Six Days of Justice
Six Days of Justice is a British television drama anthology series of single plays created by Thames Television and shown on ITV from 1972 to 1975, over four seasons of six episodes apiece.
Six Days of Justice | |
---|---|
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of episodes | 24[1][2] |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Thames Television |
Release | |
Original network | ITV |
Original release | 10 April 1972 – 19 May 1975 |
Synopsis
As suggested by the series title, each series of Six Days of Justice is made up of six separate plays, set in and around a courtroom and the corridor and waiting area outside. Focusing on magistrate and children's courts rather than the High Court, the series was praised for its naturalistic setting, lack of melodrama and low-key approach to small-time crime.[2][3]
Episodes
Series 1
Episode No | Title | Date |
---|---|---|
01 | Cross-Fire | 10 April 1972 |
02 | Suddenly... You're in It | 17 April 1972 |
03 | A Private Nuisance | 24 April 1972 |
04 | Who Cares? | 1 May 1972 |
05 | With Intent to Deceive | 8 May 1972 |
06 | Open House | 15 May 1972 |
Series 2
Episode No | Title | Date |
---|---|---|
01 | The Counsellor | 1 May 1973 |
02 | A Clear-Cut Case | 8 May 1973 |
03 | We'll Support You Evermore | 15 May 1973 |
04 | Excuse Me, Madam | 22 May 1973 |
05 | A Regular Friend | 29 May 1973 |
06 | A Little Local Knowledge | 5 June 1973 |
Series 3
Episode No | Title | Date |
---|---|---|
01 | Black Spot | 22 October 1973 |
02 | Stranger in Paradise | 29 October 1973 |
03 | A Question of Discipline | 5 November 1973 |
04 | The Complaint | 12 November 1973 |
05 | The China Lady | 19 November 1973 |
06 | Case for Committal | 26 November 1973 |
Series 4
Episode No | Title | Date |
---|---|---|
01 | Hot Water | 14 April 1975 |
02 | Belonging | 21 April 1975 |
03 | Angelica | 28 April 1975 |
04 | A Juicy Case | 5 May 1975 |
05 | The Good Samaritan | 12 May 1975 |
06 | The Brief Facts | 19 May 1975 |
DVD release
Series 1 and series 2 were released by Network DVD in 2012.[4]
gollark: The argument for land value tax is that it's apparently more economically efficient in some way than income taxes, and inasmuch as nobody actually produces land/natural resources value derived from them should go to everyone.
gollark: Case-by-case-basis handling is pretty problematic. In markets, you have the convenient answer of "whoever pays more".
gollark: Oh, and land value tax is a neat idea.
gollark: I think market systems are waaay better than some weird communist one at resource allocation (with intervention), so I'd prefer markets + limited central governance.
gollark: If there's some leather available, and two different production processes needing leather, how do you decide which factory gets which?
References
- Six Days of Justice on IMDb
- BFI Screenonline - Six Days of Justice
- "Six Days of Justice" in The Guardian, J Barrington, 15 April 1975
- Network Catalogue Entry for Series 2
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