logo
‘The Handmaid's Tale' Ended the Only Way It Could: With an Open Ending

‘The Handmaid's Tale' Ended the Only Way It Could: With an Open Ending

Gizmodo27-05-2025

Star Elisabeth Moss directed the series finale, wrapping up six seasons of eerily timely dystopia on Hulu.
The Handmaid's Tale ended its run this week with an episode titled 'The Handmaid's Tale,' bringing June (Elisabeth Moss) full circle while also allowing Hulu to leave the door wide open for The Testaments, the upcoming series based on Margaret Atwood's 2019 sequel to her 1985 novel. Emotional punctuation took priority over narrative closure, which felt like the best and only choice.
After last week's big revolutionary booms, including the airplane bomb that wiped out all of Boston's most powerful leaders, Gilead has fallen—in Boston, at least. The Handmaid's Tale has shown us glimpses of other parts of this changed country (notably season four's visit to Chicago), but it's temping to forget there's more to the fight than just the characters we have become well familiar with. 'The Handmaid's Tale' makes it clear there's still a long way to go; the rest of what was once America requires liberation, and Luke (O-T Fagbenle), Moira (Samira Wiley), and Tuello (Sam Jaeger), among others, plan to keep moving full speed ahead.
Other characters face a different sort of uncertain future. Serena (Yvonna Strahovski) is once again a woman without a country; she obviously can't remain in Gilead, and Canada and the EU are non-options. She and Noah head to a UN refugee camp, lives still very much in limbo, though Serena has two important things giving her strength: she's a mother, and at long last she has June's sincere forgiveness.
Battered but unbroken, Janine (Madeline Brewer) finally escapes from Gilead for good. Rather incredibly, she's also reunited with her daughter, thanks to the newly widowed (again) Naomi (Ever Carradine), who apparently had some good in her after all. Naomi and Aunt Lydia (Ann Dowd) remain in Gilead; Lydia, at least, will play a key role in The Testaments, which explains why we don't see too much of her in the finale.
And though we get a pretty juicy moment of fan service in the return of Emily (Alexis Bledel), a much-loved character who abruptly left the show after season four—and we also see the arrival of June's mother (Cherry Jones) and young daughter, who've been in Alaska throughout season six—'The Handmaid's Tale' puts its focus squarely on June. She does a little mourning for Nick (Max Minghella), and while she and Luke don't exactly break up, there's a respectful understanding between them that they're on different paths moving forward. But they do still share one big missing piece: Hannah.
In The Handmaid's Tale's first season, we saw Hannah ripped away from her parents as they tried to flee Gilead's child-hungry regime. As June endured rape and torture as a handmaid, her motivation to survive was getting her daughter back—something that also propelled her to stay in Gilead, as well as return there repeatedly, putting her own safety at great risk. It's been Hannah all along, so it's not surprising when June makes it clear to everyone—including her own weary mother—that rescue is still her top priority, along with staying in battle mode until Gilead is completely, fully dismantled: 'I'm not safe, and neither are you. And they are never going to stop coming for us.'
But there's some narrative roadblocking here, since Hannah is a character in The Testaments. Though we get a key update (she's moved with her adoptive parents from Colorado to Washington, DC, meaning she's geographically closer at least), that longed-for reunion is not in the cards. Instead, The Handmaid's Tale finds a way for June to work through her grief and spread her message of fierceness and hope.
Her mother and Luke both separately suggest that she should write down her experiences, leading to the meta last scene that sees June return to the bombed-out remains of the Waterford mansion, back to the room where she was confined as a handmaid, and start to dictate her thoughts.
In 'The Handmaid's Tale,' The Handmaids Tale the show transforms into The Handmaid's Tale the book. It's a poignant and effective way to bring closure to this part of the story—as the fight, we're left to imagine, will continue to rage on.
You can watch all six seasons of The Handmaid's Tale on Hulu. There's no premiere date set yet for The Testaments.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ICE arrests under Trump top 100,000 as officials expand aggressive efforts to detain migrants
ICE arrests under Trump top 100,000 as officials expand aggressive efforts to detain migrants

CBS News

time18 minutes ago

  • CBS News

ICE arrests under Trump top 100,000 as officials expand aggressive efforts to detain migrants

Arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement during President Trump's second term topped 100,000 this week, as federal agents intensified efforts to detain unauthorized immigrants in courthouses, worksites and communities across the U.S., internal government data obtained by CBS News shows. On Tuesday and Wednesday, ICE recorded more than 2,000 arrests each day, a dramatic increase from the daily average of 660 arrests reported by the agency during Mr. Trump's first 100 days back at the White House, the federal statistics show. During President Biden last year in office, ICE averaged roughly 300 daily arrests, according to agency data. The latest numbers show ICE is getting closer to meeting the far-reaching demands of top administration officials like White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, an immigration hardliner who has forcefully pushed the agency to conduct "a minimum" of 3,000 arrests each day. On Wednesday morning, ICE was holding around 54,000 immigrant detainees in detention facilities across the country, according to the data. The Trump administration is asking Congress to give ICE billions of dollars in extra funds to hire thousands of additional deportation officers and expand detention capacity to hold 100,000 individuals at any given point. Officials are also looking at converting facilities inside military bases into immigration detention centers. The marked increase in ICE arrests across the country — especially in major Democratic-led cities that do not cooperate with federal immigration officials — comes after the Trump administration replaced two of the agency's top leaders amid internal frustrations that arrests numbers were not high enough. CBS News reached out to the representatives for ICE and the Department of Homeland Security for comment. Trump administration officials have framed the aggressive expansion of immigration operations as necessary to fulfill the president's signature campaign promises of cracking down on illegal immigration, expelling immigrants with criminal histories and overseeing the largest mass deportation effort in U.S. history. But to boost arrest numbers, ICE has resorted to more aggressive — and controversial — tactics that have triggered outrage and even confrontations in some communities. Those efforts include arrests of migrants and asylum-seekers showing up to court hearings or check-in appointments that the government instructed them to attend. Immigration lawyers have strongly denounced those arrests, saying they deter migrants from complying with the legal process. Immigration roundups at some worksites have also been reported recently. Videos of some ICE arrests have depicted sobbing women and children being escorted into vehicles outside of immigration courts. Footage has also captured community members confronting federal agents — some of them masked — as they take migrants into custody. One video showed construction workers suspected of being in the U.S. illegally lined up after an ICE-led operation on their worksite in Florida. And while ICE has been arresting many immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally and also have criminal records, the agency is simultaneously detaining non-criminal migrants living in the U.S. without proper documents — including longstanding residents — amid the Trump administration's pressure to increase arrest levels. Among them is Marcelo Gomes, an 18-year-old Brazilian-born high school student in Milford, Massachusetts, who was arrested by ICE last week on his way to volleyball practice. While ICE has acknowledged that agents were looking for his father when they arrested Gomes, it has kept the teenager in detention, saying he's in the U.S. illegally. Gomes' lawyer said her client initially lived in the U.S. on a temporary visa that had since lapsed. Before Mr. Trump took office, someone like Gomes would likely not have been arrested by ICE, given his age, his lack of any criminal record and the fact that he came to the U.S. as a child over a decade ago. But the Trump administration has reversed Biden-era restrictions on ICE operations that directed the agency to largely focus on detaining serious criminals, recent arrivals and national security threats, like suspected terrorists. While ICE employees have spearheaded Mr. Trump's immigration crackdown, the agency is receiving support from other federal agencies as part of an unprecedented effort by the administration to muster manpower and resources from across the government for immigration enforcement. The federal agencies now helping ICE arrest unauthorized immigrants include Customs and Border Protection; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; the Drug Enforcement Administration; the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and the Internal Revenue Service. The Trump administration has also enlisted local and state law enforcement officials in friendly jurisdictions like Florida to support ICE operations.

DHS halts ‘Quiet Skies' program following Republican claims it was used against political opponents
DHS halts ‘Quiet Skies' program following Republican claims it was used against political opponents

CNN

time18 minutes ago

  • CNN

DHS halts ‘Quiet Skies' program following Republican claims it was used against political opponents

A program designed to flag travelers for potential extra screening and monitoring at airports and on airplanes will be discontinued, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced Thursday. The program recently came under attack from Republicans after it was revealed that prior to her appointment to lead the US Intelligence Community, Tulsi Gabbard was temporarily placed on the 'Quiet Skies' list – a process that can occur because of a number of different factors, including travel patterns. Being on the list does not mean an individual is suspected or accused of wrongdoing. Quiet Skies has long been the source of negative publicity for TSA, according to a former US official. But officials have seen it as valuable because it allows the agency to order extra security checks for certain people based on specific intelligence. 'It is clear that the Quiet Skies program was used as a political rolodex of the Biden Administration — weaponized against its political foes and exploited to benefit their well-heeled friends,' Noem said in her statement announcing the program's end. 'I am calling for a Congressional investigation to unearth further corruption at the expense of the American people and the undermining of US national security.' As CNN previously reported, Gabbard was quickly removed from the list after going public last year with claims she had been added to a 'secret terror watchlist' – saying she was placed on the list for criticizing then-presidential candidate Kamala Harris. US officials told CNN that to have a nominee for a top position — much less the director of national intelligence — placed on a government watchlist of any kind was highly unusual, if not unprecedented. It remains unclear why Gabbard was placed on the list and subsequently removed. The Quiet Skies algorithm looks at travel patterns, foreign connections and other data in a variety of government holdings, and if triggered, leads to additional security screening at the airport by Air Marshals. But it is not associated with the FBI's terrorist watch list. Security officials from multiple agencies previously told CNN that the program is known inside the government for having far laxer standards for inclusion. The program was only one part of airport security and other screening lists still exist inside of the department. In a press release Thursday, DHS said the program 'was used to target political opponents and benefit political allies.' 'TSA will continue performing important vetting functions tied to legitimate commercial aviation security threats to both ensure the safety of the American traveler and uphold its statutory obligations,' the department said.

Senate to Keep Spectrum Sales in Tax Bill, Key Republican Says
Senate to Keep Spectrum Sales in Tax Bill, Key Republican Says

Bloomberg

time19 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Senate to Keep Spectrum Sales in Tax Bill, Key Republican Says

A key Republican said senators have reached an agreement to reauthorize spectrum sales to internet companies that would generate billions of dollars in revenue toward funding US President Donald Trump's sweeping tax cuts and spending bill. Spectrum sales were included in the House version of the reconciliation package but the provision had drawn objections from South Dakota Republican Senator Mike Rounds, who previously said they risked undermining the US military's communications capabilities.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store