Maurice
Home Vision (9/18/1987)
Drama, Queer Themes/Interest, Romance
In Collection
#20
9*
Seen ItYes
(February 2007 Home)
037429179024
IMDB   7.7
140 mins UK / English
DVD  Region 1   R (Restricted)
Hugh Grant Clive Durham
Simon Callow Mr. Ducie
Denholm Elliott Doctor Barry
Judy Parfitt Mrs. Durham
Phoebe Nicholls Anne Durham
Rupert Graves Alec Scudder
Barry Foster Dean Cornwallis
Ben Kingsley Lasker-Jones
Michael Jenn Archie
Patrick Godfrey Simcox
James Wilby Maurice Hall
Helena Michell Ada Hall
Kitty Aldridge Kitty Hall
Peter Eyre Rev. Borenius
Billie Whitelaw Mrs. Hall
Mark Tandy Risley
Catherine Rabett Pippa Durham
Mark Payton Chapman
Director
James Ivory
Producer Paul Bradley
Ismail Merchant
Writer/Composer E.M. Forster
Kit Hesketh-Harvey
James Ivory
Cinematography Pierre Lhomme
Music Richard Robbins


The second of the three Merchant/Ivory films adapting E.M. Forster novels (between A Room with a View and Howard's End), Maurice deals with a theme few period pieces dare mention--a young man's struggle with his homosexuality. It's not just a gay coming-of-age story, however. The hero wrestles with British class society as much as his personal and sexual identity.

The film opens on a stormy, windswept beach, as an older man awkwardly instructs young, fatherless Maurice Hall (James Wilby) in the "sacred mysteries" of sex. The same turbulent, wordless struggle with passion lasts throughout this slowly evolving, beautifully filmed story. Novelist E.M. Forster's brainy, British melodrama hinges on choice and compulsion, as the pensive hero falls for two completely different men. First comes frail, suppressed Clive (Hugh Grant), who wants nothing more than classical Platonic harmony... and a straight lifestyle. (Grant's performance is so convincing, one wonders how he ever became a heterosexual sex symbol.) After Clive's wedding, Maurice turns to hypnosis to cure his unspeakable longings. Unfortunately, his "cure" is interrupted by Clive's lustful, brooding, barely literate gamekeeper Scudder (Rupert Graves), a worker more at home gutting rabbits than discussing the classics. Maurice's love for a "social inferior" forces him to confront his illicit desire and his ingrained class snobbery. --Grant Balfour

Edition Details
Edition - The Merchant Ivory Collection
Release Date 2/24/2004
Screen Ratio 1.78:1
Audio Tracks English Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
No. of Discs/Tapes 2
Personal Details
Purchase Date 2/9/2007
Location Personal Library
Owner Deitz
Store Amazon.com
Purchase Price $24.99
Condition New
Links ++ Review: Cinema Queer (Michael D. Klemm)
++ Jim Clark's Reviews
+ Review: NY Times
+ Review: Roger Ebert
+ Commentary: QueerGuru (2018. reviews play)
IMDB
Movie Collector Core
TheMovieDb.org
Rotten Tomatoes

Notes
For those who have any doubt about the progress society has made in understanding and accepting homosexuality, this film graphically presents the prejudices of early 20th century societies.

E.M. Foster wrote his novel in early 20th century England· "Foster, a closeted gay man showed the novel to a select few of his friends but did not seek to publish it during his lifetime, believing it to have been unpublishable during that period due to public and legal attitudes to same-sex love· A note found on the manuscript read: “Publishable, but worth it?”
"It was eventually published posthumously in 1971, and then made into a movie in 1987· When it had its World Premiere at the VENICE FILM FESTIVAL IVORY was awarded a Silver Lion as Best Director, sharing the prize with Ermanno Olmi, JAMES WILBY and HUGH GRANT were jointly awarded Best Actor, and RICHARD ROBBINS received the prize for his music· "(Queer Guru)