Shoot to Kill (1990)
June 3, 1990Release Date
Shoot to Kill (1990)
June 3, 1990Release Date

Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.

Jack Shepherd
DCC John Stalker

David Calder
DCS John Thorburn

Patrick Drury
Detective Inspector

Rod Arthur
Intelligence Officer

Daragh O'Malley
Constable 'Y'

George Shane
DCI Samuel George Flanagan

Richard Hawley
Constable John Robinson

T. P. McKenna
Chief Constable Sir John Harmon

Frank Brennan
Special Branch Inspector

Philip Bretherton
DI Gaffrey

Barry Birch
Michael Tighe

Paul Brennen
Soldier at Keady sanger

Vass Anderson
Magistrate

Anton Brookes
Roddy Carroll

Emer McCourt
E4A Officer

Jane Cunliffe
DS Eileen Scarrett

Niall Cusack
Pat Finucane

Fraser Downie
DCI Jim Smellie

Christopher Dunne
E4A Officer

Peter Cellier
MI5 Senior Officer

Colin Carnegie
Expert

Paul Brennan
Soldier

Denys Hawthorne
Professor

James Greene
DPP

Gerard Horan
E4A Information Handler

Mark Jordon
DS Keith Farrington

B.J. Hogg
E4A Officer

Des McAleer
CID Supt. Jimmy Richards

Mark Moraghan
SB Constable

Michael O'Hagan
Special Branch Superintendent

Tip Tipping
Jervais McKerr

Nick Stringer
Kavin Taylor

Kevin Stoney
Judge Kelly

Michael Simkins
DI Brian Jackson

David J. Nicholls
Training Assistant

Steve Money
Special Branch Officer

Ian McElhinney
ACC Trevor Forbes

James Duggan
Chief Information Officer

George Mooney
ACC

Peter Vollebregt
Harmon's Secretary

Hugo Conlon
Sergeant

Gary Whelan
Constable David Brannigan

Ray Ashcroft
Constable Frederick Robinsin

Aaron Harris
Sergeant 'X'

Dick Holland
Constable 'Z'

Terry Gilligan
SSU Officer

Steve Halliwell
Sgt Quinn

Derek Young
Constable McCoy
Details.
Release DateJune 3, 1990
StatusReleased
Running Time4h
Last updated:
Wiki.
Shoot to Kill is a four-hour drama documentary reconstruction of the events that led to the 1984–86 Stalker Inquiry into the shooting of six terrorist suspects in Northern Ireland in 1982 by a specialist unit of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), allegedly without warning (the so-called shoot-to-kill policy); the organised fabrication of false accounts of the events; and the difficulties created for the inquiry team in their investigation.
The film, written by Michael Eaton, produced by Nigel Stafford-Clark and directed by Peter Kosminsky, was made by Zenith Productions for the ITV company Yorkshire Television, and screened in two parts over successive nights in June 1990. However, the programme was not broadcast in Northern Ireland itself, a precaution that Ulster Television said reflected legal advice that it might prejudice future inquests on the deceased, which had been suspended.
The programme was made with the co-operation of John Thorburn, Stalker's deputy with day-to-day responsibility on the inquiry, and was said to reveal significant new information about the underlying events and how the inquiry had progressed.
Shoot to Kill was widely applauded by critics. It won the 1990 award for Best Single Drama from both the Royal Television Society and the Broadcasting Press Guild, and a nomination in that category for a BAFTA Award. The score was written by Rachel Portman.