Thanks for the wonderful thread, Lizzie 🤗
So I utilised June to familiarise myself with the story of June Osborn (what a co-incidence lol). Yes, I am talking about the Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood.
Synopsis/Book blurb:
The Handmaid's Tale is a futuristic dystopian novel by Canadian author Margaret Atwood published in 1985. It is set in a near-future New England in a patriarchal, totalitarian theonomic state known as the Republic of Gilead, which has overthrown the United States government.
The Republic of Gilead offers Offred only one function: to breed. If she deviates, she will, like dissenters, be hanged at the wall or sent out to die slowly of radiation sickness. But even a repressive state cannot obliterate desire - neither Offred's nor that of the two men on which her future hangs.
(Offred means 'Of Fred' because she has been given to Commander Fred Waterford)
I find that the on-screen adaptations almost always stray from the books at least by some degree. It's like when the characters are moulded for the screen from the pages, they take a life of their own, develop a mind of their own and hence never seem to behave the same way as they do in the pages. That does not always have to be a bad thing, but I guess it depends on the POV of the person reading or watching and what they could relate to most in the story. Whether in the book or in its adaptation.
The same happens in the Handmaid's Tale and as I discuss I’ll try not to give major spoilers. Interestingly enough, the book never mentions the protagonist's name even once. There is a line at the end of the first chapter where the handmaids are exchanging their names lying on their beds in the basketball court, the protagonist's name in the series is a deduction from that line. June is Serena's handmaid. She is supposed to bear children for Serana and her husband Fred by.. yeah, the story is that dark. Serena Joy is an old lady in the book but an infertile woman in her 30s in the series (I haven't completed the series by the way, five seasons are too long for me to watch). Commander Waterford is also an old man in his 50s in the books but in his 40s in the series. June is in her 30s in both the versions. Aunt Lydia in the books seemed kinder, maybe because I could only read what Offred remembered of her words and not what she did when she said them. The Aunts trained the handmaids and they carried electric cattle prods to punish their disobedience.
Nick Blaine in the series is way cooler (and braver) than in the book – and he has insane chemistry with on-screen June. They have good chemistry in the book as well but IMO the book version is not nearly as shippable. Nick is Waterford's driver and an "Eye". In the book, Offred suspects him to be an "Eye" while in the series he tells June that he is an “Eye”. So, most main characters look and feel differently in both the versions, but I felt both versions are good in their own ways based on where the storyteller wanted to focus.
Now, coming to world building. Since the Handmaid's Tale is a dystopian novel, the world building is a very important part of it. I find the book version of world building is more consistent than what is shown in the series. The series starts with the feel of the book version of the world but as it progresses it becomes more and more inconsistent. In Gilead, they live in a world where they'll be shot or hanged for one careless mistake but in the series they keep showing breaking of Gilead rules and not getting punished. For example, In the book version, the handmaids exchanged names barely moving their lips in hushed voices in the darkness of the night from their beds when the Aunts were not looking. In the series, they exchanged names in broad daylight in a shopping centre in front of Guardians who carried machine guns – the scene looked ridiculous because Gilead is supposed to be a suffocatingly strict regime, especially for women (seen through the eyes of handmaids) and for LGBTQAI+ community. Apparantly Atwood’s dystopian novel is inspired from real events and she had a file of newspaper clippings for the same.
The series is definitely darker than the book since it is longer and goes beyond the plot of the book. I left the series around the starting of season three (of course I skipped some part too). Overall it was worth reading and watching as it sheds light on the rights and freedom that people get at present yet are taken for granted, and what more would take to build a better and more equitable society.
Fancast: I don’t fancast before reading a book, maybe afterwards. I try to understand the author’s version of the characters first. But if I have to fancast for Handmaid’s Tale from the Indian entertainment industry (because HW has already casted its version 😅) then: Jennifer Winget for June/Offred, Barun Sobti for Luke Bankole, Shaheer Sheikh for Nick Blaine, Rupal Patel for Aunt Lydia, Manoj Bajpayee for Commander Waterford and Ratna Pathak for Serena Joy.
Edited by DreamOfEndless - 4 months ago
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