Before children can think critically, they must first feel deeply. The Foundation Years aren’t about filling young minds with facts—they’re about wiring the emotional circuitry that makes meaningful learning possible. Between ages five and seven, children are building their internal compass: learning what kindness feels like, discovering that curiosity is rewarded, and beginning to understand that they belong to something larger than themselves.
This is why we start with the heart, not the head. A child who understands empathy at six will navigate complex ethical dilemmas at sixteen. A child who learns gratitude early develops resilience that no amount of tutoring can teach. These aren’t soft skills—they’re the operating system on which everything else runs.
The films in this section aren’t entertainment. They’re emotional laboratories where your child can safely experience sacrifice, loss, joy, and wonder—then talk about it with you afterward. That conversation is where the real learning happens.
Humanity is about connection—the strengths that draw us toward others and make relationships possible. For young children, this virtue answers the most fundamental social question: “How do I treat other people?” Before children can understand complex social dynamics, they need to feel the warmth of caring for others and being cared for in return.
At this age, humanity manifests simply but powerfully. A five-year-old who shares a toy without being asked, a six-year-old who notices a friend is sad, a seven-year-old who hugs a parent “just because”—these are humanity in action. The films we’ve chosen show characters whose care for others transforms situations, teaching children that kindness and love aren’t weaknesses but superpowers.
Kindness is the gateway strength—the first step toward understanding that our actions affect others. For children aged five to seven, kindness isn’t an abstract concept; it’s concrete and immediate. It’s sharing the last biscuit, helping a sibling find a lost toy, or being gentle with animals. At this age, children are naturally egocentric, which makes kindness both challenging and crucial to develop.
What makes kindness powerful is its reciprocal nature. Children quickly learn that kind acts create kind responses. This isn’t manipulation—it’s the foundation of social intelligence. When we nurture kindness early, we’re building the neural pathways that will later support empathy, compassion, and ethical decision-making.
The goal at this stage isn’t perfect behaviour but recognition. Can your child identify kind acts when they see them? Do they notice when someone is being unkind? This awareness is the seed from which genuine kindness grows.
In the wilderness of British Columbia, a young orphaned bear cub loses his mother in a rockslide. Alone and vulnerable, he encounters a massive adult male grizzly—a creature who has no biological reason to help him. What follows is a wordless story of unexpected nurturing, as the solitary adult bear gradually accepts the cub and teaches him to survive.
The film contains almost no human dialogue. Instead, the story unfolds through the bears’ behaviour, their body language, and their relationship with the harsh but beautiful landscape. Two human hunters pursue the adult bear throughout the film, creating tension that highlights both the dangers of the wild and the bears’ need to rely on each other.
The near-complete absence of dialogue makes this film uniquely accessible to young children. There’s no complex plot to follow, no verbal irony to miss—just pure visual storytelling about care and protection. Children watch kindness happen rather than hearing characters explain it.
The relationship between the bears models exactly what kindness looks like: the adult bear doesn’t speak kindly or promise kindness—he acts kindly, sharing food, providing warmth, and defending the cub from danger. For young children who are still learning that actions matter more than words, this is powerful teaching.
Love at ages five to seven is primarily about attachment—the secure bond between child and caregiver that makes all other development possible. Children this age love fiercely and simply. They haven’t yet learned to complicate love with conditions, expectations, or self-protection. This is both their vulnerability and their strength.
The love we nurture at this stage isn’t romantic—it’s familial and foundational. It’s the love that says “I would do anything for you” and “You belong to me and I belong to you.” When children feel this love securely, they develop the confidence to explore the world, take risks, and eventually form healthy relationships outside the family.
Films about love for this age group should show love in action—particularly sacrificial love, where a character gives up something important for someone they care about. Children understand this intuitively, and it helps them recognise love as something you do, not just something you feel.
Marlin is a clownfish traumatised by loss—a barracuda killed his wife and all but one of their eggs. The sole survivor, Nemo, is born with a damaged fin, making Marlin intensely overprotective. When Nemo is captured by a scuba diver and taken to a dentist’s fish tank in Sydney, Marlin embarks on an impossible journey across the ocean to rescue his son.
Meanwhile, Nemo must find courage and resourcefulness in the tank, eventually orchestrating his own escape with help from his new friends. Father and son each grow through their separate trials—Marlin learning to trust and let go, Nemo discovering his own capabilities.
This film tackles the exact dynamic children this age are navigating: the tension between parental protection and the child’s need for independence. Children identify with Nemo’s frustration at being held back, while also understanding Marlin’s fear. This dual perspective builds emotional intelligence.
The parent-child love story is the spine of the film, but it’s not sentimental—it’s tested. Marlin’s love is shown through action: swimming through jellyfish, facing sharks, crossing an entire ocean. Children learn that love isn’t just hugs and nice words; love does hard things.
Wisdom for young children isn’t about knowing answers—it’s about loving questions. The wisdom virtue encompasses our relationship with knowledge itself: how we seek it, what we do with it, and whether we stay open to changing our minds. At ages five to seven, we’re not building wise children; we’re protecting the natural curiosity they were born with.
Every toddler is a scientist, constantly experimenting with the world. Somewhere between early childhood and adolescence, many children lose this. They start asking “Will this be on the test?” instead of “How does this work?” The Foundation Years are critical for preserving and channelling natural curiosity before schooling trains it out of them.
Curiosity is the engine of all learning. A curious child doesn’t need to be motivated—they need to be pointed in interesting directions and given permission to explore. At five to seven, curiosity is still instinctive: children want to know why the sky is blue, where birds sleep, and what’s inside everything.
Our job isn’t to teach curiosity but to protect it. This means answering questions seriously, admitting when we don’t know, and modelling the joy of finding out. It means resisting the urge to redirect children toward “useful” learning and letting them wonder about “useless” things—because there’s no such thing as useless wondering.
Curious children become adaptable adults. In a world where AI can answer any factual question instantly, the ability to ask interesting questions becomes the premium skill. Nurture it now.
On the vast grasslands of Inner Mongolia, a young boy named Bilike finds a small white sphere floating in a stream. He has never seen a ping pong ball before—and neither has anyone in his remote community. The object becomes a source of endless fascination as Bilike studies it, asks questions about it, and develops increasingly elaborate theories about what it might be.
Adults offer confident but contradictory explanations: it’s a glowing pearl, a spirit’s treasure, a national treasure of China. Each answer briefly satisfies Bilike before his curiosity resurges. Eventually, he decides that since it’s “China’s national ball,” it must be worried about being lost—so he and his friends determine to return it to Beijing.
This film is essentially a documentary of childhood curiosity in its purest form. There are no villains, no urgent plot—just a child encountering something unknown and responding with relentless interest. Western children watching will recognise Bilike’s approach to mystery because it’s exactly how they approach the world.
The film also subtly critiques how adults handle children’s questions. The grown-ups give answers to shut down inquiry rather than to illuminate truth. Children watching may recognise this pattern and—ideally—feel validated in their persistence.
Courage is doing hard things despite feeling afraid. For young children, courage rarely involves physical danger—it’s about trying new foods, talking to unfamiliar people, attempting skills they might fail at, and persisting when things get difficult. These small acts of bravery build the neural architecture for bigger courage later.
At five to seven, children are acutely aware of their smallness in a big world. They know they can’t do what adults do. This awareness can become either paralysing fear or motivating challenge, depending on how we frame it. The courage virtue says: “Yes, you are small. Yes, this is hard. Do it anyway—and notice that you survived.”
Vitality is life force—the energy and enthusiasm that makes some people magnetic. Children naturally overflow with zest, but modern life often dampens it. Too much screen time, too little outdoor play, overscheduled activities, and insufficient sleep all drain the natural vitality children are born with.
The strength we’re nurturing here isn’t hyperactivity—it’s full engagement with life. A vital child is present, enthusiastic, and fully alive in whatever they’re doing. They bring energy to activities rather than waiting for activities to energise them. This is a form of courage because it requires vulnerability: to be enthusiastic is to risk disappointment.
Films that model vitality show characters who embrace life fully, who find joy in adventure, and who inspire energy in others simply by being themselves.
Wendy, John, and Michael Darling are visited by Peter Pan, a boy who never grows up and lives in Neverland with the Lost Boys and the fairy Tinker Bell. Peter teaches them to fly (“Think of a wonderful thought—any merry little thought”) and takes them to Neverland, where they encounter mermaids, an indigenous tribe, and the villainous Captain Hook.
The adventure is a celebration of childhood imagination and the vitality of youth. Peter embodies pure zest—he fights pirates for fun, crows with triumph, and approaches every challenge as a game. The tension comes from the question Wendy eventually faces: Is it better to stay young forever or to grow up?
Peter Pan is vitality personified. He literally cannot sit still, cannot be serious for long, and cannot imagine a life without adventure. For young children still bursting with natural energy, Peter validates their zest as something magical rather than something to be suppressed.
The film also introduces—without labouring—the bittersweet truth that childhood doesn’t last. Children this age won’t fully grasp this theme, but it plants a seed: enjoy being young while you are young.
Transcendence connects us to something larger than ourselves—whether that’s nature, community, future generations, or the divine. For young children, transcendence begins with wonder. The experience of looking at stars, watching a thunderstorm, or holding a newborn sibling and feeling small but connected—these are a child’s first transcendent experiences.
At five to seven, children are naturally transcendent. They haven’t yet learned the cynicism that closes adults off from wonder. Our job is to nurture this openness while gently building the strengths—gratitude and humor—that will sustain it through harder years ahead.
Gratitude is recognising that good things come to us from outside ourselves. For young children, this means moving beyond “I want” to “thank you for”—a significant developmental shift. Gratitude counteracts entitlement, builds relationships, and literally rewires the brain for happiness.
Research shows that gratitude is one of the most powerful predictors of wellbeing across the lifespan. Teaching it early creates habits that compound over time. But gratitude can’t be forced or faked—children need to genuinely feel thankful, which requires helping them notice good things they might otherwise take for granted.
The goal isn’t polite children who say “thank you” automatically. It’s aware children who actually feel thankful because they recognise what they have.
George Bailey has spent his entire life sacrificing his dreams for others. He gave up college to run the family business, gave up travel to stay in his small town, and gave up personal wealth to help his community. When a financial crisis threatens everything, George concludes that everyone would be better off if he had never been born.
An angel named Clarence shows George what the world would look like without him—and it’s a nightmare. Every kindness George ever did, every life he touched, created ripples he never saw. His brother, whom George saved from drowning as a child, later saved an entire troop ship in the war. Without George, all those men died. Without George, the whole town fell under the control of a greedy villain.
George returns to his real life transformed by gratitude, and the community he served rallies to save him.
This is a long film, and young children won’t follow every plot point—but the central concept is powerful and simple: “What if you had never been born?” Children this age are just beginning to understand that they matter to others, that their existence makes a difference. This film validates that in spectacular fashion.
The final scenes, where the whole town brings money to save George, are among the most gratitude-inducing moments in cinema. Watch your child’s face.
Humor is serious business. Children who learn to laugh—at themselves, at life’s absurdities, at difficult situations—develop resilience that protects them through adolescence and beyond. Humor reframes problems, connects people, and releases tension. It’s a social superpower.
At five to seven, children are developing their sense of humor rapidly. They love slapstick, wordplay, and absurdity. They’re beginning to understand irony and sarcasm, though they often miss the mark. Most importantly, they’re learning that laughter can transform a situation—that humor is a choice and a skill, not just a reaction.
Playful children become innovative adults. The ability to approach serious problems with lightness, to find unexpected connections, and to risk looking silly is what distinguishes creative problem-solvers from rigid rule-followers.
A young bear from “Darkest Peru” travels to London after an earthquake destroys his home. He was raised by his Aunt Lucy and Uncle Pastuzo to believe in British kindness, and he arrives expecting to be welcomed. Instead, he finds a busy city where most people ignore or fear him.
The Brown family takes him in—reluctantly at first, especially Mr. Brown, who sees the bear as a risk to be managed. Paddington’s earnest attempts to fit in cause chaos: he floods the bathroom, destroys the kitchen, and accidentally traps a pickpocket. But his genuine kindness and unfailing politeness gradually transform the entire family.
Meanwhile, a villainous taxidermist wants to stuff Paddington for a museum display. The family must come together to save him, discovering in the process that the “risk” they took in welcoming a stranger has made all their lives richer.
Paddington works on two levels simultaneously. For children, it’s a comedy full of physical humor—marmalade sandwiches in hats, bears in bathtubs, chaotic adventures. For adults (watching alongside), it’s a warm story about kindness to strangers and the unexpected gifts that outsiders bring to families.
The key insight is that Paddington’s humor is never mean. He causes chaos accidentally while trying to be helpful. This models a kind of humor that children can emulate—playful without being cruel, absurd without being hurtful.