Manslaughter (Silent)
Manslaughter (Silent)
Available in stock
Manslaughter is director Cecil B. DeMIlle's statement on the loose morals of the Roaring Twenties. At DeMille's insistence, screenwriter Jeanie Macpherson had herself jailed for stealing a fur coat so the film's depiction of a women's prison would be accurate (she was released after the police discovered the motivation behind her thievery.) After his cycle of films starring Gloria Swanson ended with The Affairs of Anatol (1921), Leatrice Joy had become DeMille's preferred leading lady. She was nearly injured during the film's car chase sequence, which incorporated crude special effects accomplished by fitting her car with a platform that could also hold the director and two cameramen. A scene that depicts a Jazz Age party as a Roman orgy is just as shocking today as it was in 1922, and prefigures DeMille's later historical epics. In fact, Manslaughter would be one of the last of DeMille's "social problem" pictures. He would make his first version of The Ten Commandments the following year, which would also star Joy. The film also features what is widely considered the first onscreen same-sex kiss of a romantic nature during a scene set in the women's prison.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
