The Handmaid's Tale

"It's not a feminist story," series star Elisabeth Moss said. "It's a human story."
The Hulu series could bring us well beyond the end of Margaret Atwood's dystopian classic.
"The control of women and babies has been a part of every repressive regime in history."
As reproductive rights continue to come under threat, readers flock to Margaret Atwood's dystopian warning.
The new scene involves a recording of fictional audience questions about the likelihood of tyranny recurring in their own society.
Earning disparities are even greater for unmarried women.
Centuries from now, our cultural achievements will be the most important way later generations will remember us.
The show’s characters reflect on the warning signs of a troubled state.
The activists were protesting several anti-abortion measures.