1922 Manslaughter Lobby Card by Cecil B DeMille
First film to show an erotic kiss between two members of the same sex.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manslaughter_(1922_film)
Manslaughter is a 1922 American silent drama film directed by Cecil B. DeMille and starring Thomas Meighan, Leatrice Joy, and Lois Wilson. It was scripted
by Jeanie MacPherson adapted from the novel of the same name by Alice Duer Miller. The film portrays the main character, Lydia Thorne, as a thrill-
seeking, self-entitled, and wild woman who does not have a reputation of thinking before acting. She acts selfishly by dancing with other men in the
presence of her husband and not providing help to her maid who is in dire need for her son's health. As a result of her numerous poor decisions, she is
taken to court because of a vehicle accident entailing a high-speed chase she has with a motorcyclist policeman. Following this accident, she is imprisoned
for manslaughter after being prosecuted by her husband, Daniel O'Bannon, who is a lawyer. After this endeavor, Lydia comes out of jail to find her
husband has become an alcoholic.
This film was one of the first to depict very graphic scene of men plundering a room of women meant to represent the descent of Lydia's privileged life.,
and this film contained various imagery depicting life among the upper-class society.
[2]
Manslaughter was the first film to show an erotic kiss between two
members of the same sex.
[3]
The film consists of a character development that added to the films success, and at the time romance was a popular hit of
the time because of the demographic that the films were addressing.