To what end really? Are they rated 400V and you just want to keep them happy? Will you be dis/charging them rapidly or anything?
There may be counterindications. If the latter applies, better to let them distribute according to value. Remember, electrolytics have quite loose tolerances, from both manufacture and age. Charging to equal voltages, then discharging suddenly, will result in reversal of the smaller values. How much, depends on the imbalance and depth of discharge.
It might also just not be necessary; electrolytics tend to leak more near the voltage rating. This does decrease over time (reforming dielectric) but it's effectively setting its own voltage limit, and they can distribute accordingly. Not that I'd recommend stacking electrolytics completely naked like this, but just that there's an argument (if a weak one) for doing so. The downside is, if the temperatures or aging aren't distributed evenly, some will eventually start to leak more, and hog and overvolt the others. For which a resistor divider can help swamp out the imbalance, extending useful life before failure (but not preventing it, as leakage will continue to increase over time*). Meanwhile you're burning that power in the resistors all the time, so it's poor economy to use low values. Resistors tend to be chosen based on rated leakage, while consuming under a watt each, say.
*Or not, but capacitance drifts down, and ESR up. Whatever the failure mode happens to be.
Tim