Why Did Serena Turn Fred In? The Handmaid’s Tale Betrayal Explained
Serena turns Fred in because motherhood finally matters more to her than marriage, Gilead, or Fred’s authority — but that does not mean she becomes good.
Read MoreSerena turns Fred in because motherhood finally matters more to her than marriage, Gilead, or Fred’s authority — but that does not mean she becomes good.
Read MoreJune stays in Gilead because she cannot leave Hannah behind — but that choice turns her from survivor into resistance figure and changes The Handmaid’s Tale forever.
Read MoreMayday is the underground resistance in The Handmaid’s Tale, but its real power is that Gilead depends on the very people it underestimates.
Read MoreThe Handmaid’s Tale Season 3 finale, “Mayday,” delivers one of the show’s most satisfying emotional payoffs — but the logic problems still matter.
Read MoreThe Handmaid’s Tale “Sacrifice” keeps telling us June is the boss, but Serena and Eleanor are the ones making the choices that actually reshape the story.
Read MoreThe Handmaid’s Tale “Liars” is clunky on the page, but Deniz Gamze Ergüven’s direction turns Winslow’s death, the Marthas’ cleanup, and Fred’s capture into gripping television.
Read MoreThe Handmaid’s Tale “Witness” finally finds itself by forcing Commander Lawrence to live inside the horror he helped create.
Read MoreThe Handmaid’s Tale “Heroic” turns a weak Ofmatthew arc into a strong bottle episode by forcing June to sit with the damage her selfishness helped cause.
Read MoreThe Handmaid’s Tale “Under His Eye” is the point where Season 3 stops letting characters drive the story and starts moving them around like plot pieces.
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