'Handmaid's Tale' season 3 not meant to be 'torture to watch,' creator says

Janine, also known as Ofwarren, play by Madeline Brewer. Picture: Hulu Haindmaid's Tale/Instagram

Janine, also known as Ofwarren, play by Madeline Brewer. Picture: Hulu Haindmaid's Tale/Instagram

Published Jun 7, 2019

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Los Angeles - With its chilling portrait

of a patriarchal dictatorship where women are routinely raped,

mutilated and forcibly separated from their children, "The

Handmaid's Tale" has sometimes proved tough to stomach.

But Bruce Miller, creator and executive producer of the

television series based on Margaret Atwood's 1985 novel, says he

is "not in the business of inventing cruelties."

"I don't want the show to be torture to watch. It is

entertainment and you want people to be compelled by it. You

don't want it to be horrible medicine," Miller said.

Season three of the Emmy Award-winning series arrives on

streaming service Hulu on Wednesday with its portrait of life in

the fictional U.S. state of Gilead as seemingly prescient as

ever.

Handmaid June (played by Elisabeth Moss), having turned

down a rare the chance to escape Gilead with her newborn,

decides to remain to fight back against a society where women

are banned from reading and writing and forced into servitude.

It follows a second season last year that contained scenes

of beatings, hangings and rape that many viewers found too grim.

"I'm not interested in putting the audience through torture.

I try to only show the things that we need to see to understand

where June is emotionally and mentally," said Miller. "What I'm

trying to do is tell the story of June's survival and victory

and it's a long, slow slog."

Season three arrives as women in the United States,

sometimes wearing the distinctive red gowns and white bonnets

seen in the TV series, are protesting laws in 11 U.S. states

that severely restrict abortion.

Last season coincided with a crackdown on illegal

immigration at the U.S. border with Mexico in which parents and

their children were separated.

Although the theme of season three is rebellion, Miller

says there is no quick fix.

"We want to show what a hero really looks like - someone who

is stubborn. They get knocked down; they get bruised, and they

pick themselves up and try again," Miller said.

Miller said any direct parallels between the television

series and current world events are unintentional, although

Atwood has said that all the events in her book were drawn from

history.

"We try to come up with what could happen in Gilead ...

(But) if you're going to make television that is tied to the

real world, it's going to be as disquieting as the political

turmoil the world seem to be going through right now," he said. 

"Handmaid's Tale" premieres on M-Net (DStv Channel 101) on 10 June at 10pm.

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Reuters

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