Katharine Ross stars in this classic horror film as Joanna, a woman who moves to Stepford, Connecticut, along with her husband Walter (Peter Masterson) and her best friend Bobbie (Paula Prentiss). As the two women meet the other housewives who live in Stepford, they begin to notice that all of them are interested only in cooking, cleaning, and pleasing their husbands. Joanna and Bobbie are further alarmed when their husbands join the mysterious Stepford Men's Club, which convenes in a heavily guarded mansion and harbors a nefarious secret agenda. Based on the novel by Ira Levin (ROSEMARY'S BABY) and followed by the made-for-television sequels THE REVENGE OF THE STEPFORD WIVES, THE STEPFORD CHILDREN, and THE STEPFORD HUSBANDS.
Theatrical Release: February 12, 1975.
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Anamorphic Widescreen
Audio:
Dolby Digital Mono - English
Dolby Digital Mono - French
Additional Release Material:
Production Interviews - 1. Bryan Forbes - Director
2. Edgar J. Scherick - Producer
3. Katherine Ross - Star
4. Paula Prentiss - Star
5. Nanette Newman - Star
6. Peter Masterson - Star
Theatrical Trailer
Radio Spots
Interactive Features:
Scene Access
Interactive Menus
Text/Photo Galleries:
Biographies
Director of Photography
Owen Roizman: American Director Of Photography
Executive Producer
Gustave M. Berne: Executive Producer, THE STEPFORD WIVES
Production Designer
Gene Callahan: Production Designer
Source Writer
Ira Levin: Novelist
Costume Designer
Anna Hill Johnstone:
Review 1:
"...This was way ahead of its time for a major-studio movie..."
Source: USA Today
p.4D 04/15/1997
Review 2:
"...Feel nostalgia for an era when Hollywood movies dared to be weird..."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.47 08/03/2001
Review 3:
"...It's the rich social satire and underlying sense of fun that give this seminal chiller real shelf life..."
Source: Total Film
p.124 01/01/2001
Review 4:
"[With] enough guts to see the cautionary tale through to the gruesome end....Stick with the creepy cult classic..."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.73 07/09/2004
Review 5:
"[It] conjures an atmosphere of real creepiness."
Source: Uncut
p.136 09/01/2004