9500 Liberty Explained

9500 Liberty
Director:Annabel Park
Eric Byler
Producer:Alex Rigopulos
Chris Rigopulos
Music:Michael Brook
Cinematography:Eric Byler
Jeff Man
Editing:Eric Byler
Runtime:81 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

9500 Liberty is a 2009 documentary film about the struggle over immigration in Prince William County, Virginia. It was directed by Annabel Park and Eric Byler.

Content

The film chronicles an eight-week period wherein an "Arizona-style" immigration crackdown was implemented and quickly repealed. 9500 Liberty began as an "interactive documentary," allowing its viewers to not only comment, but to help determine direction and additional coverage of the story, which was uploaded to a YouTube channel[1] as footage was shot. These videos were combined with additional unreleased footage (including the directors' attempts at citizen journalism and civic duty amidst an antagonistic climate) to create the documentary.

Release and Reception

9500 Liberty garnered four film festival awards, and was released theatrically in select cities; it was picked up by MTV Networks for a Sept. 26, 2010 cable premiere.

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.youtube.com/9500Liberty 9500 Liberty YouTube