Millions is a 2005 feature film, rated PG
that tells the story of nine-year-old Anthony and seven-year-old Damian who have
just lost their mother. Just as they and their father begin to make sense of
their new world, a suitcase filled with money falls out of the sky at Damian’s
feet. Life gets very confusing for all of them. The ever-practical Anthony
believes God has given them the money to make up for the death of their mother.
The imaginative Damian believes God has given them the money to help the poor.
But he has trouble deciding what makes a person poor. A visitor comes to
Damian’s school to talk about WaterAid, an organization that provides poor
people in Africa and Asia with safe water for drinking and sanitation. Damian
learns that in some countries, not having water can make you poor because it
affects your health, your ability to go to school and your parents’ ability to
work and earn money. As the story unfolds, Damian and Anthony face the adventure
of a lifetime, moral dilemmas, as they discover that the money was stolen, and
issues that lead them to realize that true wealth has nothing to do with
money.
Fox Searchlight made and released the film in partnership with
WaterAid, and America’s leading theatre chains, which positioned Millions-themed change receptacles in cinemas across the country.
The film is inspiring and engaging. The study guide, which can be used
without viewing the film, provides activities that encourage students’ families
to discuss the problems faced by poor nations and it includes a wide range of
subject areas making it an excellent cross-curriculum resource. Students engage
in Maths activities to calculate sums of money and water usage, a quiz about
water that requires detailed research on the internet, discussion topics for
values, social education and civics and citizenship. The activities involve
students in critical analysis, reading, writing, numeracy, making value
judgments and deep thinking.
Curriculum Links:
The film and the study
guide will have relevance to all students aged 7–12 as a classroom
cross-curriculum resource.