Oscar History
Film Bitch History
Welcome

The Film Experience™ was created by Nathaniel R. All material herein is written by our team. (This site is not for profit but for an expression of love for cinema & adjacent artforms.)

Follow TFE on Substackd

Powered by Squarespace
Keep TFE Strong

We're looking for 500... no 390 SubscribersIf you read us daily, please be one.  

I ♥ The Film Experience

THANKS IN ADVANCE

What'cha Looking For?
Subscribe
« Tribeca Review: Medical Malaise in “A Mistake” | Main | Tribeca Review: Lost at Sea in “Beacon” »
Thursday
Jun132024

Nicole Kidman Tribute: The Stepford Wives (2004)

by Christopher James

You never forget your first. My first Kidman - The Stepford Wives.

Is the movie good? I will always have a soft spot for it, but it does not fully work. There are glimpses of a great movie, thanks in large part to genuine laugh-out-loud joke lines in Paul Rudnick’s script. Not many people would recommend this as a first Kidman viewing, but it perfectly illustrates one of the qualities that I think makes her one of our greatest actresses - fearless commitment to one’s character. I take that back. The introduction of Joanna Eberhart is a perfect introduction to Nicole Kidman...

Nicole’s Joanna takes the stage at the network upfronts with a fierce determination, a fire lit under her as a woman in charge. She's got a tight suit on that means business and a short, sharp bob that could cut an unsuspecting victim. It’s fitting that the happiest we see our heroine is in the film’s opening moments, unveiling the fruits of her labor - a reality show where couples are invited to cheat on one another. Nicole is perfect at selling certainty, and Joanna is certain this latest slate will be full of hits. 

Within moments, she’s accosted by one of the stars of the show, Hank (Mike White!!), whose wife (lol) leaves him for another man (also, the wife is Carrie Preston!!). The movie wants to play Joanna’s callousness at Hank as a sign of her inhumanity, something to be fixed. In retrospect, what makes Kidman’s lack of empathy haunting is its plausibility, how we can be wrapped up in our own work to such a degree that we are disconnected with its impact. Hank shoots her, sending Joanna to the hospital. In a concurrent, and more devastating (to Joanna) blow, Joanna also loses her job, prompting her husband Walter (Matthew Broderick) to move the family to the Stepford suburbs.

This fabulously dark setup should continue once we reach our whitewashed setting of critique. There’s a lot of great fun to be had as Joanna befriends two other Stepford members who don’t fit the mold - the loudmouth writer, Bobbi (Bette Midler), and the swishy New York gay, Roger (Roger Bart). The three have a fun, if slightly stilted, banter - like three stray plus ones at a wedding who delight in mocking the hosts. These characters’ bonds make the film a great time. If only the movie’s target - white suburbia - was skewered with the same sharp precision as Joanna’s work as a reality TV producer from the film’s opening. The Stepford Wives are just as robotic and perfect as the 1975 models, but there’s a missed opportunity to speak to what wifely perfection looked like in 2005, rather than reheating the same jokes from before.

Who wouldn't want to be a part of this (obviously queer-coded) group of oddballs?While great fun, the movie’s second cardinal sin is not making the horror-mystery as smart, horrific or fun as the original. We spend so much time ahead of our central trio that it can feel tiresome. A movie can’t be held up by punchlines alone. As Bobbi and Roger fall victim to the clutches of Stepford, Nicole expertly moves into scream queen territory. A mix of fear and fury permeate her gaze. In actuality, Matthew Broderick wouldn’t be a match for her. 

The movie goes off the rails in the third act, trying to manufacture a “happy ending” that feels false more than anything. We’re supposed to believe all hope is lost after Walter leads Joanna into the transformation chamber. Cut to - a blonde, dolled-up Stepford version of Joanna roaming the supermarket like a robot. She looks just like the version of Nicole Kidman that graces magazines and walks red carpets. There’s something tongue in cheek about a star criticizing their image, essentially saying the version of themselves Hollywood exalts is a fake “Stepford” version. At the climactic ballroom, Joanna reveals that she wasn’t turned, decapitates the Stepford Leader, Mike (Christopher Walken - who was a robot all along) and unmasks Claire (Glenn Close) as the mastermind behind Stepford. Shout out to a great freakout by Glenn Close.

There are plenty of subtextual elements that make the triumph of Joanna and the demise of Claire toothless and predictable. It sands away both the horror and satirical elements of the original. However, this final act expertly dramatizes Kidman’s journey in Hollywood. In order to win, she has to appear to be nothing more than a pretty face. Her movie star veneer hides the actress underneath, someone who knows how to weaponize (To Die For), subvert (Eyes Wide Shut) or even hide (The Hours) their beauty. 

The Stepford Wives was the beginning of a fallow period for Nicole Kidman, filled with big budget misfires and smaller projects that rarely broke through. There’s something exciting though about a star who refuses to play by any rules but her own. The “Mrs. Tom Cruise” persona helped people know who Nicole Kidman was. Her work amidst the end of her marriage catapulted her to the top of the A-list. What she does with her powers is something more daring - she does what she wants, not what others want.

Previously in the Nicole Kidman TFE Tribute: 

 

The dysfunctional comedy remakes and reboots continue in the next chapter of this Nicole Kidman Tribute. We go from The Stepford Wives to Bewitched.

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (8)

That closeup of Kidman as Joanna's being fired has persisted in my memory more than anything else in this movie. Okay, that might be a lie. After all, how can one forget Glenn Close's demented villain monologue in Ann Roth finery with an electrifying finish to top it all off?

June 13, 2024 | Registered CommenterCláudio Alves

Inept performance.

June 13, 2024 | Registered CommenterPeggy Sue

Frank Oz's weakest film, probably, and an attempt to repeat the lightning-in-a-bottle than In&Out was, changing Kline for Kidman and Selleck for Close and Cusack for Middler.

Main sin? Kidman seems to not get that she's supposed to be in a cartoon. Oz's comedies are directly inspired by the Looney Tunes in most cases.

What about Bob? - Elmer vs Porky Pig
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels - Bugs Bunny vs Daffy Duck
we could go on, but you can find traces (and shades) of Looney Tunes lunacy in every single Oz's comedy, with probably the only exception of Death at a Funeral.

Broderick, Middler, Close, Walken... totally get the farce. Kidman plays it too seriously and her comic timing barely shows, despite Ruddnick's efforts at writing to make it as loud and over the top as his best ones (Addams Family Values and In & Out). I totally blame Kidman for this one's cult status in both good and bad ways... most of the people vindicating the film are either Kidman fans or Ruddnick fans. I kind of vindicate it as a rewatchable failure with interesting takes and themes, but completely disjointed because of the contrast of Kidman not being on the level of the rest of the cast, giving a completely different note.

June 14, 2024 | Registered CommenterJesús Alonso

This is the sort of camp nonsense I love,Glenn Close steals the film,Midler is funny but it just doesn't work as a comedy,the 75 original is better but a lot less fun.

Sandra Bullock would have worked wonder with this role,she can do silly and OTT.

Kidman is fairly bad and her performance goes downhill from the moment she hears she's been fired.

June 14, 2024 | Registered CommenterMr Ripley79

This movie is a mess. The whole thing doesn't make sense and it's obviously being reshot to death.
That being said, everytime it comes up on TV, I end up watching the whole thing.
I think the score is gorgeous and I love that scene where Nicole character looked in awe at Glenn and Christopher dancing; it's like the most Nicole thing to do.
Her comic timing is pretty bad in this though to be fair, she is given the "straight man" role here.

June 14, 2024 | Registered CommenterDrew

It was OK. Seeing Bette Midler in a Deep Purple t-shirt is awesome. I love Deep Purple.

Glenn Close and Christopher Walken are great in this. Nicole... she's OK.

BTW, anyone heard the news about a sequel to Practical Magic?

I was excited by the idea of it until I read that.... BLECH! Oh god... Akiva Goldsman is going to write the film. My reaction to that is.... OH FUCK OFF!!!!

June 14, 2024 | Registered Commenterthevoid99

For me... Kidman always acted like her character in this movie.

June 14, 2024 | Registered Commenterrdf

I have a soft spot for this movie in The Bad Movies We Love way.

It had EVERYTHING going for it, and it ends up just a big, expensive curiosity that manages to kind of mess up everything aside from some funny lines. The behind the scenes stuff is way more interesting than anything on screen (check out the deleted scene where Midler turns into a lawnmover!) This project needs a book length oral history.

But, hey, it's still better than Bewitched!

June 17, 2024 | Registered Commenterdavidandwaffles
Comments for this entry have been disabled. Additional comments may not be added to this entry at this time.