger - if not better – subjects, including The Trials of Oscar Wilde and Mae West's last picture, Sextette."[6]

References

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