The Testaments on Disney+ Serves a Dark, Youth‑Centred Continuation of The Handmaid’s Tale
Bruce Miller returns as showrunner to bring Margaret Atwood’s 2019 novel The Testaments to the screen, positioning it as a direct sequel to the acclaimed series The Handmaid’s Tale. The new eight‑part drama, now streaming on Disney+, shifts the narrative focus to the next generation of women living under Gilead’s regime.
While the series adopts a lighter, almost YA‑ish tone compared with its predecessor, the underlying brutality remains unmistakable. Viewers are confronted with “bloody punishments, rotting corpses on gibbets and relentless indoctrination,” now filtered through the eyes of teenage protagonists.
The visual palette expands beyond the iconic red, white and green of the original. Young girls of privileged status appear in pink dresses and cloaks, older students—dubbed “Plums”—wear purple headpieces that are more stylish than the oppressive bonnets of the handmaids, and menstruating women are marked by a teal hue, signaling a grim rite of passage.
Central to the story is Agnes (Chase Infiniti), the adopted daughter of Commander MacKenzie and the secret first child of June/Offred. Her journey intertwines with that of Daisy (Lucy Halliday), a “Pearl Girl” recruited from outside Gilead, whose mysterious background fuels the series’ central mystery.
Ann Dowd reprises Aunt Lydia, now presiding over an elite preparatory school where she tasks Agnes with mentoring Daisy. Their evolving relationship, alongside flashbacks that flesh out Aunt Lydia’s own history, anchors the ten‑episode arc.
Beyond the personal dramas, the series continues to examine groupthink, systemic corruption and the subjugation of women. Scenes such as Agnes kneeling before her father in newly‑colored robes starkly echo real‑world teenage experiences of power dynamics, albeit in a far more visceral setting.
Occasional moments of dark humour provide brief relief, but the overarching message remains clear: the mechanisms of oppression are timeless, and the fight for autonomy persists across generations.
The Testaments is now available on Disney+, offering both fans of the original series and newcomers a stark reminder of how dystopian fiction mirrors historical and contemporary tyrannies.