Cinema Francais
In 8th grade all of the middle school students in our town construct a building for a French or Spanish or Chinese village, depending on what language they're taking. They draw the building assignment randomly and it is with great seriousness and excitement that the assignments are made and buildings constructed. The towns sit proudly on display in our library for several weeks afterwards.
Sam came home with the assignment to build a French cinema. He knew right away he wanted it to be a corner building with little movie posters and iron balconies. I think it's pretty wonderful. I'd love to live in the top story.
Being the third child does have its advantages! By now we have learned all the little lessons about early planning and lightweight materials and adhesives. Most of all, we know that this is a BIG deal at the school--every year there's a poor kid who, unaware, builds a lego building and calls it good. Turns out the bar at our little over-achieving school is a little higher than that.
Lucky for me, G is the chief assistant on these projects and I think Lauren, Maddy and Sam will each have fond memories of the month of evenings spent together with him transforming their visions to reality. I am so glad this is G's specialty. Give me the task of daily homework oversight and I'll gladly hand big, hives-inducing projects to patient, tool-savvy G.
Speaking of cinema and France, have you seen Hugo yet? We loved it. And Sam was happy to think of his cinema fitting right in. I just want to know if his cinema serves chocolat viennois because that would make it just about perfect.
. . .
p.s. If you want to take a peek at what G and I will be talking about in one or two decades, here's your glimpse. No kidding.
Reader Comments (8)
okay, fab cinema. kudos to Sam (&G)
and I JUST read that post (with the finger) earlier today. I almost left a comment, but then deleted it. It is our future conversation, too. Sadly, I interrupt him, embellish his stories and hurry them along. He might not be as patient as Tom... I might get the finger sooner than Louise did.
:P
Great job Sam and Greg! I would love to see a film there anyday.
I'm the worst at the story telling - I always say "Tony! Tell them about..." He is awkardly put on the spot and leaves huge holes in the story that I have to fill! I'm sure one day he'll have to stick his finger up his nose for me :)
Extremely cool. I have a 10 y-o who loves to do all her projects by herself. *Gulp*
(Also, I love Louise. So much. I may possibly stalk her and read her slightly irreverent posts to my teenagers and dream of someday being That Cool.)
Wow! Color me completely impressed. (And a little envious - can I commission him a Spanish version?)
-Your brudder Matt
Seven Smiles, I maintain I come by it honestly through the Brockbank line. Did you ever hear all the sisters talking at once??
Matt, I'm sure something could be arranged. Chicago project?? :)
now that you mention it, yes.
is that where we get it? Oh, goody! someone to blame! ;)
That is SO STINKING COOL. I think I'd be all over a project like that and shoving my kids out of the way while I worked on it. Awesome. Well done, Sam.
P.S. Now I want chocolat viennois. YUM.....