Want Your Children To Love Books Go See A Movie

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The experience of savoring the words on the page and allowing yourself to be taken on a journey inspired by the author is sublime. Since the author paints a picture with words, your imagination fills in the blanks before the voices of the characters and the images of the configurations resonate in your thoughts.

After reading and thoroughly enjoying a well-written book, watching the film adaptation may be a fascinating experience. The voices and images from your imagination are contrasted by those created by the actors, the director, and the cinematographer. It is not that the experience of watching a film adaptation is necessarily bad - it is only different. It presents a wonderful opportunity to demonstrate to your children the difference between words onto a webpage and graphics on a screen - and to have a great family experience in the procedure.

Almost without fail, your children will agree that while they enjoyed the movie, the experience made by their own imagination is better. Demonstrating to your kid that their creativity is stronger than a hollywood blockbuster is a very liberating and supportive exercise. Believe it or not, going through this process of reading a fantastic book and then watching the film actually reinforces your child's love of reading as well as using the imagination!

Between now and the end of the year, there are two opportunities to see a great novel and then to see the movie adaptation.

As a family, take the opportunity to read Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire before viewing the movie. Discuss which scenes you think will make it into the picture and they might need to cut. Have family members choose chosen characters, and act out some scenes from the book. These kinds of activities build excitement and set the stage for viewing the movie together as a household. If you want to go all out, dress in costume to see the movie. Later, discuss the way the movie differed from the publication, and, furthermore, how it differed in the scenes generated in family members' imaginations.

You can follow exactly the exact same process by reading The Chronicles of Narnia before seeing the film. Younger children might enjoy hearing the classic story of Chicken Little prior to viewing the Disney movie of the identical name. Discuss the moral of the story, and, after viewing the movie, talk about the way the storyline in the film demonstrated the principles of the classic.