
So here is where it will get tricky for me, because I'm going to get judgy. In my opinion, when you incorporate wonderful new talent, to an already loved group of actors, it just magically flows.

I usually don't talk much about the actors, because in big films such as this one, it is a given that the acting is going to be phenomenally brilliant. So it's always fun to see confetti flying everywhere on kid's heads. It's almost like a food fight, but it's an egg fight. The fun thing about this version of the egg hunt is that the more eggs you find, the more you have to crack them on your friend's heads. After that, we patch the hole with china paper using a glue-stick, and then they are ready to be hidden. Then we paint the egg shells, and once they dry, we stuff the inside with confetti. After that, we gently removed the egg-whites and yolk from inside (you can cook it and eat it later). In Mexico, at least as far as the area where I grew up, we cracked the egg shells gently and with the smallest of holes we could, but big enough to stick a finger in. So if this is the way your family does Easter eggs, today is your lucky day as you will learn an alternative to this. I guess we all do Easter eggs a little different. I was like "What? You eat them?" I guess the first time I heard of this I freaked out a little, because I had never heard of this version of Easter egg hunting. My husband told me that ever since he was a kid, Easter eggs were usually boiled, then you paint them, hide them, start the egg hunt, and finally eat the eggs you find.


Oh but I'm not done yet! You know how I mentioned that we used to paint Easter eggs at school and so on.
