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6/10
How to make a real difference in the world, part 1
da7dya26 July 2005
This documentary shows how a single cricket player, Basil d'Oliveira, managed to upset the whole system.

In the 1970s, South Africa's racist regime wouldn't permit mixed sports. It was when Basil d'Oliveira, classified by South Africa as coloured, became a well-known player that a crisis developed.

As documentaries go, this one is fairly straightforward. At the time of shooting, many of the key players were still alive, so most information is first-hand. Interviews with family members, team-mates and d'Oliveira himself give nice background, but the juice is in the politics. The member of the selection committee squirms and denies very nicely, but it becomes obvious that politics were unavoidable.

If you want to make an impact on the world, this film shows how. Find your crisis, and stand for something in exactly the right place, and you can move mountains.
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8/10
Re-Telling of a Salutary Tale of Everyday Racism
l_rawjalaurence8 July 2013
NOT CRICKET tells the story of how colored cricketer Basil D'Oliveira was consciously omitted from the England team to tour South Africa in 1968 on the grounds of race, at the behest of the South African government under John Vorster. Although those involved insisted to the contrary - notably chief of the England selectors Doug Insole - it emerged that Vorster's government had been directly in touch with the English cricket administrators, informing them in no uncertain terms that if D'Oliveira were selected, the tour would be canceled. The documentary traces D'Oliveira's early career growing up under apartheid, and his subsequent move to England, where he began playing league cricket and eventually merited selection for the national team. At the time the documentary was made, D'Oliveira was still alive - although trying hard not to blame anyone for the entire affair, it was clear that he was terribly hurt by his treatment, especially by those (such as England captain Colin Cowdrey) whom he thought were his friends. While Paul Yule's documentary rightly condemns the South African government for its institutional racism, it also implies that the English cricket authorities were equally racist; they were prepared not to select D'Oliveira (despite his record) for the team, out of a desire 'not to rock the boat,' and thereby sustain good diplomatic relations between the UK and South Africa.
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