Damn These Heels festival will end with documentary on Madonna’s dancers

                   


Utah's film celebration for lesbian, gay, indiscriminate and transgender subjects will complete the process of moving — with a narrative about the men behind Madonna on her disputable 1990 "Blonde Ambition" visit.

The Utah debut of the narrative "Pause dramatically" will be the end night film for the thirteenth yearly Damn These Heels LGBT Film Festival, set for July 15-17 at the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, Salt Lake City.

The Belgian-Dutch creation, coordinated by Ester Gould and Reijer Zwaan, profiles the seven artists — six gay, one straight — who performed with Madonna on the "Blonde Ambition" visit (and the show film "Truth or Dare"), and how the experience changed their lives.

The Utah Film Center, which composes the celebration, on Wednesday likewise reported four more titles, all sensational movies, that will screen at Damn These Heels.

"These early choices are illustrative of the differences and nature of movies that our programming panel is thinking about for the project that is turning out to be the best yet," said Patrick Hubley, the Utah Film Center's creative chief. Whatever remains of the slate will be declared in June.

Here are the four sensational movies declared Wednesday:

• "Missing" (U.S.), coordinated by Deb Shoval and composed by Karolina Waclawiak and Shoval, recounts an erratic young lady (Lola Kirke) who enrolls in the Army, however before sending experiences passionate feelings for a wedded lady (Breeda Wool).

• "Wardrobe Monster" (Canada), composed and coordinated by Stephen Dunn, a turn on the transitioning show, featuring Connor Jessup ("Falling Skies") as a high schooler who tries to be an enhancements cosmetics craftsman — and battles with his sexual personality and trepidation of his macho father (Aaron Abrams). Likewise featuring Isabella Rossellini.

• "From Afar (Desde Allá)" (Venezuela/Mexico), composed and coordinated by Lorenzo Vigas, around a moderately aged Caracas man (Alfredo Castro) who baits young fellows to his home to watch them — and what happens after a vicious first meeting with one 17-year-old child (Luis Silva).

• "Hunky Dory" (U.S.), coordinated by Michael Curtis Johnson and composed by Johnson and Tomas Pais, who stars as Sidney, a glitz rock drag ruler who must re-survey his life when his ex drops off their 11-year-old child (Edouard Holdener) for a week.
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