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  1. Latter Days: Directed by C. Jay Cox. With Steve Sandvoss, Wes Ramsey, Rebekah Johnson, Amber Benson. A promiscuous gay party animal falls for a young Mormon missionary, leading to crisis, cliché, and catastrophe.

  2. A promiscuous gay party animal falls for a young Mormon missionary, leading to crisis, cliché, and catastrophe. Aaron Davis ( Steve Sandvoss) and Christian Markelli ( Wes Ramsey) are perhaps the two most opposite people in the world. Aaron is a passionate young Elder (a Mormon missionary) who wants to do his family and church proud.

  3. Latter Days (2003) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  4. These two, very different, young men become friends, and in the process, affect each other's outlook which, in turn, sets up an inevitable clash between gay and Mormon cultures. That is the premise of "Latter Days", a 2003 film, written and directed by C.Jay Cox, himself a former Mormon missionary.

  5. Latter Days: Directed by C. Jay Cox. With Steve Sandvoss, Wes Ramsey, Rebekah Johnson, Amber Benson. A promiscuous gay party animal falls for a young Mormon missionary, leading to crisis, cliché, and catastrophe.

  6. Kinegar, a fifth-generation Latter-Day Saint, finds himself doubting under the intellectual attacks of anti-Mormons. Working and living with these young men, Allen becomes a part of the drama occurring under the everyday surface of missionary life.

  7. Latter Days. Windmills. Performed by Toad the Wet Sprocket. Written by Dan Dinning, Randel Guss, Todd Nichols & Glen Phillips. Published by Sony/ATV Tunes, LLC (ASCAP. Courtesy of Columbia Records by arrangement with Sony Music Licensing. If I Could Be With You Now. Performed by Bobby Joyner & Dean Nolen.

  8. Documentary. Two gay ex-Mormon missionaries travel across the United States to confront their past and explore their futures while discussing with other gay Mormons about the rejection, oppression and the reality of a growing number of LGBT suicides within the LDS community. Director. Brandon Deyette. Stars.

  9. Later Days: Directed by Brad Riddell, Sanford Sternshein. With David Walton, Majandra Delfino, Lisa Zane, David Pasquesi. Nostalgic for his glory days, a frustrated stay-at-home dad invites all of his high school Facebook friends to an 80s-themed surprise party for his exhausted corporate wife.

  10. Latter Days. Edit. This film was originally to be shown in the "Madstone" theater in Salt Lake City, Utah (which has a heavy LDS population) on the day of its national release, but the theater pulled it a few weeks before it was scheduled to open.