Jinyoung's Aegyo Attempt is such a shame, but at the time they had reason to be afraid, he know that their lives could get fucked up, they could be abandone be friends and family, lose everything, even get killed, it was hard, por guys....
Maurice did get a happy ending though albeit not what we expected he finally got someone who did the same effort as he did. Remember when he professed his love and climbed the ladder for Clive in the beginning? Scudder does the same. I think a part of the story is to learn to love what loves us back instead of chasing something that doesn't want us or make an effort in return. In my opinion although deep down I wanted Clive and Maurice together, I'm happy Maurice got to be with someone who truly cared and sacrificed everything for him.
The appearance of this film in my life in 1987 gave me hope and made freedom seem possible. Imagine I could only see and resee it in a cinema. Wept everytime. Forbidden love, love denied, it is irresistable and universal.
Yes, I saw it when it came to the university campus. I was 19. I remember how beautifully it was photographed and how tragic the ending is, but your comment really touched me. Thank you for that.
Okay, I'll just plop this into the feed and see whether it ends up as grist to the film history mill. I was the co-screenwriter on this movie. And the late and much-lamented Ismail Merchant, its producer, was too tight-budgeted to hire a stunt-rider at 10.20. Hugh Grant couldn't ride, or wasn't insured to. The screen-writer, by that stage, was entirely expendable. Hence it was I who was dragooned to gallop across the wide shot of Wilbury Park, in Wiltshire, doubling for Clive, in that glorious moment, along with the late Capt. Adrian ffooks - an Olympic rider of astonishing beauty - as Maurice. Life does grant its high moments. Cling to them, everyone.
Are you serious!! That's amazing, well done! Hope you had some galloping experience. Screen-writers are crucial to any successful movie, thank you for your work!
Holy crap! That is awesome! This movie was beautifully done and I thank you for your work. It has changed my life for the better. I bring it with me in my heart wherever I go.
I somewhat agree, but Clive also had a lot of depth to him. He wasn't just being an ass to Maurice for no reason, he saw his college friend get put on trial for being gay and got shunned from society. That's what prompted him to reject Maurice and get married to a woman. Remember the scene where he fainted at dinner and couldn't stop crying? I blame society for treating gay men so horribly, not Clive for succumbing to the pressure
@@rachelelizabethschneider2974 you shall read the book and I am sure your opinion about Clive character will change. And in the book risley never arrested btw.
@@catloveme3206 Yeah, I heard that Clive had more character development in the movie than in the book. I haven't read the book yet, but my good opinion of Clive is based on the movie only and I'm only talking about his character within the context of the film
@@rachelelizabethschneider2974 about the movie yes I agree with you, I can understand why he choose to marry woman and live normal life but he shall tell Maurice the truth before he goes to Greece not after.
The scene in the dorm is just... It's so good. I'm not a film student or anything, so I'm not eloquent with the proper words to describe the scene as it should be, but I HAVE to say it is one of the most beautiful "intimate" scenes I've ever watched. Very little dialogue, an unbroken shot,neither character is completely in-frame, but the emotion, the feeling, it's all there. The silence in the room, so deafening that the chair creak almost makes you jump because you are SO IN the moment, waiting for what comes next...This scene is gorgeous. The best part, for me, is that this is before they "speak of that which is unspoken"; they don't even know they're in love, but they know they're in love. I literally watched this movie less than 24 hours ago and it has become one of my top three favourite LGBTQ+ themed movies and at least in my top fifteen favourite movies ever. I was born the year this movie was made and to see first hand how far we've come in just those thirty four short years (with admittedly further to go) from when this movie was set is something to be hopeful of for the future. I LOVE this movie.
@@iwd1856 Thank you, Trippy. The music, which is magnificent, and which flowers in the final sequence, was by the very much lamented Richard Robbins, who has sadly passed without the recognition which he deserved. The cinematography was by Pierre Lhomme, who is thankfully still with us. He, as a Frenchman, was unencumbered by the very English issues of the story, and photographed it brilliantly simply for its beauty, and the beauty of its three primary actors.
I'm high on Maurice. I've fallen head over heels for Maurice and Durham's unique love story. I've been watching the film over and over and over again for the past couple of days and I don't seem to move on, the truth is, I don't want to. Everytime I watch these scenes, I discover something new, they never fail to give my hormones a good stir. And Hugh Grant's delivery of dialogues is extraordinarily brilliant. I especially like the moment when Maurice so adorably hits Clive on his head. This movie makes me laugh and cry and go crazy at the same time. I'm trying to get my hands on the novel as well.
I also find him stunning in this movie, his character might seem dull or haughty at some point but that’s exactly how he has been written in the book. A great performance I think!
He proved himself as an actor in this, his first leading role. Best thing, I believe, that he has ever done. And yes, he was astonishingly beautiful. I'm glad that there is this record of it. We filmed in King's College Cambridge, the alma mater of Rupert Brooke, the quintessentially English war poet whom he greatly resembled. A pity he never played him onscreen.
@@kitheskethharvey3576 Sad he got type casted but I love that he gets to play more diverse roles now like in Florence Foster Jenkins, The Undoing and A Very English Scandal - he's been a revelation in all of them.
Even though this is a film, I wonder how many lives were lost to society's standard of love back then. Given the acceptance and free mindsets we have now, it must've been so difficult for the lgbtq community back then. I feel so sad
The world lost one of its greatest minds because of homophobia. Alan Turing helped shortened the war and almost every technology we have now that uses computers we owe to him but because he loved men, he was persecuted. Alan killed himself after the UK government forced him into chemical castration. He bit an apple laced with arsenic. He was 41.
Stop bringing the lgbt community on this,, that's individual person in a fictional movie. Not that stupid freaky community, i cut ties with the 🌈 rainbow communist
No, that's incorrect. "Maurice" was adapted from E.M. Forster's novel by screenwriter Kit Hesketh-Harvey and directed by James Ivory; "CMBYN" was adapted from Andre Aciman's novel by screenwriter James Ivory and directed by Luca Guadagnino.
“Maurice....” “Clive....” “Hall!” he gasped, fully awake. Warmth was upon him. “Maurice, Maurice, Maurice.... Oh Maurice-” “I know.” “Maurice, I love you.” “I you.” They kissed, scarcely wishing it. Then Maurice vanished as he had come, through the window. (this is from the novel) :)
Whenever watching this masterpiece film, I've always approached it more and more that the first part of the story is important but it's merely a bridge to the main story, sort of like an appetizer to the main course. In this case, it's a surprise type of main course. Unexpected surprise. That and how the first part is to give the/their background of the story and the conflicts/character development/feel for the environment. Thank you to Forster, and Merchant Ivory. God bless
those scenes make me fall in love with no one, I feel in love and can understand every one of them and why they act this way with each other. I can't get over this movie.
@@zeebee4435 For me and for others too I guess, Clive's "change" was much more infuriating in the book. It started of him basically ignoring Maurice for a long time then starts being an ass and simping over women all of a sudden. There's debate over internalise homophobia too. Take it with a grain of salt tho 'coz I'm just a teenage reader who read books for fun. I suggest you read non-spoiler reviews and discussions about it.
clive and maurice fell out of love. it's more detailed in the book, where Clive basically leaves Maurice after finding himself being attracted to women instead of men. This made Maurice depressed and lonely, with thoughts of suicide. In the movie, it's shown more how Clive is rather fearful and too ashamed to love him. Maurice and Alec deserve each other and are properly in love. It's an absolutely beautiful story really, even though the first love interest didn't work out - if only more people could understand that.
Maurice, exquisite film by James Ivory dating from 1987 and adapted from the excellent book by E.M Forster (edited posthumously according to the wishes of the writer).
Skulle vilja se hela filmen som den är frampå tycker om engelska filmer ❤❤❤ innan detta året tar slut 2024 tycker om filmer med vackra kläder i den från förr i tiden ❤
I always felt like these two had something special to them that Maurice and Scudder didnt. I did feel happy for Maurice and Scudder by the end, but the sorrow from clive knowing he would never feel the way he felt with Maurice again overrode the happines for me. It was sad to me because even if clive wanted to stay with maurice, he had an immense amount of responsiblity that being with him would have been impossible and in addition, he was extremely frightened after risley lost everything after being caught. And i know that it is different in the book, but the movie portrays them so tragically that i cant help but feel awful for clive. But i think its most tragic to because i know that if this was set in modern times, they would have never seperated in the first place. Rather, it was the outside and judgemental world and its stresses that caused their separation.
This is the ONE AND ONLY time I've ever felt that the movie is far far better than the book. Both Clive & Maurice (and Alec too) are damn near villains in the book. Maurice is a jealous simpering dimwitted misogynist who torments his sisters, mother and later Alec for no good reason. Clive is a pretentious arse who pretends like he's sure of everything but then randomly falls out of love with Maurice with no explanation. Alec just takes advantage of a heartbroken man. It was a challenge to finish the book, but the movie was exquisite.
The screenwriter who adapted the novel, Kit Hesketh-Harvey, knew the social milieu of the novel first-hand, which was a great help. Merchant Ivory's regular screenwriter, Ruth Prawer Jhabala, had passed on the project, as she considered "Maurice" a less-than-first-rate novel, but nonetheless she made at least one excellent suggestion, telling the filmmakers that the (newly invented) episode of Risley's arrest and sentencing should be linked with Clive's decision to conform to societal pressure and "go straight."
My theory is that he didn’t deny it. He grew out of the love he had with Maurice, it shows that you can’t keep holding on to something that’s wanted to be grown. I just finished it. I think it’s a movie of growth meaning you can’t move on, you wount be able to experience new things, new love if you don’t let go of the past.
@@tsingsum9882 If Clive fully accepted his homosexuality, I doubt he would share Maurice with Scudder. That said, Clive and Ann could live as a thruple. E.M. Forster lived a similar way. He had a relationship with Bob Buckingham who married but his wife was very open. She understood how important Forster was to her husband. They lived together. In Forster's last days, it wasn't Bob by his side, but his wife who held his hand until he passed.
I didn't hate the ending because Maurice deserved to enjoy love with someone who didn't marry someone else. I felt sorry for Clive because his internalize homophobia was fueled by his college friend getting arrested and his life ruined just for being gay. Clive was terrified of losing everything so I understood the choice he made, but he clearly still loved Maurice. I think Alec Scudder was introduced too quickly and I didn't care for him as a character, but I liked seeing Maurice happy instead of rejected and miserable thinking there was something wrong with him and going to doctors to turn himself straight
when I read the book and thatlast piece hurts me a lot Clive because I feel that he did love Maurice but the fear did not leave him and his life sad because what I understood from that night he did not see Maurice again and it was him finally lost I think his only love (Maurice)
ซึ้งจังครับ อยากให้มีภาพณ์เสียงภาษาไทย. ดูไม่เข้าใจ. หนังน่าจะซึ้งมากแต่แปลไม่ออก. 😍Please translate into Thai or dub it in Thai. I really want to watch it because I don't understand it. I want Thai language.
That's why it's best to read the novel prior to watching the film. Some more than others, and in this case with Maurice, yes. It's very important, helpful and key to read Maurice by Forster, before watching the film.
I read the book. Alec's character wasn't properly developed, and I felt that maurice was drawn to alec due to lust, whereas he really loved Clive. But Clive was an ass to maurice, so I am happy maurice got a happy ending. But I wish E.M. forster had developed alec's character more, or maybe changed the ending; Clive sacrifices everything for maurice, and they go to France together.
@@adeliepeng.1046 If you’re a homophobe, why did you watch this movie? In the author EM Forster’s words: ‘I was determined that, in fiction anyway, two men should fall in love and remain in it in the ever and ever that fiction allows ... Maurice and Alec still roam the greenwood.’ Together. They‘re a life match. And this is what Forster and Ivory intended, it’s not just an ‘opinion’.
@@sophia8677 here let me help u☺✨ ruclips.net/video/umjp7qqpn5A/видео.html [Maurice and Alec part🍰] ruclips.net/video/2sAtbJ8QV6I/видео.html ["Maurice" Film Full Movie🕊]
You need to read the novel and read Forster’s endnote. Clive’s function in the story is to take Maurice only a certain distance along Maurice’s personal journey. Maurice’s fully/physically realised love with Alec completes the journey. All three characters potentially have a lot to lose. Clive is not to be hated - but he is also not the intended, or right, outcome for Maurice. Clive doesn’t have a ‘title’, by the way - his family are declining landowners and his ‘duty’ is that he is expected to become a Tory MP (for a safe seat, at a time when most ordinary people in the UK didn’t have the vote). I do not get the concern for Clive in this thread (unless the Clive-supporters are all from super-rich upper-class backgrounds?!), and neither would Forster. The author himself didn’t like Clive!
i’m still bitter that they didn’t end up together but maurice deserves happiness and i’m very happy for him. if only clive wasn’t that afraid...
Jinyoung's Aegyo Attempt is such a shame, but at the time they had reason to be afraid, he know that their lives could get fucked up, they could be abandone be friends and family, lose everything, even get killed, it was hard, por guys....
im bitter about clive because he just had to act like he did
but very deep he always loved maurice 💔
Maurice did get a happy ending though albeit not what we expected he finally got someone who did the same effort as he did.
Remember when he professed his love and climbed the ladder for Clive in the beginning? Scudder does the same.
I think a part of the story is to learn to love what loves us back instead of chasing something that doesn't want us or make an effort in return.
In my opinion although deep down I wanted Clive and Maurice together, I'm happy Maurice got to be with someone who truly cared and sacrificed everything for him.
more like if society didn't suck so much then
damn before we have “Call me by your name”, we’ve had “Maurice”
Written by James Ivory too!! What a legend
Broke back mountain too
Yes, and I remember when it came out and "Another Country" too!
And we didn’t even know it!
I guess Ivory was the screenplay writer of fanfictions. Hallelujah!
The appearance of this film in my life in 1987 gave me hope and made freedom seem possible. Imagine I could only see and resee it in a cinema. Wept everytime. Forbidden love, love denied, it is irresistable and universal.
Yes, I saw it when it came to the university campus. I was 19. I remember how beautifully it was photographed and how tragic the ending is, but your comment really touched me. Thank you for that.
aww
1987 the year of my birth year,,
bruh i was born in 2001
Me too ☺️🤗
Hugh is, was and always will be my dream man!
Fern Gully same!😍😍😍♥️♥️♥️
I prefer the young James
Hugh is quite handsome, but I found Scudder’s actor (Graves) is quite stunning.
@@Lucas-pd1ty love them both
SAME
Okay, I'll just plop this into the feed and see whether it ends up as grist to the film history mill. I was the co-screenwriter on this movie. And the late and much-lamented Ismail Merchant, its producer, was too tight-budgeted to hire a stunt-rider at 10.20. Hugh Grant couldn't ride, or wasn't insured to. The screen-writer, by that stage, was entirely expendable. Hence it was I who was dragooned to gallop across the wide shot of Wilbury Park, in Wiltshire, doubling for Clive, in that glorious moment, along with the late Capt. Adrian ffooks - an Olympic rider of astonishing beauty - as Maurice. Life does grant its high moments. Cling to them, everyone.
Are you serious!! That's amazing, well done! Hope you had some galloping experience. Screen-writers are crucial to any successful movie, thank you for your work!
Holy crap! That is awesome! This movie was beautifully done and I thank you for your work. It has changed my life for the better. I bring it with me in my heart wherever I go.
Love this inside story! Thank you for sharing. Was Hugh gorgeous inside and out in person? I always find his interview delightful.
Kit, you are the ultimate Renaissance Man! Gorgeous film, great work. Thank you.
The most lovely thing I’ve read today
"You must know that to be alone with you hurts me." - Clive
Hugh was so beautiful ugh, if wasn't for his beauty i don't think many people would like the Clive's character
I somewhat agree, but Clive also had a lot of depth to him. He wasn't just being an ass to Maurice for no reason, he saw his college friend get put on trial for being gay and got shunned from society. That's what prompted him to reject Maurice and get married to a woman. Remember the scene where he fainted at dinner and couldn't stop crying? I blame society for treating gay men so horribly, not Clive for succumbing to the pressure
@@rachelelizabethschneider2974 you shall read the book and I am sure your opinion about Clive character will change. And in the book risley never arrested btw.
@@catloveme3206 Yeah, I heard that Clive had more character development in the movie than in the book. I haven't read the book yet, but my good opinion of Clive is based on the movie only and I'm only talking about his character within the context of the film
@@rachelelizabethschneider2974 about the movie yes I agree with you, I can understand why he choose to marry woman and live normal life but he shall tell Maurice the truth before he goes to Greece not after.
@sara m in the book Clive crying after Maurice kissed him because he released he no longer love Maurice that time
Loudest damn chairs in the world
Unintentional ASMR
HAHAHAHAHAHAA
The scene in the dorm is just...
It's so good.
I'm not a film student or anything, so I'm not eloquent with the proper words to describe the scene as it should be, but I HAVE to say it is one of the most beautiful "intimate" scenes I've ever watched. Very little dialogue, an unbroken shot,neither character is completely in-frame, but the emotion, the feeling, it's all there. The silence in the room, so deafening that the chair creak almost makes you jump because you are SO IN the moment, waiting for what comes next...This scene is gorgeous. The best part, for me, is that this is before they "speak of that which is unspoken"; they don't even know they're in love, but they know they're in love.
I literally watched this movie less than 24 hours ago and it has become one of my top three favourite LGBTQ+ themed movies and at least in my top fifteen favourite movies ever.
I was born the year this movie was made and to see first hand how far we've come in just those thirty four short years (with admittedly further to go) from when this movie was set is something to be hopeful of for the future.
I LOVE this movie.
I adore Maurice, book and movie, so much it’s unreal😭❤️
Очень красиво сказано!
You mean 122 years. It’s set in 1912.
The music is exquisite and the cinematography is breathtaking, both should have won Oscars.😊😷👍
They won the Berlinale best actor for this film
@@iwd1856 Thank you, Trippy. The music, which is magnificent, and which flowers in the final sequence, was by the very much lamented Richard Robbins, who has sadly passed without the recognition which he deserved. The cinematography was by Pierre Lhomme, who is thankfully still with us. He, as a Frenchman, was unencumbered by the very English issues of the story, and photographed it brilliantly simply for its beauty, and the beauty of its three primary actors.
@@kitheskethharvey3576 So many people are asking why Robbins' music isn't on streaming services or available to buy. Do you know?
I'm high on Maurice. I've fallen head over heels for Maurice and Durham's unique love story. I've been watching the film over and over and over again for the past couple of days and I don't seem to move on, the truth is, I don't want to. Everytime I watch these scenes, I discover something new, they never fail to give my hormones a good stir. And Hugh Grant's delivery of dialogues is extraordinarily brilliant. I especially like the moment when Maurice so adorably hits Clive on his head. This movie makes me laugh and cry and go crazy at the same time. I'm trying to get my hands on the novel as well.
Deeds are more important than words.
Foreshadowing
@@wendylu2323 'Let's give over talking'
Omg sameeee I literally love it sm I rewatched it the 2nd time right away!! IT'S SO GOOD AGHFJJSJFKS
"Can't you kiss me" drives me fuxking crazy
8:14
TRUE
I'd have dumped him then and there.
@@mothball5425why
@@ferociouslionessig it's bc he wanted to kiss clive, but clive refused, and he kinda insisted(?) but then he accepted
Christ everyone is so young in this....
and now they are old enough to be my grandpa 😂 they aged so well tho
Hugh looked about 16 years old in this even though he was around 27 😭
I know ....it’s so weird
i thought they were like 30 or something
@@ELidiak2014 definitely not 16. maybe 23-25
James Wilby is so enchanting. Love the man!
I also find him stunning in this movie, his character might seem dull or haughty at some point but that’s exactly how he has been written in the book. A great performance I think!
7:07 I've never seen anything so romantic, to this level. Best scene ever
Found it!!! I really want to find somebody who make a timestamp for that scene. Thank you 😘
@@myfinevoice5158 😊
Read the book 😍 its even more romantic in the book.
Hugh Grant's hair was undefeated in the 90's... except maybe by Oprah!
Hugh Grant is so beautiful in this movie, I don't know why did he keep doing rom-coms.
He proved himself as an actor in this, his first leading role. Best thing, I believe, that he has ever done. And yes, he was astonishingly beautiful. I'm glad that there is this record of it. We filmed in King's College Cambridge, the alma mater of Rupert Brooke, the quintessentially English war poet whom he greatly resembled. A pity he never played him onscreen.
@@kitheskethharvey3576 Sad he got type casted but I love that he gets to play more diverse roles now like in Florence Foster Jenkins, The Undoing and A Very English Scandal - he's been a revelation in all of them.
@@kitheskethharvey3576 Also, I have to thank you for co-screenwriting this masterpiece.
Even though this is a film, I wonder how many lives were lost to society's standard of love back then. Given the acceptance and free mindsets we have now, it must've been so difficult for the lgbtq community back then. I feel so sad
The world lost one of its greatest minds because of homophobia. Alan Turing helped shortened the war and almost every technology we have now that uses computers we owe to him but because he loved men, he was persecuted. Alan killed himself after the UK government forced him into chemical castration. He bit an apple laced with arsenic. He was 41.
Stop bringing the lgbt community on this,, that's individual person in a fictional movie. Not that stupid freaky community, i cut ties with the 🌈 rainbow communist
2021 but still obsessed with this movie💜
where can you find it
@@chillbruh1635 here in RUclips too.♥
@@hinata3129 yeah found it thanjs
If I could paint I'd want nothing more than to paint that last scene, it's so beautiful. It's like an ethereal fairy tale
this movie gives me butterflies in my tummy every time and lingers like the taste of a cigarette.
Historians: and they were best friends
And confirmed bachelors
@@mothball5425 only Maurice was a "confirmed bachelor" tho lol
One of my favorite movies of all time.
Seeing this at an anniversary showing at my cinema was my greatest cinema experience
This movie is so beautiful
I still feel the pain in this movie😭
I love to read comments, they are more alive as love
I am reading them too, Nitin. Thank you. They keep this movie alive too.
This is Call me by your name before there was call me by your name. I just learned this movie existed
And they're from the same screenwriter!
Except much better
Maurice is better
No, that's incorrect. "Maurice" was adapted from E.M. Forster's novel by screenwriter Kit Hesketh-Harvey and directed by James Ivory; "CMBYN" was adapted from Andre Aciman's novel by screenwriter James Ivory and directed by Luca Guadagnino.
2024 first time I see her
7;08 he just claim the window to kiss him and say I love you ,, so sweet,,
Its even better and more romantic in the book. Maurice actually hears Clive calling out to him in his sleep.
It's upsetting to me that he climbed back out again 😭
“Maurice....”
“Clive....”
“Hall!” he gasped, fully awake. Warmth was upon him. “Maurice, Maurice, Maurice.... Oh Maurice-”
“I know.”
“Maurice, I love you.”
“I you.”
They kissed, scarcely wishing it. Then Maurice vanished as he had come, through the window.
(this is from the novel) :)
Clive fell first, but Maurice fell harder 💔
Whenever watching this masterpiece film, I've always approached it more and more that the first part of the story is important but it's merely a bridge to the main story, sort of like an appetizer to the main course. In this case, it's a surprise type of main course. Unexpected surprise. That and how the first part is to give the/their background of the story and the conflicts/character development/feel for the environment. Thank you to Forster, and Merchant Ivory. God bless
i just watched this movie and james wilby was so damn handsome and pretty. gonna watch his other movie
Jamas wilby is sooo handsome
those scenes make me fall in love with no one, I feel in love and can understand every one of them and why they act this way with each other. I can't get over this movie.
7:27 perfection ❤️
08:00 Clive into it but then gets the fear 😭
I was honestly disappointed that Maurice didn’t stay with Clive but with Scudder
adelie peng. Yes! They make a beautiful couple ;)
why stay with someone who’s ashamed to love you?
@@aah4735 Very right! I could understand the Clive in the movie but when I read the book, AHHHH I DON'T LIKE HIM
emo pikon damn how was he in the book ?
@@zeebee4435 For me and for others too I guess, Clive's "change" was much more infuriating in the book. It started of him basically ignoring Maurice for a long time then starts being an ass and simping over women all of a sudden. There's debate over internalise homophobia too. Take it with a grain of salt tho 'coz I'm just a teenage reader who read books for fun. I suggest you read non-spoiler reviews and discussions about it.
this movie and brokeback are the best of homosexual movies
Call me by your name too
What about God's own country
You should watch ' Gods Own Country '
@@bettyluna03 kinda boring tbh
Exactly
Clive damn handsome!! I wish he with Maurice 🤦♀️🤦♀️
clive and maurice fell out of love. it's more detailed in the book, where Clive basically leaves Maurice after finding himself being attracted to women instead of men. This made Maurice depressed and lonely, with thoughts of suicide. In the movie, it's shown more how Clive is rather fearful and too ashamed to love him. Maurice and Alec deserve each other and are properly in love. It's an absolutely beautiful story really, even though the first love interest didn't work out - if only more people could understand that.
@@tsingsum9882 yeah, understandable cause we all know that first love never end up like fairytales.
@@minglingw yeah absolutely - glad to have had this conversation with you !
@@tsingsum9882 With the second relationship it ends up a happy ending, yes?
bruh
Wish they’d re release this.
it's on youtube to watch
I love this Film. I love it so much
6:42 most romantic scene ever. They establish their mutual feelings in such a sweet way
Hugh Grant é o mais belo dos homens . Que olhos azuis extraordinários . Só tenho 16 anos , mas ele conseguiu me cativar
Cautiva a todas las edades
Oh no, I can't get Daniel Cleaver out of my head
The fight scenes were the best. Lol
Maurice, exquisite film by James Ivory dating from 1987 and adapted from the excellent book by E.M Forster (edited posthumously according to the wishes of the writer).
Maurice & Clive -> LOVE
Maurice & Scudder -> LUST
Maurice
Brokeback Mountain
Call Me By Your Name
God's Own Country
.......
.
.
.....❤
I felt sad for Clive in the end because he didn't allow himself to be set free. I was happy for maurice and Alec ❤
Skulle vilja se hela filmen som den är frampå tycker om engelska filmer ❤❤❤ innan detta året tar slut 2024 tycker om filmer med vackra kläder i den från förr i tiden ❤
Thank you for doing the video!
Another movie gem
Belicimo vídeos com imagens lindas de dois rapazes bem elegantes e muito bem charmosos. 🔷⚪🔷⚪🔷⚪🔷⚪🔷⚪🔷⚪🔷⚪🔷⚪🔷⚪🔷⚪💚⚪💚⚪💚⚪💚🔷❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐⭐⭐
@7:15 isn't this the most sweetest thing in this universe? 🥰
they made clive ugly later. look how they massacred my boy
@cjordan2162 - Thanks for posting all these great scenes from the film. Seamless editing job, too!
I always felt like these two had something special to them that Maurice and Scudder didnt. I did feel happy for Maurice and Scudder by the end, but the sorrow from clive knowing he would never feel the way he felt with Maurice again overrode the happines for me. It was sad to me because even if clive wanted to stay with maurice, he had an immense amount of responsiblity that being with him would have been impossible and in addition, he was extremely frightened after risley lost everything after being caught.
And i know that it is different in the book, but the movie portrays them so tragically that i cant help but feel awful for clive.
But i think its most tragic to because i know that if this was set in modern times, they would have never seperated in the first place. Rather, it was the outside and judgemental world and its stresses that caused their separation.
miss the part they play on the carpet
Thank you
BEAUTIFUL movie.
Those were the jolly times!
This is the ONE AND ONLY time I've ever felt that the movie is far far better than the book. Both Clive & Maurice (and Alec too) are damn near villains in the book. Maurice is a jealous simpering dimwitted misogynist who torments his sisters, mother and later Alec for no good reason. Clive is a pretentious arse who pretends like he's sure of everything but then randomly falls out of love with Maurice with no explanation. Alec just takes advantage of a heartbroken man. It was a challenge to finish the book, but the movie was exquisite.
The screenwriter who adapted the novel, Kit Hesketh-Harvey, knew the social milieu of the novel first-hand, which was a great help. Merchant Ivory's regular screenwriter, Ruth Prawer Jhabala, had passed on the project, as she considered "Maurice" a less-than-first-rate novel, but nonetheless she made at least one excellent suggestion, telling the filmmakers that the (newly invented) episode of Risley's arrest and sentencing should be linked with Clive's decision to conform to societal pressure and "go straight."
inno ai capelli sontuosi, materia divina, di Clive/Hugh
Love it so much🥺💗
My theory is that he didn’t deny it. He grew out of the love he had with Maurice, it shows that you can’t keep holding on to something that’s wanted to be grown. I just finished it. I think it’s a movie of growth meaning you can’t move on, you wount be able to experience new things, new love if you don’t let go of the past.
7:07 and 9:27 were the death of me
7:07 you should read the book. Even more romantic in the book.
Also in 9:27 in the book Clive said “I shall kiss you” to Maurice! And the consent to kiss from each other. What a gentleman!
Bonitos , e muitô bem charmosos isso fortalece os corações ..! Abraços e beijos.🔷 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Clive Durhammm
Lindicimos ..! Estes rapazes bem belezas e masculizados.💚 💚⚪💚⚪💚⚪💚⚪💚⚪💚🔷💚🔷💚🔷💚🔷💚🔷🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
just want to ask, is the video actually post from ten years ago, i'm bit shoked by the time
Its 11 yrs now, cause it was in 2009, but the movie came out in 1987. Shocking indeed.
Love it
Before there was My Policeman, there was Maurice.
Before My Policeman there was E.M. Forster’s actual life. And his real-life story is much better!
u should watch BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN it s really amazing jyst like maurice
Poxaaaaaaa, vida ...! ! ! Gostei. ., como são lindos. ..! Beeeeeiiiijos.💘 gostoso.🔷 ❄🌟❄🌟❄❄❄🌟❄🌟❄🌟❄🌟❄🌟❄🌟❄🌟🌟🌟🌟
Beijar um alguém do mesmo sexos isso não é errado mas vale acreditar no amor puros de coração. ❤💕❤💕❤💕❤💕❤💕❤💕❤💕❤💕❤💕💕💕💕💕💕💖
Why wouldn't they make a three cuple and runaway to france or italy at the end?
that's really not how it works, especially in this setting
i know, i was sad
....
@@tsingsum9882 If Clive fully accepted his homosexuality, I doubt he would share Maurice with Scudder. That said, Clive and Ann could live as a thruple. E.M. Forster lived a similar way. He had a relationship with Bob Buckingham who married but his wife was very open. She understood how important Forster was to her husband. They lived together. In Forster's last days, it wasn't Bob by his side, but his wife who held his hand until he passed.
Hated the ending to this movie I would of got Clive and Maurice to run away together somewhere AWAY from Alec Scudder far far far away 😂
I didn't hate the ending because Maurice deserved to enjoy love with someone who didn't marry someone else. I felt sorry for Clive because his internalize homophobia was fueled by his college friend getting arrested and his life ruined just for being gay. Clive was terrified of losing everything so I understood the choice he made, but he clearly still loved Maurice. I think Alec Scudder was introduced too quickly and I didn't care for him as a character, but I liked seeing Maurice happy instead of rejected and miserable thinking there was something wrong with him and going to doctors to turn himself straight
Same!
They all three go to fight in WW1, Clive comes back hard as nails and steals Maurice. Alec finds hot new boyfriend. Probably.
Clive doesn’t deserve Maurice whereas Maurice and Alec deserve each other so what are you on?
Then you've completely missed the point of the story that Forster was telling and the message that he was trying to convey.
when I read the book and thatlast piece hurts me a lot Clive because I feel that he did love Maurice but the fear did not leave him and his life sad because what I understood from that night he did not see Maurice again and it was him finally lost I think his only love (Maurice)
I still wish clive wnd Maurice wnded up together it was just basically one night with Alec like???
Mas , se amar e viver pois vivo pensando em você. Felicidades, ❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
ซึ้งจังครับ อยากให้มีภาพณ์เสียงภาษาไทย. ดูไม่เข้าใจ. หนังน่าจะซึ้งมากแต่แปลไม่ออก. 😍Please translate into Thai or dub it in Thai. I really want to watch it because I don't understand it. I want Thai language.
...when posh English boys were popular
Gosto de filmes de época
Men in boat look likes Emmanuel macron.
Watched the movie last night. I don't know why I didn't like Scudder at all. There's absolute no reason for them to be together. I don't get it.
There’s every reason for them to be together. Read the novel - read Forster’s endnote - read about Forster’s life. Alec is wonderful.
The reason is LUST
Exactly!!
That's why it's best to read the novel prior to watching the film. Some more than others, and in this case with Maurice, yes. It's very important, helpful and key to read Maurice by Forster, before watching the film.
I read the book. Alec's character wasn't properly developed, and I felt that maurice was drawn to alec due to lust, whereas he really loved Clive. But Clive was an ass to maurice, so I am happy maurice got a happy ending. But I wish E.M. forster had developed alec's character more, or maybe changed the ending; Clive sacrifices everything for maurice, and they go to France together.
CMBYN LOVERS 💞
Where’s Scudder?
Dead
@@adeliepeng.1046 lmao
@gerrygallen my comment wasn’t serious
@@adeliepeng.1046 living happily with Maurice in a cottage
@@adeliepeng.1046 If you’re a homophobe, why did you watch this movie? In the author EM Forster’s words: ‘I was determined that, in fiction anyway, two men should fall in love and remain in it in the ever and ever that fiction allows ... Maurice and Alec still roam the greenwood.’ Together. They‘re a life match. And this is what Forster and Ivory intended, it’s not just an ‘opinion’.
Hugh Grant looks like Cole Sprouse 😍😍❤
he really does!!!
No, Cole Sprouse looks like Hugh Grant.. :P
⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐❄⭐
❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗❤💗
🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵💘🔵
mannn why isn't there Maurice and Alec stuff??
This video have Maurice and Clive part only... If u want to watch Maurice and Alec part just go search...🕊✨
@@mihoshimeow ya think I didn't try that already?
@@sophia8677 did u already get???
@@mihoshimeow obviously no
@@sophia8677 here let me help u☺✨
ruclips.net/video/umjp7qqpn5A/видео.html
[Maurice and Alec part🍰]
ruclips.net/video/2sAtbJ8QV6I/видео.html
["Maurice" Film Full Movie🕊]
El nombre de esa película por favor??
Maurice
Damn I can’t get over the fact that he turned out to be an a**. They had far more chemistry than maurice and alec
I dont get the Clive hate. Clive had everything to lose because he was titled and heir. He chose duty rather than his heart for the sake of his family
You need to read the novel and read Forster’s endnote. Clive’s function in the story is to take Maurice only a certain distance along Maurice’s personal journey. Maurice’s fully/physically realised love with Alec completes the journey. All three characters potentially have a lot to lose. Clive is not to be hated - but he is also not the intended, or right, outcome for Maurice.
Clive doesn’t have a ‘title’, by the way - his family are declining landowners and his ‘duty’ is that he is expected to become a Tory MP (for a safe seat, at a time when most ordinary people in the UK didn’t have the vote). I do not get the concern for Clive in this thread (unless the Clive-supporters are all from super-rich upper-class backgrounds?!), and neither would Forster. The author himself didn’t like Clive!
6:42 easily my favorite scene.
god my soul is connected to this movie.
Hugh Grant is so unbelievable cute
so fucking beautiful
omg hi past self!! I'm still addicted to this movie
@@squid2400 same lmao
god I loved this movie
@@squid2400holy fuck me too! 😭 why do we keep meeting each other/our past selves again?