Scotland Yard (film series)


Scotland Yard is a series of 39 half-hour episodes produced by Anglo-Amalgamated. Produced between 1953 and 1961, they are short films, originally made to support the main feature in a cinema double-bill. Each film focuses on a true crime case with names changed, and feature an introduction by the crime writer Edgar Lustgarten.
The earlier films were produced by Alec C. Snowden, who was succeeded by Jack Greenwood. Directors included Ken Hughes and Montgomery Tully. The principal character in each film is a Detective Inspector, played by a variety of actors but most frequently by Russell Napier. Many of the films feature, in supporting roles, actors later to become well-known. They include Jill Bennett, Peter Arne, James Villiers, Arthur Lowe, Peter Halliday, Wilfrid Brambell, Rita Webb and Roger Delgado.
All of the episodes were shot at Merton Park Studios in London and on location on monochrome 35mm film. Most of the episodes were presented in the old Academy screen ratio of 1.33:1, whilst a handful of the later episodes were shot in a hard-matted widescreen ratio of 1.66:1.
The series later found a new audience on television in both the UK and the US. The complete series has been released on DVD in the UK by Network. It has also been shown in 2019 on the UK TV channel Talking Pictures TV.

Episode list

Here is the list of Scotland Yard episodes :
The real-life ballistics expert Robert Churchill appears in The Mysterious Bullet, and the barrister Travers Humphreys in Murder Anonymous.

US TV scheduling

Scotland Yard aired at 10 p.m. Eastern opposite The $64,000 Challenge on CBS and The Loretta Young Show on NBC. It was replaced on the 1958 fall schedule by the five-week series Encounter, a drama anthology which originated from Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The BBC television series of the same name broadcast in 1960, and the 1970s London Weekend Television series New Scotland Yard are unrelated to these films.