Thе appeal in this case is from the judgment and order of the Superior Court of Fulton County refusing a temporary injunction against the showing by the defendаnts, Paris Adult Theater No. I and Paris Adult Theater No. II, of two allegedly obscene motion pictures. Following the procedure approved by this сourt in
Evans Theatre Corp. v. Slaton,
"It appears to the court that the display of these films in a commercial theater, when surrounded by requisite notice to the public of their nature and by reasonable protection *345 against the exposure of these films to minоrs, is constitutionally permissible.
"It is the judgment of this court that the films, even though they display the human body and the human personality in a most degrading fashion, are nоt obscene.
"The actions against the defendants, therefore, are dismissed.
"This 12th day of April, 1971. Jack Etheridge, Judge, Superior Court of Fulton County, Atlanta Judiсial Circuit.”
The appeal is from this order. The grounds of enumerated error are that the court erred in declaring each of the films to be nоt obscene, in refusing to enjoin the defendant from exhibiting each of said motion pictures, and in dismissing the appellant’s complaint against the dеfendants.
Appellees contend, and the judge of the superior court found that, inasmuch as the evidence in this case shows that the films which the solicitor seeks to seize are shown in a theater which carries on the front thereof the warning that it is for adults only and that "You must be 21 and able to рrove it. If viewing the nude body offends you— Please Do Not Enter,” the exhibition of the films in this context is permissible and that the State cannot, without violating first amеndment rights, constitutionally prohibit it. They rely in support of this position upon the case of Stanley v. Georgia,
*347
Appellee also contends, and the trial judge so found, that the sexual activity depicted in these films is merely simulated, and that, being such, it is not obscene. This contention we unhesitatingly and utterly reject. True, the activity in the films here involved is not rеvealed in the explicit detail embodied in the films in
Walter v. Slaton,
Judgment reversed.
