
'The Handmaid's Tale' shifts gears, changing more than just its clothes
CNN
"The Handmaid's Tale" joins the roster of programs that have flamed brightly, then kept the fires burning beyond their creative apex.
The result is a fourth season that feels like a very different show, one that partially escapes the suffocating climate of Gilead but can't avoid the sensation that this provocative series is now operating on borrowed time. The Hulu show notably became the first streaming drama to win the Emmy in its category way back in 2017, when novelist Margaret Atwood's warnings of a brutal patriarchal totalitarian state felt searingly of the moment. Those elements haven't abated, but the series has covered so much ground, and jumbled so many key relationships, as to run into "The Walking Dead" syndrome, only sooner -- with each exploring variations on what happens when societies break down, while lumbering onward without the same momentum as their early seasons.More Related News













