I think that decision makes the film all the more eerie. I don't think it was done to create doubt. It makes the final reveal at the Men's Association all the more chilling. And if they showed that to be the fate of other Stepford wives earlier in the movie, they would have given away the ending. The fact that these men are able to commit murder time and time again with impunity shows they pretty much have it down to a science. And it shows how powerless Joanna was from the get-go despite her single-mindedness and intelligence. It is a truly harrowing depiction of oppression foisted upon any wife unlucky enough to move to Stepford, and it goes beyond mere Stepford, Connecticut. Who's to say this couldn't happen in 'your own home town' - it's worked so well in Stepford?
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