A lesbian movie kissing scene from 2000 film What’s Cooking starring Kyra Sedgwick and Julianna Margulies as a lesbian couple. The film is entertaining as it mixes drama and comedy into an interesting recipe. To use other metaphors, the film is the American tossed salad or mixing bowl. We see four quite different families experiencing Thanksgiving day in seemingly different ways. But underneath, we see also the similarities of the joys, pains, and struggles as the various families deal with the reality hidden beneath the holiday veneer.
This is the lesbian movie kissing scene in the second Wild Things film trilogy. A respected high school teacher (Matt Dillon) who is faced with accusations of rape by a student (Denise Richards, from Starship Troopers) who had been giving him the kind of attention most people would consider improper for such a “nice” young lady. Another student (Neve Campbell) raises a similar charge against the teacher, and that’s when a police officer (Kevin Bacon) begins to investigate the allegations.
The unrated version of Wild Things has seven more minutes of footage, and no, the famous hotel-room scene is not extended. But the Denise Richards-Neve Campbell swimming-pool lesbian film scene is extended and sexier, and there is a new Richards-Matt Dillon scene among the closing credits.
A lesbian movie kiss scene in 1998 movie High Art. Syd (Radha Mitchell) is an editor at a painfully pretentious art magazine; by chance, she becomes acquainted with lesbian photographer Lucy (Ally Sheedy) and her weirdo German girlfriend (Patricia Clarkson, in a strange Dietrich-like role).
Syd becomes captivated with Lucy and her work and, smelling a career move, offers to feature her in the next issue of the magazine. The two become attracted, but their relationship is fraught with perils–Syd loses her rather square boyfriend, Lucy’s girlfriend takes a hike, the avaricious management at the magazine pressures Syd, and, most importantly, the pair begins to travel down the road of heroin addiction.
A lesbian kissing scene in 1999 movie Thelma And Louise starring Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis. Whilst on a short weekend getaway, Louise shoots a man who had tried to rape Thelma. Due to the incriminating circumstances, they make a run for it but are soon followed closely by the authorities including a local policeman who is sympathetic to their plight. The federal authorities, however, have less compassion and thus a cross country chase ensues for the two fugitives. Along the way, both women rediscover the strength of their friendship and suprising aspects of their personalities and self-strengths in the trying times.