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  1. May 5, 2016 · The answers, it turns out, are nowhere near as neat or gentlemanly as the gentlemen’s game, as is seen in the documentary Death of a Gentleman. Directed by Sam Collins, Jarrod Kimber and Johnny Blank, this award-winning investigative/sports film has stirred the cricket fraternity and fans for the grim reality it has laid bare.

  2. Aug 6, 2015 · Death of a Gentleman is a documentary about the death of international cricket. Don’t all turn the page. Sam Collins, Johnny Blank and Jarrod Kimber’s film packs a good disputatious punch ...

  3. Just Finished re-watching "DEATH OF A GENTLEMAN" , Its a brilliant investigative documentary directed by Sam Collins, Johnny Blank and Jarrod Kimber about the administration of cricket and the actions of heads of cricket boards. Its a must watch movie for all the lurkers and is available on Netflix in some countries(AUS).

  4. Using Lalit Modi to justify the arguments for good governance reflects a sense of warped irony when we are talking about the ICC. Spoiler alert: The hidden camera conking out during the attempted sting at the ICC meeting lends an air of authenticity to the film. In summation, Death of a Gentleman is a fascinating journey for any cricket lover.

  5. Death of a Gentleman is a 2015 documentary film about the takeover of the governance of cricket by ICC's 'Big Three'. [1] It was directed by Sam Collins, Jarrod Kimber and Johnny Blank, [2] and features interviews with takeover architects Giles Clarke and N Srinivasan (the other was Wally Edwards), [1] alongside Ed Cowan, Tony Greig, Gideon Haigh, Michael Holding, Jonathan Agnew, Chris Gayle, Rev. Andrew Wingfield Digby, Haroon Lorgat, Lalit Modi, and Kevin Pietersen.

  6. Two cricket journalists stumble upon one of the biggest sporting scandals ever. Rent Death of a Gentleman on Prime Video. Death of a Gentleman is a spirited sports documentary that will blow the ...

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  8. Death of a Gentleman is not a nostalgic look back at a sport that professionals played against amateurs while stopping for tea. It's a modern morality tale about a future where sport and money collide, India as a super-power, the curse of the professional administrator and set in a world where fans are better connected to (but more disconnected from) their heroes than ever before.