This award-winning film tells the story of how Coca-Cola became the world's most famous multinational company and follows its quest to be the globe's number one beverage.
HOW IT STARTS: The Second World War prompts Coke's global expansion as every US soldier gets a bottle of Coke for five cents. Bottling plants are shifted overseas. Coca-Cola becomes a worldwide symbol of the American way of life. In the 1960s Coke is boycotted by the US civil rights movement for racist policies. By the 1980s Coca-Cola is top of the world's soft drinks - and then aims higher.
GLOBAL TAKEOVER: In France people resist "coca-colonisation", denouncing the drink as a threat to their identity. In China Coke builds up a bottling network which spans the country - but is up against a long history of tea drinking. In Mexico for many people Coke and Pepsi become a kind of holy water.
OUTRAGES: Coke claims not to interfere with local politics - but in Guatemala the activities of one of its bottlers cause a scandal when employees trying to start a union are murdered. Outrages in other countries - most notoriously Colombia - also blacken the company's name.
THE BATTLE GOES ON: Coke's quest for world domination goes on. Coke's priority is the emerging markets - countries like China and India. But critics claim the costs to local people are too high and press for government action against the company.