| |
The Stepford Wives DVD Review:

TV
executive Joanna Eberhard (Kidman) suffers a nervous breakdown
after been fired by the network when one of her Reality TV shows
goes disastrously wrong. On medical advice her husband Walter
(Broderick) moves the family out of New York to the small Connecticut
town of Stepford. This idyllic, peaceful community is filled
with enormously successful men and their beautiful, perfect
wives. As the husbands retire to their Men’s Association,
Joanna and fellow Stepford newcomers Bobbie (Midler) and Roger
(Bart) join the women at the spa but suspicions soon arise as
each of the wives is just far too perfect to be true.
Would you
want the woman in your life to be at your beck and call, to
pander to your every need and make you feel amazing in the bedroom?
Well you need a Stepford Wife.
Based on
the best selling novel and a remake of the classic 1975 movie
by Bryan Forbes, this version forgoes the horror and fright
aspects of the original material on which it is based, choosing
a more comedic approach and for the most part it works quite
well. The Stepford Wives is a satire that pictures modern, career
driven women as heartless, self-serving beasts that need to
be sent back to the 50s. This of course, is the wishful thinking
of small, domineered men who want to regain control of their
households and have found an ingenious way of doing this in
Stepford. This is where the film differs from the original,
where the wives where replaced with robots, in this very modern
version, nano-chips control the behaviour of them turning them
into remote controlled servants. Well this is what you are led
to believe as during the scene where Walter finds out that the
wives have been replaced, the example is most definitely a robot.
Quite confusing.
Plot inconsistencies
aside, it is the very strong ensemble cast that makes this picture
very enjoyable. Nicole Kidman plays the only slightly straight
role of the piece and in Joanna Eberhard she portrays unlikeable
persona, at first anyway. She is a career-oriented woman who
has forsaken her role as a wife and mother for the pursuit of
power, fame and respect in an industry of backstabbers. This
is a character that you are not supposed to like, increasing
your understanding of why Walter would like her replaced. Matthew
Broderick plays the down-beaten Walter very well. When he moves
to Stepford he suddenly gains the respect and belonging he has
always pandered after. This is Broderick back to his best, playing
a likeable character that you can easily sympathise with.
Glen Close,
Bette Milder, Christopher Walken and Roger Bart support the
two leads excellently. Glen Close is at her most kooky as Claire
Wellington, the wives’ community leader. This is a woman
stuck in the 1950s and the epitome of the Stepford ideal. Christopher
Walken’s Mike Wellington is the instigator of that ideal
and the driving force behind the Stepford revolution. This is
another master class from the excellent character actor. Bette
Milder and Roger Bart provide many of the laughs as Bobbie and
Roger. Novelist Bobbie is the new, empowered woman who refuses
to conform to her husband’s ideals. She writes books about
her mother entitled “I Love You but Please Die”
and continually rips into Claire and her Stepford ways. Roger
is the PC element of the film as the more effeminate side of
a gay relationship. He provides all of the fashion and girly
quips that have become so stereotypical of a character like
this but they are funny.
Remakes
are never usually as good as the original and this is again
the case here. The darkness and tragedy have gone and been replaced
by laughs but the message is still the same. Do you want to
be married to someone who does everything you want and do you
want someone to love you for what you are, flaws and all? While
the ending does feel a little rushed after the big finale, there
is still a lot to enjoy here and enough to get you thinking
the question, what if you could trade in your partner for a
better model.
Star Rating
= * * *
PICTURE
& SOUND
Presented
in 1.85:1 Anamorphic Widescreen with a Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack,
this is a good transfer. The picture is crystal clear throughout,
bringing the bright colours of Stepford to life. The sound is
also good, with a strong emphasis on dialogue, as you’d
want with a comedy.
BONUS FEATURES
Commentary
by Director Frank Oz
This is
an insightful and informative track from Frank Oz, as the director
discusses most aspects of the movie’s production. He reveals
the many chances in the plot and scenes throughout the commentary,
telling you when scenes where cut, rewritten and changed. Casting,
locations, sets and the plot are also discussed as the director
talks extensively about the filmmaking process he goes through
with his movies. This is a good commentary from a director who
clearly knows what he is doing.
A Perfect
World: The Making of the Stepford Wives (19.47 mins)
Director
Frank OZ, screenwriter Paul Rudnick, director of photography
Rob Hahn, production designer Jackson DeGovia and stars Matthew
Broderick, Glen Close, Christopher Walken, Bette Midler, Jon
Lovitz, Roger Bart and Faith Hill talk about bringing Stepford
into the 21st Century. The featurette takes you through the
designing, building, costume designing processes utilised on
the production and locations used to bring Stepford to the sliver
screen. We also go behind the scenes of Garden, Ballroom, Men
Association, Book Club and Midsummer Night Ball sets.
Stepford:
A Definition (3.53 mins)
Director
Frank OZ, screenwriter Paul Rudnick and stars Nicole Kidman,
Glen Close, Christopher Walken, Bette Midler, Jon Lovitz, Roger
Bart and Faith Hill talk about the impact of the Stepford Wives
on society and how it became a notion to describe what men wanted
in a woman.
Stepford:
The Architects (6.01 mins)
Director
Frank OZ, screenwriter Paul Rudnick and stars Nicole Kidman,
Glen Close and David Marshall Grant talk about bringing the
story into the 21st Century. Rudnick reveals why he decided
to inject comedy into the piece and how he tried to make it
relevant for today’s audience.
The Stepford
Wives (10.07 mins)
Director
Frank OZ, screenwriter Paul Rudnick and stars Nicole Kidman,
Glen Close, David Marshall Grant, Roger Bart, Bette Midler and
Faith Hill talk about the Wives of Stepford, Joanna, Bobbie,
Claire, Sarah and Roger.
The Stepford
Husbands (8.05 mins)
Stars Nicole
Kidman, Matthew Broderick, Glen Close, David Marshall Grant,
Roger Bart, Bette Midler, Jon Lovitz, Matt Molloy and Christopher
Walken discuss the men of Stepford, Walter, Dave, Mike, Herb
and Jerry.
Stepford:
Deleted and Extended Scenes (9.55 mins)
Entitled
“Square Dance”, “Husbands on the Driveway”,
“Bobbie’s Kitchen”, “Lab Sequence”,
“Herb on Pole” and “Claire’s Electrocution”,
these six deleted or extended scenes are quite interesting.
They show the original intension that the women where in fact
completely robots but without a commentary track we don’t
know why they changed the plot dynamic.
Stepford:
Gap Reel (4.31 mins)
A montage
of outtakes and gaffs by the cast, with a strong emphasis on
Matthew Broderick, Jon Lovitz and Glen Close
Trailers
(3.40 mins)
Your chance
to watch the teaser and theatrical trailers for The Stepford
Wives
OVERALL
DreamWorks
have done a very good job bringing The Stepford Wives to DVD.
The featurettes are good, covering most aspects of the films
production and the commentary track by director Frank OZ is
very informative. Fans of the movie will be very pleased with
the disc, as it is a fine example of how a single DVD package
should be approached. For everyone else this is well worth a
rent.
DVD Star
Rating = * * *
Jamie Kelwick

Site
Contents Copyright© The Z Review, unless used with permission.This
site has no intention to infringe on the rights of the film
owners of The Stepford Wives and intellectual copyright holders of the movies
mentioned herein & hold copyright over the movie, characters,
merchandise & storyline. |
|
The Stepford Wives Info: |
|
The
Stepford Wives Director:
Frank
Oz
The Stepford Wives
Written By:
Paul Rudnick
The Stepford
Wives Cast:
Nicole
Kidman, Matthew Broderick, Bette Milder, Glen Close,
Christopher Walken, Jon Lovitz, Roger Bart and Faith
Hill
Reviewed
by:
Jamie
Kelwick
Buy
The Stepford Wives on DVD U.S.
Buy The Stepford Wives on DVD U.K.

Buy
an The Stepford Wives Movie Poster!
Search
our database of DVD reviews:
A,B,C,D,E,F,G,
H,I,J,K,L,M,N,
O,P,Q,R,S,T,U,
V,W,X,Y,Z
We
want your DVD reviews, email them
here!
|
|