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The Stepford Wives (1975)
In director Bryan Forbes' great and shocking cautionary
feminist sci-fi/horror and part-mystery cult tale - it was an adaptation
of Ira Levin's satirical 1972 novel of the same name from a screenplay
by William Goldman. The creepy, satirical black comedy and cult classic,
was filmed in southwestern Connecticut (in the towns of Norwalk and
Darien, near Stamford), provided a savagely-chilling view of perfect,
'ideal' Betty Crocker-like suburban wives (docile android/robotic
replicas that were made to be loving, obedient, and subservient (they
wore flowery dresses and hats, cleaned house obsessively, were always
available for sex, and cooked gourmet meals).
The robotic clones were created by anti-women's
lib husbands in the upscale town of Stepford, Connecticut (fictitious),
who eliminated their free-spirited wives (literally) and replaced
them with exact replicas - in the mold of an old fashioned male supremacist
ideal (submissive, compliant and automaton housewives who were sex
objects and domestic slaves with only one goal - to please their
middle-aged, corporate husbands).
On one of the film's posters, a long synopsis
of the unsettling film was presented - as its tagline:
Something strange is happening in the town of Stepford.
Where the men spend their nights doing something secret. And every
woman acts like every man's dream of the "perfect" wife.
Where a young woman watches the dream become a nightmare. And sees
the nightmare engulf her best friend. And realizes that any moment,
any second - her turn is coming.
The entertaining and thought-provoking film had many
similarities to the earlier sci-fi horror classic Invasion
of the Body Snatchers (1956), with its cloned individuals
substituted for Stepford's docile and zombie-like females. Although
the film wasn't entirely warmly greeted in the mid-1970s by some
critics and feminists, it earned $4 million (domestic) at the box-office,
and since has become an admired cult film. The derogatory catchphrase "Stepford
Wife" has become a common expression. Director Jordan Peele acknowledged that
his social horror-thriller Get Out (2017) was directly influenced by this film. During
casting, the prototypes for the two main female cast members were
modeled after the characters played by Mary Tyler Moore (Mary Richards)
and Valerie Harper (Rhoda Morgenstern) in TV's very popular The
Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970-1977).
The mid-70s film was followed by three
derivative TV movies (Revenge of the Stepford Wives (1980),
The Stepford Children (1987), and The
Stepford Husbands (1996)). The feminist satire was remade as a
dark comedy almost 30 years after the original by director Frank Oz
(The Stepford Wives (2004)), with Nicole Kidman as the Katharine
Ross character, portraying a TV executive who was being threatened
to become an automaton housewife. The film's tagline was: "THE
WIVES OF STEPFORD HAVE A SECRET".
- in the film's opening sequence and under the
title credits, aspiring photographer and housewife Joanna Eberhart
(Katharine Ross) was in the midst of a move from a now-vacated
NYC apartment; her balding husband Walter (Peter Masterson) drove off in their packed-up,
wood-paneled Ford station wagon with her and their two children
Kim (Mary Stuart Masterson) and Amy (Ronny Sullivan), and their
terrier dog Fred; the typical American family was moving to the
suburbs in Stepford, CT, where they would feel safer and not have
to lock the doors at night
Joanna Eberhart (Katharine Ross)
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Joanna's Balding Husband Walter (Peter Masterson)
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Six Year-Old Daughter Kim (Mary Stuart Masterson)
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Young Amy Eberhart (Ronny Sullivan)
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- they soon arrived in the idyllic, forested, picturesque
small village of Stepford in the neighboring state of Connecticut,
and entered the driveway leading to a two-story white colonial
house; on move-in day as workers carried in their furniture, a pretty,
across-the-street housewife neighbor Carol Van Sant (Nanette Newman,
real-life wife of the film's director) (wearing an apron) brought
over a casserole; soon after, Walter thanked Carol's husband Ted
(Josef Somer): "She cooks as good as she looks, Ted"
- as the two Eberhart children boarded their school
bus, they were greeted with cold, blank stares from their schoolmates;
there was an oppressive feeling that Joanna was lonely and uncomfortable
in her new surroundings, and missed the noise and hustle-bustle
of NYC; during an interview with the Welcome Wagon Lady (Paula
Trueman) - a writer at The Weekly Chronicle who was gathering
material about Joanna for the "Newcomer's Column," Joanna
explained how her husband was a lawyer, and that she was a "hopeful,
would-be, semi-professional photographer"
- later in the evening, Joanna reported to Walter
that in the mid-morning, she had witnessed how neighbor Carol Van
Sant acted sexually-submissive to her husband Ted - letting him
put his hands on her boobs in public view in her front yard; Walter
described how he had met "other
Stepford commuters" who had all joined the cliquish but eminent
Stepford Mens' Association ("Practically every important guy
in town's a member, commuters and townies. l mean, everybody, the
TV executives, the shrinks, the scientists, the police chief, the
fire chief, the head of the hospital, the guy who runs the phone
company"); Walter admitted it would be an honor to join, as a way to network
with others, and that he had been invited with "a good chance
of getting in"; however, he stated how he objected to their exclusionary
rule (that he claimed was changing in 6 months): "It's
strictly men only"
- when Walter asked if she was in favor, the upset
Joanna protested that he hadn't told her the truth that he had
already joined the antiquated club; she also reminded him that
he often pretended to consult with her, but actually never asked
for her opinion and advice on anything, and always suited himself;
he had decided to move, buy a house, and set up mortgage down-payments,
so then why did he always play-act that they would be deciding
things together: "Why bother to ask me at all?"
- outside in the parking lot of the local Grand Union
supermarket where the Eberharts were purchasing groceries, there
was a minor fender bender between two station wagons driven by
Carol Van Sant and Mrs. Kit Sunderson
(Carole Mallory); Carol appeared stunned and disoriented and was
holding her head; she strangely kept insisting and repeating that
she was fine: ("Oh, this is all so silly. It's-it's just my
head"); an efficient and prompt Oxford Police ambulance drove her away,
although Joanna remarked to Walter that the ambulance had headed
in the wrong direction away from the Stepford Hospital
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Guilt-Ridden and Regretful Walter After Joining the
Mens' Association, and Admitting It Might Have Been Wrong to Move
to Stepford
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- two disturbing incidents occurred the same evening:
(1) upset daughter Kim acted out her unhappiness in the new house
through her pet teddy bear, and (2) in the middle of the night,
Joanna found a brooding Walter drinking in the living room by himself
after having been inducted into the Men's Association as a member;
with tears in his eyes, he vowed that he really loved Joanna
and admitted moving to Stepford was a terrible mistake: ("I
screwed this whole thing up. You didn't wanna move here");
he complained that he felt like he was getting old
- then one day, Bobby Markowe
(Paula Prentiss) effusively introduced herself to Joanna, after having
read about her recent write-up in the Weekly Chronicle:
("Avid shutterbug, ex-Gothamite who misses the noise of the naked
city?"); she was also a big-city transplant and newcomer to the small town
and a self-described "ex-Gothamite, who's been living here in
Ajax country for just over a month now,
and l'm going crazy"; she was also exasperated with the sanitized,
seemingly-perfect but meaningless lives of the bland young women
in Stepford who were obsessed with housework: ("l don't wanna
squeeze the god-damn Charmin")
- in Joanna's kitchen, Bobby told how she had moved
to Stepford under similar circumstances - it was her husband's
choice: "Dave brought us here because of land values. He's best
in bed when the market's up"; the irrepressible Bobby realized
an instant friendship with Joanna: "I'm gonna like you...A messy
kitchen. lt's beautiful. A home away from home"; they shared a
drink of Walter's Scotch as they munched on Bobby's Ring-Dings
(chocolate frosted, round and small devil's food cakes)
- both spoke suspiciously about the lifestyles of
their subservient neighbor housewives, who apparently only cleaned
house, were non-argumentative and always smiling, and bowing to their
husband's needs: ("l can't figure out this burg. lt's like maids
have been declared illegal, and the housewife with the neatest place
gets Robert Redford for Christmas"); they also wondered about
their husband's regular attendance at the "creepy" Men's
Association, and if the men "watch dirty movies and reminisce about the good old days...like
those good old days when Playboy used the airbrush"
- Walter phoned Joanna during the evening,
asking for permission to have the Association's New Projects Committee
meet in their home for a planning meeting - in 20 minutes; Walter
was being pressured and coerced by the Association's President
Dale "Diz" Coba (Patrick O'Neal), and was phoning from
Dale's office; Dale asked if Walter was "altogether sure" about
Stepford - he hesitantly agreed that he was adjusting to "Stepford"
(described by Dale as "a big change...for the better")
- Walter and Dale arrived with four other men, and
briefly showed them around the house:
as Joanna prepared Lipton Tea for the group in her kitchen, she
found herself being observed by Dale, who creepily noted: "l
like to watch women doing little domestic chores"; she responded
back: "You came to the right town"; she didn't believe his
nickname "Dis" referred to his previous work at Disneyland: ("You don't look
like someone who enjoys making other people happy")
Dale "Diz" Coba (Patrick O'Neal) - a Former
Disney Executive
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Walter Eberhart (Peter Masterson) - A Lawyer
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Ted Van Sant (Josef Somer)
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Claude Axhelm (George Coe)- A Stutterer
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Ed Wimpiris (Franklin Cover) - A Businessman
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Ike Mazzard (William Prince) - A Renowned Sketch
Artist
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- the men (besides Walter and Dale) included stuttering
Claude Axhelm (George Coe), neighbor Ted Van Sant, Ed Wimpiris (Franklin
Cover), and stealthy sketch artist Ike Mazzard (William Prince), who
sat in the living room and engaged in a boring discussion about
ideas for the next community project; meanwhile, Ike drew a full
face-portrait of Joanna and other numerous sketches of her individual
features (eyes, mouth and nose); to Joanna's surprise, he
presented her with her autographed portrait
- later that night, the opinionated Joanna expressed
how she thought the men were complete intellectual bores: ("You
wouldn't have given those bores the time of day back in Manhattan...
they're worse than your senior partners. New Projects committee.
They ought to start by working on themselves....They were dummies");
Walter disagreed with her assessment: ("This is Stepford. lt's
not New York. These are the people we have to live with and, and they suit me")
- at bachelor Dis' outdoor garden-pool
party and afternoon picnic-BBQ, Joanna and Bobby attended, but
felt under-dressed: (Bobby: "What do you say we go home and change?
Like put on a fancy dress?" Joanna: "Absolutely not!"); Joanna
felt uncomfortable about how everything was just too perfect: "l
mean, I like it. lt's perfect. How could you not like it? l just don't like it"
- Joanna overheard the slightly-drunk Carol Van Sant express inordinate enthusiasm: "I'll
just die if I don't get this recipe!", and then as Carol
wandered about and spoke to other guests, she repeated herself
again and again, alerting Dale to her malfunctioning; her husband
Ted escorted her away; the next morning, Carol awkwardly apologized
to Bobby and Joanna for her behavior, excusing it
due to a recurring drinking problem; they were puzzled about her
mentioning that several Association members had pressured her to make the apology
- a moderate feminist Joanna (who had
"messed a little bit with women's lib in New York") proposed that
the two of them organize and form their own Women's Lib consciousness-raising
session to compete with the mens' "sexually archaic" club, although
she qualified her intentions: ("l'm not contemplating any Maidenform
bonfires, but they could certainly use something around here")
Initial Failed Efforts to Recruit Females to a Women's Lib Group
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Marie Axhelm: Too Busy - Vigorously Ironing
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Kit Sunderson: "I just love my brownies"
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Mary Ann Stavros: "I just can't waste my spare moments..."
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- however, when the two proposed the idea to one of
the Stepford females, it was met with disinterest; Marie Axhelm
(Toni Reid), while vigorously ironing in her home, declined claiming
she had no time; Kit Sunderson claimed that she
was too busy baking: ("I just love my brownies"); at the Daybreak
Nurseries, Mary Ann Stavros (Barbara Rucker) claimed: "I just can't
waste my spare moments on something like that"
- at the Cornell house after barging into
the front door, the two with amusement listened to unmistakable
upstairs noises of love-making - Patricia Cornell (Judith Baldwin)
was ecstatically praising her aging husband Frank's (Michael Higgins)
excellent sexual skills: "Oh, yes. Nobody's ever touched me the
way you touch me. Oh, there. Oh, you're the best, Frank. Oh, God,
are you the best....You're the king, Frank. Oh, you're the champion,
Frank. Oh, you're the master!"
- after a set of tennis with Ed's trophy
wife Charmaine Wimpiris (Tina Louise) who had just moved into town
a few months earlier, Joanna and Bobby visited with Charmaine
as they were served by a maid named Nettie (Dee Wallace); supportive
of them, Charmaine was recruited into their consciousness-raising
group, and shared how she wasn't at all upset by Ed's membership
in the Association: "l know that it's unfair and sexist, but, frankly,
anything that gets him out of the house nights is fine with me"
- in her home, Joanna was approached by stutterer
Claude Axhelm to strangely assist in a project ("a lifelong hobby")
to orally record her pronunciation of hundreds of words, but Joanna
politely declined: "That's very interesting, Claude, but it's too
much work. We Stepford wives are busy, busy, busy"; using a coersive
'blackmail' approach, she suggested having him encourage the 'busy'
wives of Stepford to attend her group: ("lf they could find the
time for me, I could find it for you"); her ploy seemingly worked
- during Joanna's and Bobby's first consciousness-raising
session/discussion, attended by five other women, including Carol,
Charmaine, Kit, Marie and Mary Ann, the wives sat blank-faced when
Joanna suggested topics such as "sex, money, our marriages,
anything at all"; Joanna began the sharing by mentioning how
Walter cared more about the law than her; Charmaine confessed a
lack of love from her husband Ed: "He never loved me";
and then Kit complained she couldn't bake because of other cleaning
chores: ("Took me so long to get the upstairs floor to shine, l didn't have any time
to bake"); to Bobby's dismay, the conversation disintegrated
into over-exaggerated joy by Marie Axhelm over the virtues of Easy-On laundry starch
- while Joanna took their dog Fred for an
evening walk, Walter phoned the Association members to come over,
and a group of men thoroughly examined and inspected the Eberhart's
primary bedroom and closet; during Joanna's walk, she had her first
glimpse of Stepford's landmark, restored castle-like mansion surrounded
by vast lawns - the headquarters of the Mens' Association, where
she was warned by a young security guard-policeman (John Aprea):
"Really, Mrs. Eberhart, this isn't the best place for you to wander
around"; as she walked away, she didn't notice that a very distressed
Ed Wimpiris was being driven off by Ike Mazzard
- in the town's pharmacy, Bobby noticed the pharmacist
Frank Cornell and his pretty blonde wife Patricia behind the counter,
and reminded Joanna that they had listened to their loud sexual encounter
- afterwards on the sidewalk, they bumped into the
Welcome Wagon lady, who spoke about a black family moving in, and
unexpectedly bragged: "We are the most liberal town around"; she
recalled in the past that meetings of a Stepford Women's Club with
50 members were regularly held in town; off-screen, Joanna confirmed,
in the town's library, that the President of the club was Carol
Van Sant; later, when Carol was confronted, she no longer expressed
any interest in "liberal" causes: "We disbanded, oh, years ago.
We weren't accomplishing anything useful," and now her main all-consuming
concerns were her husband Ted, her children, and her housework:
"l like to see my home looking nice"; she confidently stated: "I'm
happy!"; afterwards, Bobby and Joanna asked themselves whether
they were "the crazy ones"; Joanna tried to reassure
Bobby: "We're fine"
- Joanna impulsively and briefly visited NYC and presented
a portfolio of her photos to the Atkinson Gallery, but her work
was rejected; during her absence, the family dog Fred was taken
away in a cage in the back of a truck; upon her return from the
city, Joanna and Bobby drove around the neighborhood looking for
Fred and saw a bulldozer leveling Charmaine's tennis court, with
Ed supervising; the two were distressed, while talking to Charmaine,
that she had been transformed into a devoted and 'perfect'
housewife - now conservative and boring with a long flowery dress;
she said that after a long romantic weekend with Ed, she had fired
her maid, and now, her main goal was to please her husband,
who hated tennis and wanted to replace the court with a heated
swimming pool: "I want to please him now, and, boy, am I ever going
to...All I ever thought about before was just me. Well, l'm here
to tell you that's all over now. Ed's always hankered after a heated
swimming pool. And now he's going to get it"
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Bobby's Suspicions Told to Joanna That the Stepford Water Was Contaminated
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- Bobby conducted research and reported on a 1971 Time
Magazine article about contaminated water (infused with a chemical tranquilizer)
in El Paso, TX; she theorized that the same environmental problem
was causing behavioral changes in many of the Stepford
women, due to the dumping of toxic waste from nearby industrial
labs into the river: ("There's something in the water that turns
us into hausfraus, drones"); Joanna contacted NYC biochemist
friend Raymond Chandler (Robert Fields) with a water sample;
Joanna (when known as the single Joanna Ingles) admitted that
she was "in love" and had "lost her virginity" to him 12 years
earlier when they were both seniors at NYU
- in Chandler's NYC office,
unexpectedly, the results of the water test turned up negative:
("There's nothing here") - and Bobby's crack-pot theory was
disproven; during their short reunion, Raymond secretly passed
a note to Joanna: ("I'm not happy either"), contradicting his
earlier statement to her that his 9-year marriage was also very
happy; privately, Raymond regretfully told Joanna: "We blew it, didn't we?"
- as they drove back to Stepford, Bobby vowed to
never become a Stepford wife and decided to force her husband Dave
to move out immediately: ("'m not going to end up like one of those
pan-scrubbers. l'm getting the hell out of Stepford. I'll ask Dave
tonight, and we'll move"); she also encouraged Joanna to move out
too: "You can't break up a team like us. We're the best thing to
happen since Laurel and Hardy"
- in the next scene, Joanna completed the lengthy
vocabulary audio recordings ("Zoom. Zoot suit. Zulu"), and then
tentatively asked Walter if he would consider moving away from
Stepford, because the women (and men) were so dull; although he
questioned her, she was astonished that he was very open to the
suggestion: "Maybe Norwood or Eastbridge. OK, let's move," and
proposed moving in August before the new school year; Joanna as
overjoyed and showered him with kisses
- shortly later, Joanna and Bobby went house-hunting
in nearby Eastbridge with gossipy realtor Mrs. Kirgassa (Martha
Greenhouse); Bobby asked if Joanna could watch her children and
their shaggy dog while she and her husband Dave (Simon Deckard)
were in NYC at the Plaza Hotel for their annual romantic getaway
weekend; during the chaotic and noisy weekend with the Eberhart
house full of children, the hopeful and buoyant Joanna resurrected
her camera and took many photos of their enthusiastic playfulness
during the weekend, although Walter was becoming exasperated; at
the Atkinson Gallery in the city on Monday morning, Joanna's photos
were praised by gallery owner Mr. Atkinson (Remak Ramsay) as "lovely"
- and she felt enlivened and recognized as a talent: "I guess I
want to be remembered"
- upon her return to Stepford, she rushed into Bobby's
home and kitchen to share her joy over the positive reaction to
her photos; a major shock came when Joanna was alarmed and disturbed
to learn that Bobby was wearing a frilly formal dress with
makeup: ("Why are you wearing all that makeup? You never even used
to clean your kitchen, much less wear makeup"); amazingly, Bobby
had been transformed overnight like Charmaine had, and vowed to
never be a slob again so that she could please her husband: "l
just want to look like a woman and keep my house looking decent
too"; Bobby had also changed her mind about leaving Stepford,
with its "good schools, low taxes, clean air"
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Joanna's Upset That Her Liberal-Minded Friend Bobby
Had Entirely Changed Over a Weekend Into a Subservient, Clean-Freak
Housewife
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- feeling panicked and upset, Joanna raced home, and
drove recklessly (she passed a school bus unloading children, knocked
down the Van Sant's mailbox, and dented the station wagon); after
telling Walter that Bobby's "kitchen was sparkling," he thought
Joanna was over-emphasizing things and "going crazy"; Joanna pointed
out the major issue: "She's changed!...Bobby really has changed.
Believe me. Everything in her house looked like a TV commercial";
Walter tried to convince Joanna that Bobby's changes and reforms
might be for the better, and complained about Joanna's own lack
of attention to their house-keeping: "She had to clean it sooner
or later. lt looked like a god-damn pigsty. l mean, when are things
gonna start sparkling around here? That's what l'd like to know.
l mean, just look at the way my kids are dressed. Ragamuffins.
Jeez, I work 80 hours a week. l live in a great house, and my kids
look like they belong on welfare. Look, if you paid a little more
attention to your family and a little less to your god-damn picture-taking...";
Joanna responded by insisting on moving immediately ("l'm getting
us a house now")
- believing that Joanna was irrational, Walter demanded
one condition before a move to another house in
a few weeks - that Joanna seek help from a psychiatrist; he considered
her urgent and disruptive need to move once more as an "unreasonable"
request that was due to her unusual "fixation" and issue
with house cleanliness; Joanna mentioned how she was suspicious
of the "top notch guys" that Walter might recommend in town
- after seeking her own female psychiatrist Dr. Fancher
(Carol Rossen), Joanna explained how she wanted to move
out of the stifling town of Stepford with its conformist, deadened
housewives after living there for only a few months: ("The women
in Stepford just seem to be on a different wavelength"); the therapist
agreed: "Stepford, I know, has a reputation for being unsocial...Perhaps
Stepford is heaven for the house-and-garden type"
Joanna's Psychiatrist Dr. Fancher (Carol Rossen)
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Joanna's Biggest Fear - Loss of Her Individuality and Identity - "Like one
of those robots in Disneyland"
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- and then, Joanna nervously brought up her male conspiracy theory: "l think
the men are behind it...All of them in the Association. My husband,
everyone"; she knowingly stated how her seemingly-absurd
belief might be crazy: ("lf l'm wrong, l'm insane"), but that the
men in Stepford were somehow transforming the psyches of their
wives to become model homemakers: ("They draw our pictures, and
they tape our voices. And the women all look neat and pretty");
it was four months before her good friends Charmaine and Bobby
had been "changed" and Joanna now feared her time was up - and
that she was next ("l just know something is wrong, and my time is coming")
- Joanna clearly explained her biggest fear - loss
of her individual identity: "There will be somebody with my name,
and she'll cook and clean like crazy, but she won't take pictures,
and she won't be me. She'll, she'll, she'll be like one of
those robots in Disneyland"; the therapist urged the very frightened
Joanna to find safety and security somewhere away from town with
her children, without telling her husband
- back in her dark Stepford home during a brewing
storm, Joanna again found Walter drinking alone, after sending
his two daughters to a friend's house for the weekend; he remained
evasive to Joanna about their missing whereabouts ("They're fine");
during a physical altercation on the stairs after Walter ordered
Joanna to go upstairs to relax and lie down on their bed, she refused
("I want my children!") and locked herself in their room; she snuck
out as she overheard Walter suspiciously phoning Dale about how Joanna was "upset"
- drenched in the rain, Joanna proceeded
to Bobby's house hoping to find her children, but they weren't
there; her robotic-acting friend cheerfully offered to serve her
a "fresh-perked" cup of coffee; exasperated, Joanna shouted out
in a rage: "Bobby, stop it, look at me! Say I'm right. You are different. Your figure's
different, your face, what you talk about. All of this is different." Joanna
tested her friend: "What does archaic mean?" but
Bobby circumvented the question and then claimed that she had forgotten
that she knew its meaning; Joanna recalled that the word "archaic"
wasn't on her vocabulary word list that she had recorded
- to test her humanity with a desperate act,
Joanna grabbed a sharp bread knife and deliberately
cut her own finger: ("Look, I bleed...when I cut myself, I bleed");
then, after Bobby had no discernable reaction to Joanna's wound,
Joanna stabbed Bobby in her lower abdominal/genital area, while
asking: "Do you bleed?"
Joanna Tested Her Robotic Friend Bobby by Stabbing Her in the Abdomen
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After Pulling Out the Knife - Bobby Repeated Each
Phrase Three Times: "How could you do a thing like that? When I was just going to give you
coffee. I thought we were friends!"
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- Bobby calmly and cleanly pulled out the knife and
asked three times: "How could you do a thing like that?" as
she cleaned the bloodless blade; the stabbing also caused her android
friend to go berserk, drop coffee cups, saucers and coffee grounds
onto the floor, and repetitively ask the same questions due to
malfunctioning, severed robotic wiring. ("I was just going
to give you coffee. I thought we were friends!");
the newly-made android Bobby twirled and acted monotonously and with
repeated phrases, as Joanna ran from the frightening scene
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The Shocking Discovery That Bobby Markowe Was an
Android, Twirling And Acting Monotonously With Repeated Phrases
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- back in her own home, Joanna snuck up and
struck Walter in the forehead with a fireplace poker to force him
to reveal the location of the children; before his vision blurred
and he lost consciousness, he directed her to the town's Mens'
Association mansion; she found the front-door unlocked, and was
able to wander up the stairs and through the mansion's hallways
and corridors armed with the poker; she followed the voices of
her children, and discovered that the sounds
were coming from a reel-to-reel tape recorder in an empty room
- in the same room, she also came face-to-face
with cold-hearted mastermind Dale, who informed her that her children
were actually with Charmaine; he prevented her escape by electronically
locking all of the doors, and then told her she wouldn't need to use
the poker she was carrying
- when Joanna asked him "Why?" - to explain the
motive for the men to transform the town's wives, Dale revealed the horrifying truth:
"Why? Because we can. We found a way of
doing it, and it's just perfect. It's perfect for us and perfect
for you. You're a very good subject, perhaps the best we've
had. You were brighter than most...See, think of it the other
way around. Wouldn't you like some perfect stud waiting on
you around the house? Praising you? Servicing you? Whispering
how your sagging flesh was beautiful, no matter how you looked?...Well,
that's all there is. So why don't we get it over. You know,
you hurried us a little. We weren't quite ready for you, if
you want to know the truth."
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Joanna Was Told The Horrifying Truth About the Town's
Transformed Wives
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- Joanna was disgusted by his rationale when he asked
if she would like have a "perfect stud" at her service;
after Dale removed the poker from her hand, she screamed and fled
down the hallways and into various rooms in the large mansion, as
he slowly followed after her; she came upon a mock-up of her own
bedroom with pet dog Fred growling at her; during a very
slow pan to the right, Joanna exclaimed: "Oh, no! Oh, God!", as
she saw her own, semi-completed, robot-duplicate, peacefully combing
her hair in front of a tri-part mirror on a dresser
A Mock-Up of Joanna's Bedroom in the Mansion
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Joanna: "Oh, no! Oh, God!"
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A Pan to the Right Revealed A Joanna-Android Combing
Her Hair Before Mirror
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- when the semi-finished android-replica turned toward
her, Joanna was shocked into paralysis when she witnessed her own
smiling robotic double with sunken, soul-less, black and empty
eye sockets; the small-breasted Joanna noticed the large breast
implants on the android; the Joanna-duplicate wrapped a long nylon
stocking around her hands as she approached to strangle the real-life
Joanna to death by garrotting - as Dale watched from the doorway
while calmly petting Fred; the movie frame abruptly went black,
and the audio was cut; it was inferred that the other real Stepford
women were also murdered before being replaced
- the film ended days later with all of the flowery-dress-wearing
android wives (with large-brimmed sun-hats) pushing their shopping
carts in the local supermarket while listening to Muzak; the vacuous-minded
females, including roboticized clones of both Bobby and Joanna,
greeted each other with only a simple hi or hello
- the film's primary image serving as the background
for the end credits was a blurry close-up of Joanna's completed
eyes; after shopping, Joanna joined her smiling, self-satisfied
husband Walter who drove her and her daughters home in their station
wagon, provided in still images
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Young Housewife Joanna Eberhart (Katharine Ross) Leaving
NYC - An Aspiring Photographer
The Eberhart Family Arriving in the Village of Stepford, Connecticut
Pretty, Frilly Apron-Wearing Neighbor Housewife Carol Van Sant (Nanette
Newman) With a Casserole For the Newcomers
Blank-Staring Children on a Stepford, CT School Bus
Crash-Accident in Parking Lot of Supermarket - A Collision Between Kit
Sunderson's and Carol Van Sant's Station Wagons - Injuring Carol's
Head
Pretty Stepford Wives Who Witnessed the Accident
A New Friend for Joanna - The Irrepressible Bobby Markowe (Paula Prentiss)
Walter Phoning From Dale's Office - Asking Joanna to Bring the Projects
Committee Home For
a Planning Meeting
The Creepy Mens' Association President Dale "Diz" Coba (Patrick
O'Neal)
Arrogant and Cold Dale Silently Observing Joanna in the Kitchen: "l
like to watch women doing little domestic chores"
Joanna to Dale: "You came to the right town"
Joanna Serving the Male Guests During the New Projects Committee Meeting
in Their Home
During the Planning Meeting Discussion, Sketches Were Drawn of Joanna
by Ike Mazzard
Joanna and Bobby Invited to An Outdoor Garden-Pool Party With Other
Stepfordites
Drunken Carol Van Sant Repeating: "I'll just die if I don't get
this recipe!"
Ed's Trophy Wife Charmaine Wimpiris (Tina Louise)
Joanna's Failed Consciousness-Raising Discussion Group
Marie Axhelm
(Toni Reid) Endorsing Easy On Laundry Starch
Stepford's Mens' Association Headquarters - A Restored Castle-Like
Mansion
In the Pharmacy, the Cornell "Twosome" (Who Had Been Overheard
Having Sex)
Bobby to Joanna: "You know, maybe we're the crazy ones"
Family Dog Fred Kidnapped During Joanna's Absence
Ed Wimpiris Supervising the Destruction of The Tennis Court to be Replaced
With Pool
The Newly-Transformed Charmaine Wearing a Long Formal, Flowery Dress
Joanna's Past "Love" - NYC Biochemist Raymond Chandler (Robert
Fields)
Bobby to Joanna: "I'm getting the hell out of Stepford!"
Joanna and Walter - Happy About the Prospect of Moving Away
Weekend Photography for Joanna
Walter's Criticisms of Joanna's Own Lack of Housekeeping Skills
Joanna's Concern to Walter: "Bobby really has changed. Believe me"
Joanna to Bobby: "Your figure's
different, your face, what you talk about..."
Joanna's Question to Test That Bobby Wasn't Herself: "What
does archaic mean?"
Joanna to Bobby: "Do you bleed?"
Joanna With a Fireplace Poker - To Knock Out Walter
Joanna's Visit to the Association's Mansion
An Upstairs Reel-to-Reel Tape Recorder With Her Children's
Voices
Joanna Face-to-Face with Mastermind Dale "Diz" Coba
The Shocking Reveal of Joanna's Own Robotic Double With Fake Breasts
- Approaching to Strangle the Real Joanna
Robotic Duplicates: Bobby and Joanna in Supermarket
Background Image for End Credits: Close-Up of Robotic Joanna's Completed
Eyes
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