James Ivory
Author of A Room with a View [1985 film]
About the Author
Image credit: Credit: Timoko Kikuchi highfallsfilmfestival.com
Works by James Ivory
Autobiography of a princess, also being the adventures of an American film director in the land of the Maharajas (1975) 9 copies
A Room With A View / The Ipcress File — Director — 2 copies
The Wild party 1 copy
The Europeans [Los europeos] 1 copy
The remains of the day 1 copy
The Guru — Director — 1 copy
The Europeans [DVD] [2020] 1 copy
Una habitacion con vistas 1 copy
Quartet 1 copy
Roseland [1977 film] — Director — 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Ivory, James
- Legal name
- Ivory, James Francis
- Other names
- Hazen, Richard Jerome (birth)
- Birthdate
- 1928-06-07
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Berkeley, California, USA
- Places of residence
- Klamath Falls, Oregon, USA
- Education
- University of Oregon (School of Architecture and Allied Arts)
University of Southern California (School of Cinematic Arts) - Occupations
- film director
- Relationships
- Merchant, Ismail (partner and collaborator)
Jhabvala, Ruth Prawer (collaborator)
Members
Reviews
Lists
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 47
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 1,308
- Popularity
- #19,627
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 22
- ISBNs
- 79
- Languages
- 1
This was a fairly brave film to make in the 1980s, when public sentiment towards male homosexuality had turned negative again in the wake of the AIDs crisis.
So there are many things to commend. However, for me there are two glaring problems. And I cannot say whether these arise from the film or the original text. The first is that the relationship between Maurice and Scudder seems so unlikely. Not because it is between two men but because they are so incompatible in every way except lust. Scudder is portrayed as a nasty amoral little man, the very opposite of Maurice.
Secondly, although the film ends romantically with Maurice and Scudder holed up in the boathouse making love by firelight, a none too subtle contrast with the (presumed) unsatisfactory marriage of Durham and Anne, that totally avoid the questions which Duham has posed earlier in the film – how are two men in such a relationship to actually live together in that world, a world which has rejected them socially and legally? Maurice proclaims that he is an outlaw, and that is precisely what he is getting into; but the implications of that are never shown. The problems would be compounded by the incompatibility already mentioned. It's difficult to avoid comparisons with the ending of the same team's film of Forster's 'A Room With A View', where a couple also defy convention – but where the same societal problems will never arise in such an overwhelming way, especially as the male hero of that is far less dependent anyway on society's approval for practical things like money. Maybe at the end of the day the difference is the point; but it would have been braver still to have confronted these issues head on.… (more)