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Being generous is the focus of the movie Millions, released on home video November 1. After watching the movie, use our conversation starters below to brainstorm ways your family can make a difference—whether you have $5 or $500. Then cash in on our activity, “Face Value,” to bring the big-screen lesson to life!
Set in England , the film follows the fate of two young brothers, Damian (Alex Etel) and Anthony (Lewis Owen McGibbon), whose mother has died. One day Damian is shocked when a big bag of bills falls on his backyard fort. He confides in Anthony about the money miracle. With the United Kingdom one week away from converting pounds to Euros, the boys must quickly figure out what to do with the money.
The brothers clash over how to spend the cash. Still grieving the loss of his mother, Damian believes it's a gift from heaven and feels compelled to share the wealth with the down-and-out. Anthony, meanwhile, starts splurging on cool stuff for himself. When the boys learn the truth about where the bag of bills really came from, they face not only a bad guy, but also a bigger dilemma over what to do with the dough.
Talk Together
Ask your kids to imagine that a big bag of $100 bills fell on their fort. Take turns sharing the first three things you would do with your money. Why would using your money this way make you feel good? Do you think you'd spend your money more like Anthony or like Damian?
Spending money on yourself isn't necessarily bad, but it's important to spend it to help others, too. Ask your kids to think of ways they benefit from others being generous—perhaps an amazing new lion exhibit opened up at the zoo, thanks to hundreds of donors.
As a family, write a list of people or places you'd help if you had an endless supply of money—from adopting all of the kittens at the pet shelter to buying winter coats for needy kids. Brainstorm ways you can still support your cause, even if you don't have a lot of money. Your son might volunteer one hour each week playing with the kittens at the shelter. Or your daughter might organize a coat drive in your neighborhood.
Hold onto this list—you'll need it to play “Face Value.”
Play Together: Face Value
Make your own funny money that will motivate you to help others!
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