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Includes over 30-minutes of deleted scenes, with audio commentary by director James Ivory; video interviews with Ivory, producer Ismail Merchant, actors James Wilby, Hugh Grant and Rupert Graves, and screenwriter Kit Hesketh-Harvey; original theatrical trailer.
Full Product DetailsSide #1 -- Disc 1
1. Opening Credits/"The Sacred Mystery of Sex" [6:19]
2. Michaelmas Term, 1909, Cambridge [3:13]
3. Meeting Clive Durham [4:09]
4. "The Unspeakable Vice of the Greeks" [5:28]
5. "Your Father Always Went to Church" [1:33]
6. First Embrace [6:38]
7. "Can't You Kiss Me?" [4:32]
8. Maurice Returns Home [2:01]
9. Pendersleigh Park, 1910 [5:33]
10. The City, 1911 [2:56]
11. Viscount Risley Arrested [6:29]
12. Clive Breaks Down [6:27]
13. Durham Visits Greece [2:25]
14. "Can the Leopard Change its Spots?" [7:02]
15. Maurice and Ada [2:00]
16. "Clive Durham Is to Be Married" [5:54]
17. A Visit With Dr. Barry [4:34]
18. Pendersleigh, Autumn, 1913 [12:34]
19. Maurice Hypnotized [4:00]
20. Alec Scudder [10:25]
21. Cricket Match [6:07]
22. A Second Visit With the Dr. Lasker-Jones [3:07]
23. Scudder Visits London [11:11]
24. Southampton Sendoff [7:56]
25. The Boathouse [4:30]
26. End Credits [2:38]
Director James Ivory brings his subdued, "Masterpiece Theater" style to a forbidden subject -- homosexual love. Maurice is based on E.M. Forster's suppressed 1914 novel that was held back from publication until after his death. The film takes place at Cambridge, before World War I, when homosexuality was outlawed in Great Britain. Clive (Hugh Grant), an aristocratic Englishman with a life of privilege, suddenly shocks his close friend Maurice (James Wilby) by declaring his love for him. Maurice is initially stunned by the pronouncement, but in the end finds himself giving Clive a passionate kiss and telling him that he loves him as well. Clive, in the stiff-upper-lip British manner, considers their love to be more of an intellectual concept, but Maurice becomes passionate about the affair. Clive, afraid of being exposed as a homosexual, backs off and breaks up with Maurice for marriage, family, and politics. Maurice is crestfallen, but then he has a passionate affair with Clive's gamekeeper, Scudder (Rupert Graves), and Maurice and Scudder decide to risk their reputations by openly living together as lovers. Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide