The BBC presents a documentary on slavery in America entitled CSA and it traces the history of the present-day Confederate States of America.
The BBC retells history beginning in 1863 when the Southern States managed to overcome a mis-managed attempt to secede from the union and win over the northern states that were fighting to keep the country a slave-free entity.
With the assistance of French and British Troops, the Confederacy wins a decisive victory at the battle for Gettysburg.
Within a short period Ulysses S. Grant surrenders to Robert E. Lee and Abraham Lincoln flees to Canada. The Northern States are absorbed into the Confederacy; Boston and New York are burned to tinder and the right to own slaves is protected by the Constitution. From this point up to present day the Confederate States of America grows to become the most powerful nation on Earth.
The CSA is dominant in wars with Spain and other Latin American countries and enters a partnership with Adolph Hitler in order to remain the strongest nation.
Today the CSA sustains pressures over its use of slavery from Canada and the Muslim Nation. Slavery in the CSA, as it was originally for the seceding states at the outbreak of the Civil War, is the economic spine of the country and leaders accept it into their vision as endemic to the quality of the nation.
The CSA is blind to the humanistic quality of the institution on the individual in regards to black people in the country. When a long-time slave of John Fauntroy, (Larry Peterson) -- a politician and great-grandson of one of the main leaders against Lincoln -- comes forward with shocking news, a rupture in the political structure of the CSA seems imminent.
Actors: Greg Kirsch, Renee Patrick, Molly Graham, William Willmott, Rupert Pate
Directors: Kevin Willmott
Writers: Kevin Willmott
Producers: Andrew Herwitz, Benjamin Meade, Kerwin Looney, Marvin Voth, Matt Jacobson
Format: Color, DVD, NTSC
Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo)
Number of discs: 1
Rating: Unrated
Studio: Ifc
DVD Release Date: August 8, 2006
Run Time: 89 minutes
DVD only