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HANDMAIDS TALE S6 -ch 4 - sun 10pm - TV PACE. NO SPOILERS

968 replies

Blondeshavemorefun · 27/04/2025 12:18

I was late coming to this. Didn’t watch it in 2017 - possibly as had just given birth to mini blondes

but finally got into it maybe 2yrs ago and watched it

so s6 is back and last series ever. How will this end

I know it’s around for those who binge tho this is weekly paced

The only thing worse than waiting two and a half years for the sixth and final season of The Handmaid's Tale (https://url.uk.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/kOwOCLPWOHVV3MLTBfVcyyDSV?domain=radiotimes.com/)
is waiting to escape Gilead itself.

Over five seasons, the woman formerly known as Offred escaped and infiltrated Gilead more times than the fruit have been blessed.

It all comes down to this now, the final season (although a sequel series called The Testaments is also in the works). Still, it's safe to say that The Handmaid's Tale will bring an explosive, probably harrowing end to this story of a gender scorned.

But to enjoy it fully, you'll need to remember what happened previously. That's where we come in.

Join us as we lift the veil and journey back to season 5 of The Handmaid's Tale, just when the walls of Gilead had begun to crumble.

The Handmaid's Tale recap
Five seasons ago, The Handmaid's Tale began with June and her husband Luke (O-T Fagbenle) trying to escape Gilead with their daughter, Hannah.

As fans probably remember, they failed to get away, which led to June's servitude and her daughter being taken away to be raised by strangers.

After many failed rescue attempts, June learned in season 5 that (a still very young) Hannah — or Agnes, as she's known in Gilead — was being fast-tracked into a Gilead marriage.

Season 5 ends with Hannah still trapped there, so expect her rescue to play heavily on June's mind in the final 10 episodes of season 6.

It's also worth noting that June has already escaped to Canada by this point, reunited with Luke, her bestie Moira (Samira Wiley), and Nichole, her other daughter she gave birth to in Gilead. You know, the one her father, a Gilead officer named Nick (Max Minghella), helped smuggle out.

June isn't the only one popping out babies in this dystopian future. Her former owner, for want of a better word, named Serena Joy, also brought a bundle of joy into the world when her son Noah was born. June actually helped Serena give birth in No Man's Land, but she was later separated from Noah in Canada when she was thrown into a detention centre.

Towards the end of the season, Serena (https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/drama/the-handmaids-tale-serena-wharton-newsupdate/)
was reunited with her son, though, and managed to escape with him.

Things have been rocky for June too, even after she escaped literal hell on earth. With anti-refugee sentiment rising and Gilead gaining popularity outside of its borders, Canada isn't as safe as it once was for everyone's favourite former handmaid.

Following an attack at a memorial service, June was targeted again when a truck sporting a Gilead bumper sticker ran her over, in front of her own home, no less.

Being the dutiful husband he is, Luke rushes out to save her, but he gets a bit carried away and accidentally kills June's attacker in the process.

You'd think the police would have given him a medal for that, but no, they instead issue a warrant for his arrest. The pair make a run for it, planning to escape Canada via a train that's transporting refugees out west to Alaska.

Their plan hits a slight snag, however, when they see officers checking documents at the station.

Luke nobly offers himself up to the police so June and Nichole escape in the chaos that ensues. Men aren't exactly known for doing the right thing in this show, but June's husband has usually been the one exception to that rule.

On board the train, June grapples with what's just occurred, realising that she must now save Luke as well as Hannah. But her thoughts are interrupted when she hears another baby cry...

Yep, after everything they've been through, Serena and her son Noah made it onto the same train as June, presumably under false pretences. The two women kind of smile at each other, shocked by this surreal twist of fate.

"You got a diaper?” asks Serena. June doesn't answer because the final season credits roll then, but it's safe to say that there's a s**t-storm gathering in store for them both at the end of this train journey, or even earlier for that matter.

The same is also true of Gilead, where Janine (Madeline Brewer) suffers as a handmaid for Commander Joseph Lawrence (Bradley Whitford) and Naomi Putnam (Ever Carradine), who are due to get married.

In the face of abuse, Janine fights back, which leads to the Eyes taking her away. Aunt Lydia (Ann Dowd), who's always had a soft spot for Janine, isn't best pleased by this development, sowing the seeds for not just this final season but also the sequel show, The Testaments. If you know, you know…

Meanwhile, good old reliable (and boring) Nick has agreed to secretly with the US government in exchange for June's safety. But when he becomes convinced that Commander Lawrence is the one behind the attacks on her, he storms Joseph's wedding reception and hits him.

While in prison, his pregnant wife leaves Nick, rightly convinced that he's still in love with June.

So, with all that said and done, how will this impact the sixth and final season? Episode 1 is simply titled Train, so it should come as no stretch to the imagination that the season 6 premiere will pick up where the previous season left off.

What's not clear is where June and Serena now stand. Can they work together as friends? Or will one inevitably betray the other before reaching their final destination?

June and Serena's relationship is complicated at the best of times, so instead of making more impossible guesses, we'll leave you with the official logline for season 6 of The Handmaid's Tale to look for more clues.

"June’s unyielding spirit and determination pull her back into the fight to take down Gilead. Luke and Moira join the resistance. Serena tries to reform Gilead while Commander Lawrence and Aunt Lydia reckon with what they wrought, and Nick faces challenging tests of character.

"This final chapter of June’s journey highlights the importance of hope, courage, solidarity and resilience in the pursuit of justice and freedom."

Elisabeth Moss as June holding Nichole and smiling at the camera while sat on a train full of people.

The Handmaid's Tale season 6: Release date, plot, trailer and latest news

The final season is upon us.

https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/drama/the-handmaids-tale-season-6-release-date/

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13
Breathmiller · 23/06/2025 07:47

Exactly! It seem that everyone in Boston must have been at the wedding and eaten a bit of that cake including all the guards (apart from the one at Wharton's door and Peter at the Red Centre) I mean it was a big cake and all power to Rita for making it in such a short space of time but it wasn't that big to wipe out a major city

Crinkle77 · 23/06/2025 08:22

IcedPurple · 23/06/2025 07:41

Yeah, they couldn't walk out their front door without being observed in the first series. But then since at least the 5th series it seems June, Nick and Lawrence can just stroll back and forth across the Canadian border, so I guess standards are slipping!

Also, why were the handmaids veiled at the wedding? That didn't happen before. Seems they invented it so that June could stay hidden.

They did mention in an earlier episode that handmaid's were now veiled.

IcedPurple · 23/06/2025 08:27

Breathmiller · 23/06/2025 07:41

I agree icedpurple with everyone doing a too quick turnaround. Serena's speech to the handmaids was awful and I felt in a typical Serena type way that she would be more worried about her status as a fertile wife without a handmaid than the handmaid's welfare. It didn't ring true.

I think a lot of the characters' lightbulb moments were rushed in this episode. Whereas a lot of the previous 7 episodes could have been working up to it all more.

I think this series has been a bit obvious, each episode that there has to be the same thing going on with different people. Serena and June particularly mirroring each other. It all seems a bit...obvious. And patronising at times.

Although I did say in my pp that I enjoyed this episode more (and I think that is mostly because it was set back in Gilead proper) I do think that I am hanging on til the end of this tv series as a whole. Partly because I want to see what happens to the characters and I am drawn in to the world of Gilead due to a long held interest in the book and story and what it says about women in different societies and partly because I want to see how it evolves in to The Testaments.

But, if I'm being completely honest? Its a struggle sometimes to see what they have done to the story and the characters that I have so long been interested in and I am often disappointed that it has evolved at times in to a typicay over done American Game of Thrones type thing, veering in to Mission Impossible at times (caveat - I have seen neither of these things). The first series was genius but it has progressively gone off the boil for me.

But, I will be here next week. I think I have Stockholm Syndrome 😅

Yeah I agree. I too am kind of 'I've made it this far so I might at well see it out'.

But I miss the subtle characterisations and the perfectly evoked bizarro world of the earlier seasons. It's degenerated into a 3rd rate thriller now.

IcedPurple · 23/06/2025 08:28

Crinkle77 · 23/06/2025 08:22

They did mention in an earlier episode that handmaid's were now veiled.

Thanks I missed that.

Seems more like a plot device than a coherent development.

Buiderswoe · 23/06/2025 08:32

See ya Bell! 🎉

deeahgwitch · 23/06/2025 08:33

Could someone please explain why the Guardian just stood there with a gun in his hand and did nothing when Aunt Lydia discovered what was going on and June delivered a few home truths to her.
I really had to suspend disbelief that he didn’t alert other guardians.

I agree @Cranmer women are still suffering in the world because of a patriarchal and oppressive society 🥲

Crinkle77 · 23/06/2025 08:42

deeahgwitch · 23/06/2025 08:33

Could someone please explain why the Guardian just stood there with a gun in his hand and did nothing when Aunt Lydia discovered what was going on and June delivered a few home truths to her.
I really had to suspend disbelief that he didn’t alert other guardians.

I agree @Cranmer women are still suffering in the world because of a patriarchal and oppressive society 🥲

No idea. In the past they would have just shot them dead. But I guess they couldn't shot all those fertile women

deeahgwitch · 23/06/2025 08:44

But surely he would have radioed his comrades to inform them. I found it bizarre. It just didn’t sit right.

IcedPurple · 23/06/2025 09:03

deeahgwitch · 23/06/2025 08:44

But surely he would have radioed his comrades to inform them. I found it bizarre. It just didn’t sit right.

Yeah, Guardians don't take orders from women, even a senior Aunt.

Instead he calmly allowed a squadron of handmaids out to seek vengeance. No way would he do that. He wouldn't survive long if he was found out.

CruCru · 23/06/2025 09:11

I agree re the scene between Serena and Wharton. It’s a real shame - he’s a really good actor. They could have had him turn bad slowly, ramping up the coercive control. It would have been subtle and made sense in the Gilead world. Instead they had this mad scene where the pacing just didn’t work.

IcedPurple · 23/06/2025 09:20

CruCru · 23/06/2025 09:11

I agree re the scene between Serena and Wharton. It’s a real shame - he’s a really good actor. They could have had him turn bad slowly, ramping up the coercive control. It would have been subtle and made sense in the Gilead world. Instead they had this mad scene where the pacing just didn’t work.

Yes. Two great actors who've shown themselves capable of portraying complex emotions. And instead they made him into a cartoon villain and she into a reborn feminist.

Yvonne Strahovski has portrayed Serena so subtly. It would have been wonderful to see the emotions play across her face as she gradually realised that Wharton was basically another Fred, and that she had made a huge mistake for herself and Noah. They've wasted so much time on repetitive conversations between Luke and June, so even with just a few episodes left they could have built up a picture of Wharton gradually asserting control over Serena, and her dismayed reaction.

If she and Aunt Lydia join the resistance, then that is going to be a betrayal of how their characters have developed over the past 5 series. But the way things are going, it wouldn't surprise me.

Annialisting · 23/06/2025 09:32

The guard was very young. Could that explain why he didn’t react?

I enjoyed the scene where Wharton showed his true colours. Run Serena run.

Portakalkedi · 23/06/2025 10:32

Enjoyed this episode, but yes some implausible stuff due to having to cram it all in to one series ( and unnecessary longwinded scenes with Luke in earlier episodes). I had hoped for a mass poisoning at the wedding, but the Marthas were there. I do wish there could have been another series, back in Gilead, with a slower take on the aftermath of this incident, and more about the changes in Serena and Aunt Lydia, leading into The Testaments.

JewelleryCat · 23/06/2025 10:32

I’ve finally watched it. I’m disappointed we didn’t see more of the wedding, I would have liked to see what a Gilead wedding looked like unless there was one in previous series and I’ve forgotten but I loved Serena’s outfit

It was also obvious that when Serena married Commander Wharton that he would have a handmaid and just want Serena to be a wife instead of being the face of New Bethlehem. Also, I thought Naomi was looking a bit peeved. Was she jealous?

I loved when June stabbed Bell in the eye, some good symbolism there and even though you have to suspend belief, I liked everything that happened at the Red Centre too. All in all, a very good episode

Soubriquet · 23/06/2025 10:46

It was a great episode. Finally

wish it was longer or more episodes was more like it!

PaintDecisions · 23/06/2025 10:57

OK, so many things in this episode! Why are we on episode 8 and this is only just happening?

So many areas we have to suspend belief because they have suddenly rushed it all into a couple of shows.

The wedding was not nearly as grand as I was expecting. No cameras, no press photographers etc. Huge swathes of attendees were handmaids and econo-people.

Serena freaking out about the handmaid on her new home makes sense, but is at total odds with her weird speech to the handmaids at the wedding. It just didn't ring true. It's clear the writers are rushing the story now and it's spoiling it.

The guard would have shot most of the women in the Red Centre. I cannot suspend my belief to that at all.

The winning around of Aunt Lydia hasn't been sudden, it's been drip fed for a couple of series now, but the speeches made to her were absolutely dire. Great from a feminism and truth perspective, but shite from an actual convincing an Aunt perspective.

And I've no idea who the final commander was that was asleep in that last scene - if not Nick (and I don't think it was), who are people thinking it is?

Was this series the one affected by the writers strikes in Hollywood? Is that something to do with how bad so much of this series seems to be?

HollyBerryz · 23/06/2025 11:09

I assumed the guard at the red centre just have been 'in on it' otherwise I agree it makes no sense. There are a few males who don't wholly agree with gilead. When we saw the handmaids running at the end were they running after killing their commanders? I assumed they would kill commanders and then take the children and escape but it didn't look that way and I did wonder how they will escape across the border.

HollyBerryz · 23/06/2025 11:10

And did Serena eat her own wedding cake?

CruCru · 23/06/2025 11:22

Annialisting · 23/06/2025 09:32

The guard was very young. Could that explain why he didn’t react?

I enjoyed the scene where Wharton showed his true colours. Run Serena run.

If he had any sense, he would have weighed up the pros and cons. A guard who shot two Aunts plus a load of Handmaids is going on the Wall, no matter what he claims they were planning. A guard who says that the senior Aunt (who is still around) let the Handmaids escape will be treated more leniently.

Breathmiller · 23/06/2025 11:44

Portakalkedi · 23/06/2025 10:32

Enjoyed this episode, but yes some implausible stuff due to having to cram it all in to one series ( and unnecessary longwinded scenes with Luke in earlier episodes). I had hoped for a mass poisoning at the wedding, but the Marthas were there. I do wish there could have been another series, back in Gilead, with a slower take on the aftermath of this incident, and more about the changes in Serena and Aunt Lydia, leading into The Testaments.

Yes, I agree with this. There has been too much focus on June in Canada and her relationship woes with Luke and Nick. I know its her story really but I also would have liked more time back in Gilead to see how it was changing from within. What was going on at the Red Centre, in the houses other than just Lawrence's. Hannah. The Handmaids left behind. Where are they still getting "fallen" fertile women to be handmaids? What's going on in the Colonies? How are the Marthas?

Breathmiller · 23/06/2025 11:47

And I've no idea who the final commander was that was asleep in that last scene - if not Nick (and I don't think it was), who are people thinking it is?

I thought maybe Wharton?

Breathmiller · 23/06/2025 11:47

Anyone watching it today that can pause it and zoom in?

Annialisting · 23/06/2025 12:20

CruCru · 23/06/2025 11:22

If he had any sense, he would have weighed up the pros and cons. A guard who shot two Aunts plus a load of Handmaids is going on the Wall, no matter what he claims they were planning. A guard who says that the senior Aunt (who is still around) let the Handmaids escape will be treated more leniently.

Yes this makes absolute sense.

dapsnotplimsolls · 23/06/2025 13:01

I agree with others. It's frustrating that episodes 2-4 were dull and now it feels rushed. Some of the dialogue feels too obvious and fan-fiction. I watched the end carefully and I thought it was just a random Commander?

lemondropsandchimneytops · 23/06/2025 13:06

I agree with so many of the points made. The tempo of this series has been all wrong and it feels like they've left so much to the last 2 episodes. How did June and Janine get from Bell's house to the Red Centre? Where are the Handmaids and Serena going and how are they just getting away with wondering around Gilead? Still no Hannah!

I thought it was Wharton at the end. It looked like his house and his handmaid.