The Stepford Wives (2004 film)

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The Stepford Wives
The Stepford Wives (2004 film).jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Frank Oz
Screenplay by Paul Rudnick
Based on The Stepford Wives
by Ira Levin
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyRob Hahn
Edited by Jay Rabinowitz
Music by David Arnold
Production
companies
Distributed by
Release date
  • June 11, 2004 (2004-06-11)(United States)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$90–100 million [2] [3]
Box office$103.3 million [2] [3]

The Stepford Wives is a 2004 American science fiction black comedy film directed by Frank Oz from a screenplay by Paul Rudnick and starring Nicole Kidman, Matthew Broderick, Bette Midler, Glenn Close, Christopher Walken, and Faith Hill. The second feature-length adaptation of Ira Levin's 1972 novel of the same name following the 1975 film of the same name, it received generally negative reviews from critics and was a box office failure, grossing $103 million worldwide on a $90–100 million budget. [4]

Contents

Plot

Successful reality television executive producer Joanna Eberhart's career suddenly ends after a disillusioned reality show participant named Hank tries to kill her. After Joanna suffers a mental breakdown upon the loss of her job, she, her husband Walter Kresby, and their two children move from Manhattan to Stepford, a quiet Fairfield County, Connecticut suburb. Upon the family's arrival, Joanna befriends writer and recovering alcoholic Roberta "Bobbie" Markowitz and Roger Bannister, a flamboyant gay architect who has moved to town with his long-time partner Jerry, a corporate lawyer.

After the trio witness Sarah Sunderson violently dance and then collapse, Joanna argues with Walter about the incident until Walter bluntly informs her that her children barely know her, their marriage is falling apart, and her domineering nature makes people want to kill her. As he tries to walk out of their marriage, Joanna apologizes and agrees to appease him by trying to fit in with the other wives. The next day, Joanna, Bobbie and Roger go to Sarah's home to check up on her, where upon entering, they hear her upstairs, ecstatically screaming during sex with her husband Herb. As they scramble to sneak out, they find a remote control labeled SARAH, which makes her breasts enlarge and make her walk backward robotically as they unwittingly fiddle with it.

One evening, Walter and Bobbie's husband Dave go to the Men's Association with Roger and Jerry, but Joanna and Bobbie hire a babysitter and sneak inside to spy on them and the other husbands. They discover a hall filled with family portraits, but Roger catches them and assures them that all is well. The next day, the pair discover Roger's flamboyant clothing, Playbill program from Hairspray , and memorabilia of Orlando Bloom and Viggo Mortensen have all been discarded. Jerry tells them to meet him in the town hall and they see Roger, apparently running for Connecticut State Senate with a bland look and conformist personality, all at Jerry's direction. Joanna wants to leave and Walter agrees, saying they will go the next day. Going into Walter's study, she discovers that all the Stepford wives were once working women in high-power positions, just like herself.

The next day, Joanna visits Bobbie, noticing that her formerly messy house is spotless. Now blending in with the other Stepford wives, Bobbie says she is a whole new person and the most important thing is her cookbook. While offering to help Joanna change, Bobbie doesn't notice her own hand on fire when she obliviously rests it on a stove burner. Joanna flees Bobbie's house to look for Walter at the Men's Association, where all the neighborhood's husbands imposingly surround her. Walter laments to Joanna that he always felt emasculated by her, and the Men's Association leader Mike Wellington explains that they insert nanochips into their wives' brains to make them into poised, submissive Stepford Wives. Joanna asks if the nanochipped wives really mean it when they tell their husbands that they love them, to which Mike only replies "enjoy" and ushers a reluctant Walter and Joanna into the transformation chamber. The next scene shows all of the Stepford spouses, including Joanna, Bobbie and Roger, now dazedly shopping at the grocery store dressed in classy Sunday attire.

With Joanna and Walter as special guests, Stepford hosts a formal ball. During the festivities, Joanna distracts Mike and entices him into the garden, while Walter slips away to the transformation room where he destroys the software that programs the women. The wives all start confronting their husbands, and Walter and Joanna reveal that they never went through with the microchip implant. When Mike nearly assaults Walter, Joanna decapitates Mike with a candlestick, exposing him as a fully animatronic robot. Mike's wife Claire explains that she created Stepford because she, too, was a bitter career-minded woman. When she discovered Mike's affair with her research assistant, she murdered them in a jealous rage, then used her skills as a brain surgeon to develop the Stepford Wives program in an effort to improve marriages. Claire then electrocutes herself to death by kissing Mike's severed robotic head.

Six months later, in an interview with Larry King, Joanna (who has won six Emmys for producing the hard-hitting documentary Stepford: The Secret of the Suburbs), Roger (who has won his State Senate seat as an Independent) and Bobbie (who has written and published her first book of poetry Wait Until He's Asleep, Then Cut It Off) explain that the Stepford husbands are under house arrest for their crimes and being retrained to become better people. The closing scene shows the husbands shopping for groceries, under the strict oversight of their wives.

Cast

Production

John Cusack and his sister Joan were originally cast as Walter and Bobbie, respectively, but both had to drop out of the film only weeks before filming started to be with their father Dick, who was dying. [5] Joan had previously appeared in two other films written by Rudnick, Addams Family Values and In & Out (the latter also directed by Frank Oz, for which she was nominated for an Academy Award).

Reportedly, there were problems on-set between Oz and stars Nicole Kidman, Bette Midler, Christopher Walken, Glenn Close and Roger Bart. In a 2003 interview, Oz stated, "Tension on the set? Absolutely! In every movie I do, there's tension. That's the whole point. And working people hard, that's exactly what they expect me to do [...] Bette has been under a lot of stress lately [...] She made the mistake of bringing her stress on the set." [6]

The film was originally conceived as a darkly satirical piece with an ending closer to the finale of the original but negative results from test screenings caused Paramount to commission numerous rounds of reshoots [7] which significantly altered the tone of the film and gave it a new ending. [8]

In a 2005 interview Matthew Broderick stated, "Making that film wasn't enjoyable. It was nobody's fault but my part was not terribly interesting [...] It was not a thrilling film. I would hate it if it were my last." [9]

In a 2007 interview with Ain't It Cool News , Oz's take on the film was "I had too much money and I was too responsible and concerned for Paramount. I was too concerned for the producers. And I didn't follow my instincts." [10]

The majority of the film was shot in Darien, New Canaan and Norwalk, Connecticut. [11] [12]

Reception

Critical reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, The Stepford Wives holds an approval rating of 26% based on 176 reviews, with an average rating of 4.7/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "In exchanging the chilling satire of the original into mindless camp, this remake has itself become Stepford-ized." [13] Metacritic , which uses a weighted average , assigned the film a score of 42 out of 100, based on 40 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. [14] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C+" on an A+ to F scale. [15]

Pete Travers of Rolling Stone said that the on-set complications of the film "can't compare to the mess onscreen." [16] Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly said, "The remake is, in fact, marooned in a swamp of camp, inconsequentiality." [17] A. O. Scott of The New York Times said, "the movie never lives up to its satiric potential, collapsing at the end into incoherence and wishy-washy, have-it-all sentimentality." [18]

Some critics were more receptive to the film. Roger Ebert called Paul Rudnick's screenplay "rich with zingers" and gave the film three stars. [19] However, in the "Worst Movies of 2004" episode of At the Movies with Ebert and Roeper , he admitted that, while he gave the film a "thumbs up", it wouldn't be "the first movie that [he] would defend."[ citation needed ]

The film's teaser won several Golden Trailer Awards in the categories of "Summer 2004 Blockbuster" and "Most Original", as well as "Best of Show". [20]

Box office

The U.S. opening weekend's gross was a respectable $21.4 million but sales fell off quickly. That weekend represented over a third of the final domestic gross of $59.5 million. [2] The film also grossed $42.9 million internationally for a worldwide total gross of $103.4 million. [3]

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