Film Review
Possibly the weirdest pro-feminist film ever made. When it was
first released,
The Stepford Wives
was not well-received, but, thirty years on, it has acquired the status
of a cult sci-fi horror classic. The film has been criticised for
its slow, uneven pace, but despite this is makes a compelling thriller,
with an unmistakable air of menace and an undercurrent of dark
humour. The idea of a community of men setting out to create what
is, from their point of view, the perfect world in which women exist
merely to satisfy their needs, is both scary and hilarious. It is
also horrific when you realise that this is precisely what men have
been trying to do since the dawn of time. What
The Stepford Wives presents is male
chauvinism taken to its ultimate extreme.
An obvious variant on
Invasion of
the Body Snatchers, the film is based on a popular novel by Ira
Levin, who also penned such important works as
Rosemary's Baby and
The Boys from Brazil. Bryan
Forbes was a surprising choice to direct the film. He had
previously made just a handful of films, including the crime drama
Seance on a Wet Afternoon (1964)
and the oddity
Whistle Down the Wind
(1961). Forbes did not have an easy time making
The Stepford Wives. Right
from the outset, he ran into difficulties with his screenwriter William
Goldman, whose vision of the film differed markedly from his. One
of the biggest sources of contention was Forbes' decision to cast his
wife Nanette Newman as one of the titular wives. In the end, it
was Newman who provided the model for the look and behaviour of all of
the Stepford wives.
The film had three made-for-television sequels:
Revenge of the Stepford Wives
(1980),
The Stepford Children
(1987) and
The Stepford Husbands
(1996), and was remade unsuccessfully in 2004 with Nicole Kidman in the
lead role. It has also inspired numerous paraodies and the mild
green Nanette Newman reprised her role as the perfect housewife in a
series of TV commercials for a well-known brand of washing up
liquid, which are, in some respects, even more disturbing than this
film. It is quite possible that there are feminists who still
burn effigies of Nanette Newman, rather than their bras, on a regular
basis.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Bryan Forbes film:
Whistle Down the Wind (1961)
Film Synopsis
Walter and Joanna Eberhart are a typical middleclass American
couple. He is a successful lawyer, she is an aspiring
photographer. One day, Walter decides to uproot his family and
move out of busy New York City into the sleepy Connecticut suburb of
Stepford. Not long after arriving in the quiet picturesque little
town, Joanna notices how subservient most of the women are to their
husbands. They have no interest outside the family home and are
more than content to spend their hours cleaning, cooking and servicing
their husbands' conjugal needs. The only woman who appears
not to have made herself a domestic slave is Charmaine Wimperis,
another newcomer to Stepford. With her help, Joanna attempts to
found a women's group, but none of the other women in the town is
interested. Realising that something is wrong and afraid that she
too may metamorphose into a kitchen-bound housewife, Joanna tries to
persuade her husband that they should move. Walter assures her
that she is overreacting and suggests she should see a
psychiatrist. Joanna's anxieties turn to horror when her friend
Charmaine suddenly becomes like every other wife in Stepford...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.