The film is not limited only to the events surrounding Battlefest; it also follows one of the dancers, Jay Donn, who is cast in the role of Pinocchio with a contemporary dance company, Company XIV, that travels to Edinburg, Scotland to participate in the Fringe Festival. His story is rather inspiring as he is able to adapt and hold his own against the other classically trained dancers. Jay Donn seems set to become one of the first of the Battlefest dancers to become commercially successful. It’s a joy to watch Jay Donn excel in his art and realize his dreams. His joy is palpable, when he shares the news with his mother; her tears of pride are—at least, to this viewer—infectious (I’m rarely a weepy push over). The film also focuses on a pudgy, conflicted, inspiring and definitely creative bear of a dancer called Flizzo. Flizzo is the flex legend that everyone respects but wants to bring down so they can be champ. Out of the all the artists featured in the film, Flizzo is the most compelling and multi-dimensional. He may not excel in the relationship with the mother of his daughter, but he excels as a respected leader among his fellow dancers, and this flex master can certainly dance—and battle
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