#28: What film would you use to introduce movies to a ten-year-old child who had never seen one before?
We discussed the Great Depression era in out last fight. Russell Crowe and George Clooney duked it out for several rounds until Eustace Scrubb tossed Robert Redford into the ring, securing the win and earning Eustace the right to ask:
What film would you use to introduce movies to a ten-year-old child who had never seen one before?
The Rules:
Post your answer as a comment. Make it clear that this is your official answer, one per member.
No profanity. No pornography.
Defend your answer in the comments and fight it out against other MFC members’ answers for the rest of the week.
Whoever gets the most likes on their official answer comment (and only that comment) by Friday night wins the fight.
The winner gets the honor of posting the next question the following Saturday.
In the case of a tie, the member who posted the question will decide the winner.
Notes:
Only movies will qualify (no TV shows, or documentaries); however, films that air on television or streaming (BBC films, a stand-alone mini-series) will qualify.
Your answer can be as off-the-wall or controversial as you’d like. It will be up to you to defend it and win people to your side.Â
Fight it out.
Know someone who’d like to join the fight? Let them know about us. The more fighters the better. Discounted rates are available for groups of four or more…perhaps sign up your family and friends as a gift.
Milo and Otis. It's tame enough for the littlest audiences but the jokes are clever enough to entertain adults as well. It's short, but well done, funny and cute.
A runaway victory this week for Shannon and Mary Poppins. Great job, Shannon. You get to choose Monday's question.