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                  is a feature-length independent family thriller film project currently seeking financial backing for production. It is a monster movie intended for a wide audience and while meant to be suspenseful and even frightening in some places, endeavors to be suitable for viewing by most members of the family with the exception of the very youngest members. With minimum violence, the “fright factor” stems from the threat of a terrifying Sasquatch-like beast, while the heart” of the story if the touching relationship between a father and son. Designed with a limited budget in mind,              intends to be that one-in-a-million, low-budget, high-yield movie blockbuster. 

 

If the outstanding reception of both the screenplay and the novella are any indtcation,                   will be a blockbuster!!!

 

Click on the movie poster to go to MOMO at the Internet Movie Database!

 

STARRING:

GARY GRAHAM

BOBBY COLEMAN

ANITA CORDELL

MICHAEL MAYBERRY

DOUGLAS DUNNING

(noncontractural)

FROM WRITER, PROUCER, DIRECTOR KEVIN M. KRAFT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“My endeavor to make truly excellent and broad-based motion pictures extends naturally to MOMO, as well as my desire since I was a child “to make a really good and scary Bigfoot movie!” There have been many attempts and few real successes. I remember a film called Sasquatch: The Legend of Bigfoot I saw at a movie house in the 1970s, and it scared me. I’m not sure why. I would likely find it cheesy if I saw it today. Still, it stayed with me. And while there have been a number of attempts at bringing the legendary Bigfoot to the screen, few were successful at being truly effective. It occurred to me that the writers, producers and directors, for the most part, approached their projects as horror films, and the star was the monster, with attention to plot and the human lead characters being jettisoned in favor of monster thrills. MOMO, on the other hand, will be approached as an adventure with the human characters being the focus, and the monster merely providing the plot complication to develop the journey of the human characters.” – Kevin M. Kraft

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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