Living… in Rosewood with her mother. Ashley is always busy at work so Hanna basically has the house to herself. Despite the fact that her mother makes a ton of money and Hanna would never want for anything, she adopted many bad habits when she became popular, including shoplifting.
Just another secret for someone to expose! Profession… sophomore at Rosewood Academy and resident Queen Bee. Ever since she lost the weight, Hanna became the popular girl at Rosewood, along with her sidekick and partner-in-crime sometimes literally , Mona.
Relationship Status… single, but interested in Sean Ackard. Challenge… keeping her secrets and maintaining her popularity, maybe not in that order. Hanna, along with her friends, has accumulated many secrets. Personality… snobby, outspoken, and funny. Hanna is rude and standoffish to almost everyone she meets, perhaps because she became so used to seeing the worst in people when she was overweight. Hanna is basically never what she seems to be — smart when she seems dumb, kind when she seems rude, rebellious when she just wants and needs love and attention.
But after Alison and Aria caught Aria's father cheating on her mom with his student, Alison constantly threatened Aria with the secret. After Alison mysteriously disappears, the truth becomes impossible to uncover. Now that Hanna, Spencer, Emily, and Aria are rid of "A," the stalker who terrorized them for months, they're free to go back to their pretty little lives. Too bad there's a new A in town. And this A refuses to let them forget about Rosewood's darkest secret: the murder of their best friend Alison DiLaurentis.
The girls dig deeper for the truth—but someone wants to bury them alive. For years scandal has rocked Rosewood, Pennsylvania—and high school seniors Aria, Emily, Hanna, and Spencer have always been at the center of the drama.
They've lost friends, been targeted by a ruthless stalker named A, and narrowly escaped death. And it's not over yet. Aria's love life is on the fritz. Emily's exploring her wild side. Hanna's kissing the enemy. And someone from Spencer's past—someone she never thought she'd see again—is back to haunt her. But none of that compares to what happened last spring break. It's their darkest secret yet and guess who found out? Study now. See Answer.
Best Answer. Study guides. Write your answer Related questions. Who does Hanna see in the hospital in Pretty Little Liars? What are the girls' names on Pretty Little Liars? Who is Iris in the Pretty Little Liars series? Who are Alison's real best friends in Pretty Little Liars? Who are the girls on the covers of the Pretty Little Liars books? Is alison really dead on pretty little liars? Who does Alison meet in the metal hospital in Pretty Little Liars?
What was your favorite part of Pretty Little Liars from the book? Who burned Alison in the end of Pretty Little Liars? What is Hanna's secret on the Pretty Little Liars show? Who copied Alison's bracelet in Pretty Little Liars? Why is Alison texting in Pretty Little Liars? What happens in Pretty Little Liars book 6?
What is the theme of Pretty Little Liars it has to be in sentences? People also asked. Alison picked out insecurities in her friends so she could exert control over them, and it was never more noticeable than in how she treated Hanna over the years. She made her feel fat and ugly, regardless of her actual appearance. Is that the work of a friend? As if it wasn't bad enough that Alison frequently mocked Hanna and made her feel inferior, she openly encouraged Hanna to have an eating disorder.
She would tell Hanna not to eat and tell her it was "for her own good. She pretended to do it under the guise of "caring" for Hanna, but in reality, she just wanted to control her even more. Even worse, in another flashback, it's shown that at one point Alison even offered to help Hanna take care of binging episodes. She doesn't explicitly say it, but Alison strongly implies she will teach Hanna how to purge after she binge eats.
They always say it's a tricky line to walk when you start to get close to someone you idolize. That was certainly true with Hanna and Alison. For much of Hanna's youth, she tried to mold herself into an Alison clone. She mimicked her looks, her habits, and even her attitude.
She wanted what Alison had in terms of confidence and popularity. As such, it made Hanna extra bitter toward Alison when she realized she spent so much time trying to be someone else instead of finding her own identity.
Mona as "A" hit Hanna with an SUV back on season one, "A" fakes Toby's death with a crashed motorcycle on season three, "A" tries to run over Emily, Aria, and Hanna with Mona's car on season four, and we also learn on season four that "A" has been using a private plane. But the most unbelievable "A" act involving a vehicle is perhaps the car crash in Emily's living room on season four, episode seven, "Crash and Burn, Girl! At the very end of this episode, a car drives directly into Emily's living room, where her mom is talking on the phone.
Emily's mom manages to dive out of the way and avoid getting hurt, but the front of her house and the car are completely damaged. But we learn on the next episode that whoever was driving somehow escaped the car so quickly after the accident that Emily and her mother didn't see who they were. We later find out that the driver is "A," but it is never explained how "A" managed to crash a car into a house, survive that crash without injury, and flee the car so quickly.
During season three, viewers were introduced to Ezra's high-school girlfriend Maggie and her 7-year-old son Malcolm, who was believed to be Ezra's child. Maggie got pregnant while dating Ezra, and his mother paid Maggie to disappear to avoid Ezra having to care for a child as a teenager. Ezra is furious when he finds out about this because he never knew he had a child or that his mother paid Maggie off.
Maggie and Malcolm are a huge part of season three and the first half of season four. But after Maggie gets a job offer that would require moving Malcolm away, Ezra takes a paternity test in the hopes of taking Maggie to court to get custody of Malcolm. But during season four, episode 10, "The Mirror Has Three Faces," the results of the paternity test prove that Ezra isn't actually Malcolm's father, making the multiple-season plotline a very long waste of time.
Season four, episode 11, "Bring Down the Hoe," combined the show's usual revelations and suspense with a hoedown-style dance. The fact that Rosewood High was even having a hoedown was a bit of a stretch seeing as the high-class town typically throws formal events. But for some reason, the school threw a country dance that the liars — and the rest of the school — willingly attend. Once everyone is at the dance, all of the liars get pulled away into dramatic missions centered on their relationships or "A.
Hanna meets Travis at the dance, and he reveals that he saw who killed Detective Darren Wilden and can testify to clear Hanna's mother's name. Meanwhile, Emily and Spencer see Red Coat this season's iteration of "A" and borrow a hayride truck to try and chase her down. All of this is pretty much standard for a "Pretty Little Liars" school-dance episode until Aria and her date, Jake, actually start dancing. Aria and Jake apparently know how to do an entire country line-dance routine — and so do all of the other students from the Northeastern town — and viewers got to spend almost two full minutes watching them.
That's two full minutes set aside for a country dance routine rather than for, say, any kind of explanation about the whole bee thing. This is already a bit of an odd plotline — especially since Spencer opening an "A" magic box note becomes a clunky way to show that she apparently knows how to do magic tricks, which she never does or brings up again.
Why was "A" sending them to a magic show in Ravenswood, a town that suddenly became important this season? Maybe to promote the spin-off TV series "Ravenswood" that aired around the same time as this season.
While Hanna, Spencer, and Emily watch Aria "disappear" onstage as part of the magic act, Emily is the one who actually goes missing. And not only does "A" manage to kidnap Emily, but also they get Emily into a coffin that was waiting at a nearby sawmill, and send her down a conveyor belt moving toward a giant, rotating saw.
Emily is rescued, and the liars never ask how she ended up in the coffin. It's never explained how "A" actually managed to do all of this without Emily noticing or crying out, or running away. When Hanna starts focusing more on the latest mystery in the liars' lives — finding out who was actually buried at Ali's funeral — she realizes that someone switched Ali's dental records to match the teeth of the dead girl.
On season four, episode 17, "Bite Your Tongue," Hanna makes a dentist appointment so she can go through the city's dental files, but "A" has other plans. They put Hanna under anesthesia and perform dental surgery on her to leave a message inside her tooth. Perhaps the most unbelievable part is that the girls are actually able to find and read the tooth message. Viewers have to suspend a lot of disbelief here, starting with the fact that "A" knows enough about dental surgery to be able to leave a note in someone's tooth.
A note that is so minuscule tooth-sized! It feels jarringly out of place, has odd out-of-character moments, and earned its place on Screenrant's list of the worst episodes of "Pretty Little Liars.
After spending several nights not sleeping — thanks to the pills she's been taking — Spencer apparently imagines her world as a noir-style film from the s that doesn't quite line up with reality.
Although this episode helps the audience see how seriously Spencer's drug use is affecting her, it feels unnecessary. It's also odd that an episode where nothing happens in the real world would take place at the end of such a suspenseful season. When Ali's mom puts together a bridal fashion show during season four, episode 23, "Unbridled," the liars volunteer to be models and seize the opportunity to search the DiLaurentis' house for clues.
But despite being considered the smartest liar, Spencer was apparently incapable of realizing the dress she wore for the fashion show had a corset with bones sewn into it. Corsets are usually a bit uncomfortable to put on, so presumably one with finger bones sewn in would be outright painful.
However, Spencer doesn't notice at all until she takes it off in front of the other liars. How she managed to put the corset on without ever looking at it and seeing the bones is never explained or even questioned by any of the other girls.
At this point, they've already randomly found a necklace made of teeth, so I suppose they've just accepted that sometimes they'll be finding random body parts courtesy of "A. There are two things that stand out about the night Ali went missing: She met with an absurd number of people and she wore a bright-yellow shirt that even the actress who played Ali hated.
For several seasons, viewers wondered why no one except Spencer woke up earlier to realize Ali was missing. On the season four finale, "'A' Is for Answers," the girls find out they slept through that night because Ali actually drugged them all with medication she stole from her mother. Since Spencer had been taking upper pills at the time, the sedative didn't work properly on her, which explains why she was the only one who woke up during the night.
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