Back to the dramatic stories of The Handmaid's Tale which follows June Osborne, one of the handmaids who are forced on the sexual servitude. The new season begins with an exciting mission for June. Meanwhile Nichole may go away by the decision of The Waterfords and Serena Joy.
The Handmaid's Tale Season 3 is exploring a more singular event instead of the broader, more relevant, sweeping storytelling of seasons past, but it's still compelling, provocative, and worth your investment.
[It] sustains many of the qualities that first made the show such a talker (and award winner), with memorable performances and a fascinating vision of government oppression and cruelty in the name of God.
Handmaid's Tale may be useful cultural shorthand, and its imagery will send a powerful message for as long as there are outrages to protest. But the show has only a few things to say, in a world where forms of gendered oppression are many and various.
While the third season doesn't fix all the issues that the sophomore season had, its shift from bleak emotional torture to a brisk political thriller is promising.
There's still enough going on in The Handmaid's Tale to keep it reasonably compelling, even though it's harder to ignore the sound of the ticking clock that strongly suggests this narrative needs to turn harder in some new directions, and soon
In terms of quality, 'The Handmaid's Tale' continues to be splendid, however one can notice a certain fear to evolve or leave the comfort zone. [Full Review in Spanish]
The elements that help the series transcend that air of repetition are as intact as ever. Elisabeth Moss remains electrifying... The storyline, as it appears from the early episodes of this season, is anchored in the dynamics of motherhood.
If not much sunnier, not as relentlessly grim as the second, while June is slowly, methodically, morphing into the Robo-June we know she must become. So far, so good.