The Handmaid's Tale

    The Handmaid's Tale
    1990

    Synopsis

    In a dystopicly polluted rightwing religious tyranny, a young woman is put in sexual slavery on account of her now rare fertility.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Natasha RichardsonKate
    • Faye DunawaySerena Joy
    • Aidan QuinnNick
    • Elizabeth McGovernMoira
    • Victoria TennantAunt Lydia
    • Robert DuvallCommander
    • Blanche BakerOfglen
    • Traci LindOfwarren / Janine
    • Zoey WilsonAunt Helena
    • Kathryn DobyAunt Elizabeth

    Recommendations

    • 80

      The New York Times

      With its devilish attention to polite little touches, its abundant bitchiness, its decrying of the Handmaids' oppression along with its tacit celebration of their fecundity, The Handmaid's Tale is a shrewd if preposterous cautionary tale that strikes a wide range of resonant chords.
    • 60

      Variety

      Though helmer Volker Schlondorff succeeds in painting the bleakness of this extrapolated future, he fails to create a strong and persistent connection with the heroine’s plight.
    • 60

      Los Angeles Times

      It's a beautifully austere piece of work -- it's rare to see a film these days that's as carefully designed as this one. But the design hasn't been given enough human contours. It's as if the film makers had forgotten the raging emotions that all that design and austerity were supposed to repress. [07 Mar 1990, p.F1]
    • 50

      Chicago Sun-Times

      At the end of the movie we are conscious of large themes and deep thoughts, and of good intentions drifting out of focus.
    • 50

      Washington Post

      The finale isn't quite as chillingly nerve-wracking as one would hope. Schloendorff, who also made The Tin Drum, directs with a uniform dullness that creates little sense of suspense. In replaying the Atwood novel, he and Pinter ultimately fail to create a significant timbre of their own to make the transmogrification truly effective.
    • 50

      Washington Post

      If the movie stands between good old messy, toxic America and depraved Gilead, blessed be it. But alas, it's unlikely to appeal to the converted, much less bona fide brimstone eaters. And one can't help but wonder why a woman didn't direct this movie about women being dominated by men.
    • 42

      Entertainment Weekly

      The Handmaid’s Tale is watchable, but it’s also paranoid poppycock — just like the book.
    • 40

      Empire

      Comes across as a TV movie and overall, a disappointment - a high calibre cast and concept completely squandered.

    Seen by

    • cody