Underwater Dreams is the story of four undocumented students who shocked the engineering world in a 2004 sophisticated robotics competition sponsored by NASA and the Office of Naval Research. They were the rag-tag high school team that went up against the college students from MIT, pitting a robot made of Home Depot parts against custom built machines from the most elite engineering programs in the nation. And they won.
During the broadcast of Underwater Dreams on msnbc, Voto Latino’s, Maria Teresa Kumar, the film’s director, Mary Mazzio, team coach Fredi Lajvardi, and founder of the Arizona Dream Act Coalition, Dulce Matuz participated in a live Twitter chat to share special behind the scenes details and insights into the continuing struggle for undocumented youth in America today.
Earlier this week, Mary Mazzio answered YOUR questions about the film:
Alicia Maule: Hi Mary, how did you come across this story, and what do you think about the timing of the movie’s release during this highly publicized moment of the “immigration crisis”?
Mary: Alicia – thank you for your question. Many years ago, a teacher sent me the story of what these boys had accomplished – and I thought it was an epic David and Goliath story. I then saw a NIGHTLINE piece and CNN piece, but no film. I called the teachers to see if a documentary film might be possible, only to discover that they had just signed a deal with Warner Brothers. Every year after that, I would call to check in. No feature film was ever made. Finally, 6 or 7 years later, I called and the Warner Brother rights had expired. And I was able to dive into this project with the boys and their teachers.









