The USA Film Festival presents A Letter to Momo

The USA Film Festival presents A Letter to Momo
A film by Hiroyuki Okiura

Saturday, January 26th, 4:30pm
(Doors open at 4:00pm)

Angelika Film Center Dallas
5321 E. Mockingbird Lane at Central Expressway, in Mockingbird Station
(Please do no telephone the theater; they have no information about this program and are not handling tickets.)

TICKET INFORMATION (please read carefully)Tickets are $5 each (cash only) and will be available at the theater, day of show only, after 11:30am for the general public.

Exclusive for A-Kon members – A-Kon members can purchase tickets IN ADVANCE through the USA Film Festival office; Cut-off date for advance tickets is Wednesday, January 23rd at 6:30pm.

You will need to visit the Festival office in person – No email or telephone orders will be accepted. All ticket sales cash only. To visit the Festival office, please telephone first to make sure there is someone available to take your order.

A-Letter-to-Momo-posterUSA Film Festival office - 214-821-6300
6116 N. Central Expressway, Suite 105, Dallas, TX 75206
Office hours: Monday-Friday, 10:30am-6:30pm (sometimes later)
(Call ahead to make sure someone is there to take your order and for directions on where to park)

(The office is located in Expressway Tower, on the SE corner of Central Expressway access road and SMU Boulevard; no access through main lobby; call for directions.)

About “A Letter to Momo”:
The last time Momo saw her father, they had a fight — and now all she has left to remember him by is an incomplete letter that he had started to write her, a blank piece of paper penned with the words “Dear Momo,” but nothing more. Moving with her mother from bustling Tokyo to the remote Japanese island of Shio, she soon discovers three goblins living in her attic, a trio of mischievous spirit creatures who have been assigned to watch over her and only she can see. The goblins are also perpetually famished and begin to wreak havoc on the formerly tranquil island, ransacking pantries and ravaging orchards — acts for which Momo often has to take the blame. But these funny monsters also have a serious side, and may hold the key to helping Momo understand what her father had been trying to tell her.

120 min. Ages 7 and up. In Japanese with English subtitles.