logo
‘The Handmaid's Tale' Stars Elisabeth Moss and Max Minghella on That Shattering Betrayal

‘The Handmaid's Tale' Stars Elisabeth Moss and Max Minghella on That Shattering Betrayal

Yahoo20-05-2025
[This story contains spoilers from season six, episode seven of , '.']
'It was Nick who told me everything.'
More from The Hollywood Reporter
On Set for 'The Handmaid's Tale' Final Season With Hugs, Tears and Rebellion: "I Had a Full-Fledged Breakdown"
How Josh Charles Found His Quiet Rage for 'The Handmaid's Tale'
Samira Wiley on Finding Her Fire Again in Final Season of 'The Handmaid's Tale'
The Handmaid Tale's June (Elisabeth Moss) first heard those words while hiding in a closet with Nick (Max Minghella), as High Commander Wharton (Josh Charles) informed fiancée Serena Joy (Yvonne Strahovski) that his son-in-law helped him thwart what could have been a debilitating attack on Gilead High Commanders at Jezebel's, orchestrated by June and the Mayday resistance group.
The sixth episode in the final season of the Hulu series ended on that cliffhanger moment as viewers watched June internally digest what she just heard. This week's seventh hour, 'Shattered,' then picked up in that closet. The episode quickly zoomed over to Jezebel's to show viewers the devastating consequences of Nick's betrayal of June: All of the Jezebels (women who are forced to be sex slaves for High Commanders) are brutally shot and killed by Gilead officers. Janine (Madeline Brewer) is the only one who is spared, due to her relationship with High Commander Bell (Timothy Simons).
The massacre of the Jezebel's women is a scene of shocking violence for the dystopian series, and the execution of so many women is a haunting vision June imagines when she's then told by Nick what happened.
'Have you ever had a moment where you hear something or learn something about someone and you can't unsee it? You can't go back,' asks Moss when speaking to The Hollywood Reporter about this point of no return between lovers June and Nick. 'Everything changes in that moment for June. She cannot ever see him in the same way again. I think he completely shatters her.'
Handmaid's Tale viewers had a big reaction after last week's episode, 'Surprise,' when finding out that Nick had ratted out June's resistance plan. But Minghella wasn't bracing for impact heading into season six's release. 'I don't really mind what they think of Nick morally,' he tells THR. 'I just hope [viewers] enjoy the narratives. Whether they have different feelings about me afterwards is not something I have much control in.'
That's not to say that Minghella doesn't care deeply for his character. 'He's nothing like me, we're quite different. He's much more stoic; I'm a sort of mess of a person (laughs). I don't talk anything like Nick; Nick speaks and moves in a very specific way,' he says. 'But I can relate to this character [throughout the series]. I feel there is some temper between us. I understand him.'
In the episode, Nick quickly clocks June's stunned reaction, and he confronts her about what she's chosen to ignore about him all along. He accuses her of turning a blind eye on his elite role in the fascist Gilead regime when it benefits her to do so. When she realizes that Nick is just like the evil men who run Gilead, he responds: 'And you love me. So what does that make you?'
June then walks away from Nick. It's a moment that Nick acknowledges may be for good in a later conversation with Rita, where he leans into June thinking he's a self-serving monster.
'She's completely brokenhearted,' Moss tells THR. 'She's also so mad at herself that she ignored all the signs — that she should have seen it, that she should have known, that she should have not fallen for it or believed in him. All of that is going through her head in the same moment. And then thinking about those women and not being able to ever get that image out of her head, and not knowing about Janine and whether or not [she's alive]. Her mind is going a mile a minute.'
June has been free from Gilead since escaping in season four. She's now a refugee and rebellion fighter who has reunited with husband Luke (O-T Fagbenle), friend Moira (Samira Wiley), former Martha Rita (Amanda Brugel) and the Mayday resistance fighters trying to take Gilead down, as she and Luke continue to fight to get her oldest daughter, Hannah (Jordana Blake), back. When June returns and tells Luke that Nick knew about the plan because of her, Luke finally expresses his true feelings about June and Nick's Gilead affair, which led to the birth of June's youngest daughter, Holly.
'Don't be in love with a fucking Nazi, how 'bout that!' Luke tells his wife.
Fagbenle has been carrying around his own feelings about the love triangle at the heart of The Handmaid's Tale for some time. The actor accepts there is a trauma love bond between June and Nick, but as far as he's concerned, 'It's pathological on many levels,' he says. 'It's so blindingly obvious that Nick is part of a fascistic regime and this entire time, the only time he's acted against that was for his own selfish interest because he was in love with a woman. That doesn't erase the fact that you can't get promoted up the ranks of Gilead unless you're doing some really dark things. You don't get promoted up the ranks because you're baking nice pastries!'
It's something that June, as well as viewers, have been guilty of overlooking, thanks to Minghella's performance and the chemistry between the pair as June and Nick's love story has unfolded over six seasons. 'Just look at her performance in that scene,' Fagbenle tells THR of Moss. 'It's brilliant, the look on her face. I'm always blown away by her.'
After this, things can't be the same for June when it comes to Nick, says Fagbenle, who thinks it's about time.
'This entire journey for Luke, and myself as a person, I've been so surprised that more people don't see that,' says Fagbenle of Nick's role as a Commander. 'It's an interesting quirk of humanity that we're willing to whitewash a bunch of things around a person because we love them and we think they're hot or we think they're the person we want to fall in love with. I think it's really interesting on both the political level and a psychological level.'
Co-showrunners Eric Tuchman and Yahlin Chang have also compared June's relationship with the two men in her life. 'With Nick it's more lusty and passionate, and with Luke it's the love of a super strong attachment to a husband who has stood by you,' Chang tells THR.
Commander Lawrence (Bradley Whitford) channels some of these confronting feelings in the episode, when he accuses June of being blind to trust Nick because of his 'smoldering' gaze.
'There are certain things about Nick that June is blind to and that our viewers — and we as writers — are blind to because we're invested in this romance. And that is that Nick is a Commander in Gilead, that's the truth of it,' says Chang. 'Because for Nick to have risen up to be part of the Gilead power regime — to be an Eye from the beginning and then all the way through to becoming a Commander — he has done some bad things, and we haven't shown them and so it was convenient to forget. But one of the themes in our story the season is that there is no such thing as a good Gilead Commander. If you're a man and you're powerful in Gilead, it means you are touched by some of that Gilead corruption. You just are.'
When June returns to Mayday headquarters, it's Moira who comforts her and who understands why June fell in love with Nick — a romance, as Fagbenle has previously pointed out — that was borne out of and bonded by trauma. Perhaps that's why Luke stops short of leaving June and their marriage. If anything, the Nick betrayal and June's revelation afterwards bring the husband and wife closer, as they vow to never lose sight of what they are fighting for: their daughter Hannah, who is now a wife-in-training and still living under Gilead tyranny.
The episode later reveals that Janine is now a handmaid for High Commander Bell, who has been sexually abusing her ever since she arrived at Jezebel's, and that even Aunt Lydia (Ann Dowd) can't get to Janine. 'Nick is not the person June fell in love with, and as much as she can mourn the loss of the person she fell in love with, it won't trump the loss of the women at Jezebel's,' says Moss of June's turning point. 'But there is pain there, too. I'm not going to say that there isn't complexity there.'
Instead of pulling away in misery, however, the events push June to plan an even bigger Mayday coup. She plots their biggest resistance ploy yet — with the help of Lawrence, their Canadian ally Mark Tuello (Sam Jaeger) and Mayday — to enlist every handmaid and ally to use the upcoming Gilead wedding between Serena Joy and High Commander Wharton as a cover to slyly attack every Gileadean person in attendance. 'Those Commanders and those Wives are going to be so busy eating and dancing and having the time of their fucking lives that they will never see us coming,' says June at the end of the hour, ushering in what is sure to be a blessed evening for episode eight.
***
The Handmaid's Tale releases new episodes Tuesdays on Hulu. Follow along with THR's final season coverage.
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History
A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise
'Yellowstone' and the Sprawling Dutton Family Tree, Explained
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Call the police.' Jared Verse left inspired by his Aaron Donald workout trauma
'Call the police.' Jared Verse left inspired by his Aaron Donald workout trauma

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'Call the police.' Jared Verse left inspired by his Aaron Donald workout trauma

Jared Verse thought he was ready for the challenge. A workout with future Hall of Famer Aaron Donald in Donald's home gym? No big deal. Or so believed Verse, the reigning NFL defensive rookie of the year. 'That workout was psychotic,' Verse said this week. The meeting of the muscles happened in June after Verse stoked Donald's competitive fire during Verse's appearance on the 'Adam Schefter Podcast.' Verse unabashedly if not kiddingly sounded as if he were challenging Donald to a workout duel. 'He don't want that,' Verse said when asked if he could work out with Donald during the offseason. 'He's not ready for that.' Verse added a few other choice comments, causing Donald to playfully respond in a video posted to social media. 'Somebody put the word out,' Donald said. 'I'm looking for you, Verse. I'm looking for you. Come to the house. I just want to talk. I just want to talk, that's it. 'Nothing much, big dog. That's it. Just a little conversation. Put in a little weights. Do a little cardio. You know, the old-man retirement workout. Let's put you through it. See what you can do. I just want to talk. Come on, I just want to talk.' A few days later, the two got together for a workout that Verse will never forget. Donald put Verse through a punishing series of full-body circuit training. 'His wife came in laughing at me — I told her to call the police,' Verse said, adding, 'I tried to lie and say my mom was at my house and I had to go let her in. He told me to give my keys to his management or assistant and that they would go let my mom in. So I wasn't leaving. 'Finished the workout. I'm dead tired, I'm exhausted. I had a plan to go jump in the sauna afterwards, didn't happen. I had plans to watch film, didn't happen. Went home and I didn't work out for another day and a half because I couldn't move my body.' Verse, however, valued the lessons learned. Donald stressed to Verse throughout the exhausting workout that he think about the fourth quarter of games, and the need to be strong when others fall off. 'It was insane to see that's the level it takes to be in the discussions of best defensive player ever or best player ever,' Verse said. 'So that's the level I have to reach on a consecutive basis. That's what I'm striving for now.' Verse is part of an ascending Rams defensive front that includes edge rusher Byron Young and tackles Kobie Turner and Braden Fiske. The Rams added depth by signing free-agent tackle Poona Ford and selecting Michigan edge rusher Josaiah Stewart in the third round of the draft. The confidence in the pass rush led the Rams to stand pat and not add any players to the secondary. A strong pass rush, they reason, will make up for perceived deficiencies on the back end. Verse, 24, is the star of the front. The confident and vocal 2024 first-round pick exceeded expectations last season, recording 4 ½ sacks and 18 quarterback hits while blossoming into one of the league's most dynamic defensive players. Has coach Sean McVay noticed anything different about the 6-foot-4, 250-pound Verse as he prepares for his second season. 'Other than him still talking and you can't hear him shut up ever?' McVay said, laughing, 'I love him. I mean, he is never shutting up, but he's got a relentless energy. 'I think he's understanding how to be able to use that to his advantage.' At the behest of former Florida State and NFL defensive lineman Corey Simon, Verse said he reviewed every play from his rookie season. He focused on the bad plays, as well as the good ones, to find ways to improve. His performance in a 44-42 defeat by the Buffalo Bills stood out. 'They definitely found my weakness in that game,' he said, 'and I definitely made sure that's not a problem anymore.' Verse reported for training camp with a slightly different approach than last year, when he experienced what he described as a rookie mindset. Read more: The ultimate Matthew Stafford backup? Why the Rams love Jimmy Garoppolo 'I was mentally like, 'Oh, I've got to pound it, I've got to pound it. I've got to pound it,'' Verse said. 'This is a grind. It's a long 17-game season. We're trying to go a lot longer than 17 games, so I can't push myself too much harder. 'I was getting after it [this week], but I still was able to take a little step back, realize, 'hey, not every day needs to be the grand finale.'' Defensive coordinator Chris Shula said that with the departure of veteran Michael Hoecht, Verse has stepped up as a leader of the edge rushers. 'He's a guy that really likes to be coached hard,' Shula said. 'And when your best players like to be coached hard, I think that sets the culture for the whole defense.' Verse has made no secret of his goal to become not only one of the NFL's top defensive players, but like Donald, one of the best of all time. For the time being, however, Donald can continue to go through post-retirement workouts on his own. 'He needs to stay away from me,' Verse joked, 'and if the security sees him on the property, they need to take care of him.' Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

‘Avatar: Fire & Ash' Trailer Leaks Online: James Cameron Returns With Fiery Stunner
‘Avatar: Fire & Ash' Trailer Leaks Online: James Cameron Returns With Fiery Stunner

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘Avatar: Fire & Ash' Trailer Leaks Online: James Cameron Returns With Fiery Stunner

The action-packed first trailer for James Cameron's next Avatar fantasy epic has leaked online — and the footage looks spectacular. Disney is rolling out the trailer for Avatar: Fire & Ash 'exclusively' in theaters in front of Fantastic Four: First Steps. And just like with Christopher Nolan's 'only in theaters' trailer for The Odyssey early this month, grainy unauthorized copies have begun to circulate. But give some credit to Disney here — the Fire & Ash trailer is, at least, a bit tougher to find than the trailer Nolan's Universal film was, with copies being taken down as fast as they pop up. More from The Hollywood Reporter Billie Eilish Reveals 3D Collaboration With James Cameron Is in the Works James Cameron to Write Movie Based on Joe Abercrombie Novel 'The Devils' After Finishing 'Avatar: Fire and Ash' Les Dilley, 'Star Wars,' 'Raiders of the Lost Ark' Art Director, Dies at 84 Needless to say, fan reaction has been effusive. Fan site The Sietch of Sci-Fi said the trailer 'looks incredible.' Another raved that the trailer was 'some of the most beautiful footage I've seen all year [and I was] struck by the real sense of doom and rage — fist fights inside of cosmic volcanoes, heroes terrified, huge aerial battles.' While another entertainment writer wrote, '[The trailer] started out as 'meh, more of the same' and ended with 'yup, another billion to James Cameron.'' And a film critic wrote: 'The visuals are (somehow) on another level. There is no doubt in my mind that this WILL be the biggest movie of 2025, and 'epic' doesn't feel like it does this trailer justice.' The trailer introduces two new tribes, the Wind Traders and the fire-hurling Ash People clan. The footage shows (trailer spoilers here — if that's a thing) plenty of intense arial fighting between Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and his Na'vi family, the Ash People clan and, of course, Colonel Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang, now sporting dramatic white, black and red warpaint, suggesting he might have made an alliance with the Ash People). At one point, a captive Kiri (Sigourney Weaver) is warned by a new villain, Varang (Oona Chaplin), 'Your goddess has no dominion here.' Sully — who warns, 'we cannot live like this' — is taken captive and paraded by the occupation forces. And Spider (Jack Champion) seems like he's in jeopardy quite a bit. The first Avatar, released in 2009, became the highest-grossing film of all time, raking in $2.9 billion globally. The first sequel, 2022's The Way of Water, charted as the third-highest-grossing movie of all time (with $2.3 billion), beating expectations and silencing doubters that the Oscar winner could pull off another Avatar blockbuster. At this point, few doubt Cameron's ability to generate massive box office returns with the Avatar franchise and confidence is high that Fire & Ash will deliver when its released as a major holiday tentpole on Dec. 19. While a run time hasn't yet been announced, Cameron has teased that Fire and Ash 'will be a bit longer' than The Way of Water. The last film was three hours and 12 minutes. 'In a nutshell, we had too many great ideas packed into act one of [Way of Water],' Cameron recently said. 'The [film] was moving like a bullet train, and we weren't drilling down enough on character. So I said, 'Guys, we've got to split it.' [Fire & Ash] will actually be a little bit longer than [Way of Water].' Cameron plans five Avatar films and has said he intends to direct them all, as well. Much of the footage, Cameron has said, has already been shot. Avatar 4 is set for Dec. 21, 2029, and Avatar 5 will arrive Dec. 19, 2031. Cameron also hopes to adapt the Charles Pellegrino books Ghosts of Hiroshima and Last Train From Hiroshima as soon as his Avatar schedule permits. The film would focus on the true story of a Japanese man during World War II who survived the atomic blast at Hiroshima as well as the explosion in Nagasaki. If it comes to fruition, it would mark Cameron's first non-Avatar film since 1997's Titanic. Fire & Ash cast members include Zoe Saldaña, Sigourney Weaver, Britain Dalton, Jack Champion, Trinity Jo-Li Bliss, Stephen Lang, Giovanni Ribisi, Edie Falco, Brendan Cowell, Matt Gerald, Kate Winslet, Cliff Curtis, Bailey Bass, Jemaine Clement and David Thewlis. The official description of Fire and Ash: 'Jake and Neytiri's family grapples with grief after Neteyam's death, encountering a new, aggressive Na'vi tribe, the Ash People, who are led by the fiery Varang, as the conflict on Pandora escalates and a new moral focus emerges.' Disney had no comment on the leak. Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Greatest Needle Drops in Film History The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best Solve the daily Crossword

‘South Park' creators reveal battle with network over wild Trump depiction, joke they're ‘terribly sorry'
‘South Park' creators reveal battle with network over wild Trump depiction, joke they're ‘terribly sorry'

New York Post

time17 hours ago

  • New York Post

‘South Park' creators reveal battle with network over wild Trump depiction, joke they're ‘terribly sorry'

'South Park' creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone discussed their controversial season 27 premiere at San Diego Comic-Con on Thursday, revealing a behind-the-scenes battle with network executives over airing a less-than-flattering depiction of President Donald Trump's penis during Wednesday's episode. The duo behind the long-running Comedy Central series spoke alongside a panel of other adult cartoon creators at the event, including 'Beavis and Butt-Head' creator, Mike Judge, and 'Digman!' co-creator, Andy Samberg. When asked if they had been following the reaction to their season 27 premiere by the panel's moderator, Josh Horowitz, Parker jokingly replied, 'We're terribly sorry.' As reported by The Hollywood Reporter, that's about as far as the creators went in responding to the controversy stirred by the episode, although Stone did address Trump more directly later in the discussion when the duo were asked about how they originally met. 'For me and Trey, we met over 'Monty Python,'' he said. 'In this day, when PBS is getting their funding cut, that's how I found 'Monty Python.'' Stone's comments on PBS come on the heels of a congressional vote last week to cut funding for public broadcasting. Trump signed the $9 billion spending cuts package into law on Thursday. 'South Park' creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone revealed they went toe-to-toe with network executives before airing their controversial season 27 premiere at San Diego Comic-Con. Getty Images According to Parker, the show's team finalized the season's premiere episode just shortly before it aired. 'Just three days ago, we were going, 'I don't know if people are going to like this,'' Parker said, adding that the duo were reading news headlines and said to each other, 'Let's put that in there.' Horowitz questioned the 'South Park' creators about whether there were any concerns about the season premiere from higher-ups at Comedy Central, with Parker detailing a discussion with the network about showing Trump's penis on the show. The creators of the long-running Comedy Central series detailed how the executives wanted Trump's penis blurred, as the duo told them, 'No, you're not gonna blur the penis.' REUTERS 'They were like, 'We're gonna blur the penis,' and we're like, 'No, you're not gonna blur the penis,'' Parker responded, adding that the show's team agreed to add eyes to the depiction of the president's penis to make it a character. The White House, however, did not seem thrilled about the season 27 premiere of 'South Park.' White House Assistant Press Secretary Taylor Rogers issued a statement regarding Wednesday's episode to Fox News Digital on Thursday. 'The Left's hypocrisy truly has no end — for years, they have come after South Park for what they labeled as 'offense' [sic] content, but suddenly they are praising the show,' Rogers stated. 'Just like the creators of South Park, the Left has no authentic or original content, which is why their popularity continues to hit record lows. This show hasn't been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention. President Trump has delivered on more promises in just six months than any other president in our country's history — and no fourth-rate show can derail President Trump's hot streak.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store