The novel was met not with scandal, but with scholarly acclaim. Critics hailed it as a missing link in queer literary history. Yet, the book truly exploded into the popular consciousness with the 1987 film adaptation directed by James Ivory (produced by Ismail Merchant, with a screenplay by Kit Hesketh-Harvey). Starring James Wilby as Maurice, Hugh Grant as Clive, and Rupert Graves as Alec, the film was a sumptuous, faithful adaptation that introduced Forster’s radical romance to a global audience. Hugh Grant’s performance—capturing Clive’s porcelain beauty and moral cowardice—is a masterpiece of suppressed emotion, while Wilby’s transformation from stiff-upper-lipped boy to ecstatic lover is unforgettable.
At university, Maurice falls in love with a fellow student, Clive Durham. Clive is intellectual, aristocratic, and introduces Maurice to Plato’s Phaedrus , which celebrates the love between men as the highest form of love. For a blissful period, they engage in a passionate, chaste romance. But Clive is terrified of physical intimacy and the law. He eventually “cures” himself through hypnosis, marries a woman, and retreats into the safety of convention. Clive represents the intellectual acceptance of same-sex love without the courage to live it. maurice by em forster