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Maurice David Greven

Maurice By David Greven

Maurice by David Greven


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Summary

Maurice (1987), a British film based on the novel by E.M. Forster, follows an Edwardian mans journey to self-acceptance as someone who loves and desires men. Rebutting its critical reception, this volume champions the film as a sympathetic adaptation, making a case for its underappreciated positive depiction of gay love.

Maurice Summary

Maurice by David Greven

Maurice, James Ivorys 1987 adaptation of the E.M. Forster novel, follows an Edwardian mans journey from the awakening of his desire for and love of men to self-acceptance. One of the most politically resistant films of the 1980s, Maurice dared to depict a young mans coming-out story and a happy ending for its lovers, Maurice and Alec.

James Ivory and producer Ismail Merchant, a couple whose cinema is synonymous with period film adaptation, released Maurice during the first AIDS decade, a time of flagrant transatlantic homophobia. Criticism following its release described Ivory as a superficial and staid director, while the film was received as a regression to the uncinematic and overly faithful style that characterized the early adaptations by Merchant Ivory Productions. Offering a close reading of Forsters novel and an analysis of Ivorys distinctive visual style, Richard Robbinss indelible score, and the performances of James Wilby, Hugh Grant, and Rupert Graves, David Greven argues that the film is a model of sympathetic adaptation. This study champions the film as the finest of the Merchant Ivory works, making a case for Ivorys underappreciated talents as a director of great subtlety and intelligence, and for the film as one worth recuperating from its detractors.

Understanding Maurice as a fully realized work of art and adaptation, this volume offers insight into how a stunning novel of gay love became a classic of queer film.

Maurice Reviews

The writing is the greatest joy of this book in its daring and originality, its clarity and avoidance of academic stuffiness, its freshness and nimble erudition, Greven's Maurice is witty, deeply moving, superbly literate, and erotically tactile, like the movie he praises. In naming Merchant Ivory's Maurice a classic, Greven has created a classic of his own. Long may it be read. Will Aitken, author of Death in Venice: A Queer Film Classic


Greven succeeds in restoring Maurice to an honored place among significant movies that feature a gay protagonist. The concluding chapter is sophisticated yet accessible to a broad audience. Greven writes with a clarity that will likely appeal to general audiences and film scholars alike. Library Journal


"Maurice is placed by media professor David Greven in a tradition of melancholy and lyrical gay films exemplified by Ang Lees Brokeback Mountain, and later Luca Guadagninos Call Me By Your Name. Greven makes clear in an autobiographical note that Maurice had a tremendous effect on people like himself: lonely gay men who were still closeted when they saw it. Gay & Lesbian Review

About David Greven

David Greven is professor of English at the University of South Carolina.

Additional information

NGR9780228018780
9780228018780
0228018781
Maurice by David Greven
New
Paperback
McGill-Queen's University Press
2023-09-15
208
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - Maurice