BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT RARE Photo sheet poster

Price: AUD $19.99

Beyond Reasonable Doubt (1980)
Director: John Laing Writer: David Yallop
With David Hemmings, John Hargreaves, Tony Barry.
 
 
RARE Country of Origin Original Australian photo sheet 27" x 40" folded as issued fine – very fine condition.
 
Genre: Crime – Drama – Mystery – Independent Film – Arthouse cinema.
 
 NOTE: Photo sheets were printed exclusively for Australia and regional countries in the late 70s and early 80s featuring six scenes from the movie. They were folded around each scene so when folded the poster would appear slightly larger than a one sheet. They are somtimes referred to as "lobby card" posters and are generally hard to find.
 
The true story of the six-year fight to free a farmer who’s jailed for a double murder which he didn’t commit.

June 22 1970. The discovery of a baby in an empty bloodstained farmhouse brings police and searchers to a tiny New Zealand farming settlement, beginning a series of events which will divide a country and dominate headlines for the next ten years.

BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT is the film of the most baffling and controversial case in New Zealand history.

The police led by Inspector Bruce Hutton (DAVID HEMMINGS) had little to go on. No bodies, few clues, no motive. For three months a massive search operation concetrated on finding the victims – a local farmer and his wife. Suspicion focussed on the woman’s father, Len Demler (MARTYN SANDERSON). Suddenly, with the discovery of both bodies in a nearby river, police attention switched to a local farmer Arthur Allan Thomas (JOHN HARGREAVES). In November 1970 Thomas stood trial on a charge of double murder. He was found guilty.

But there were strong misgivings among his family and friends. The concern spread through the media to the general public. Following efforts by his supporters, Thomas was granted a second trial in march 1973. This event was without precedent in British Commonwealth legal history. By now the police investigation and the legal system itself were on trial. Despite allegations of misconduct, suppression of witnesses and evidence, Thomas was again found guilty.

Thomas’ family and supporters would not give up. Following six more years of legal appeals and a Prime Ministerial inquiry, Arthur Allan Thomas was pardoned. One week before Christmas 1979, nine years after he was first imprisoned, Arthur Allan Thomas came home.

 

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