These 7 Helena moments from Unspeakable Sins will make you realise how much she hated Claudio

Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix
Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix

Helena may have started as a quiet, restrained personality in Unspeakable Sins, but toward the end, she had become one of the most emotionally complex and quietly powerful characters. Her hatred toward Claudio was not loud or explosive. In fact, it had developed slowly underground through years of control, emotional abuse, and fear.

But as the episodes unfold, viewers see this hatred rise to the surface through increasingly clever, chilling, unforgettable ways. Helena wants more than to escape Claudio; she wants to eliminate everything he represents in her existence.

These seven moments from Unspeakable Sins cemented just how much Helena despised Claudio and had viewers glued to the edge of their seats watching her undo him.


These 7 Helena moments from Unspeakable Sins will make you realise how much she hated Claudio

1. Enduring Claudio’s abuse and control (Episode 1 - The Trap)

Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix
Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix

From the very beginning, the hate felt by Helena for Claudio espouses years of manipulation, gaslighting, and violence. In episode 1, entitled The Trap, Claudio is seen tracking her phone, controlling her movements, and isolating her emotionally. Helena hardly has space to breathe. While she doesn’t outright struggle against it, her silence and expressions betray an ever-growing rage.

This outlook speaks about how she will eventually retaliate against him. It is not merely about escaping him, but about punishing him.


2. Beginning the affair with Iván as a form of rebellion (Episode 2 - The Reunion)

Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix
Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix

Helena is in episode 2: The Reunion, starting her affair with Iván. But without passion, there is resistance. To submit to Iván's affections was the first act in active rebellion against Claudio. She wants to seek solace in someone whom Claudio doesn't control, and with every intimacy shared with Iván, it is an obscene gesture to her husband's domination.

With this rebellious act, it is perfectly clear: she has been disgusted and emotionally numb toward Claudio for quite a while to love him.


3. Planning the hidden sex tape to blackmail Claudio (Episode 3 - Desperation)

Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix
Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix

Helena's anger becomes action in Desperation. She and Iván are going to shoot themselves together so they can blackmail Claudio, and hopefully, finally intimidate him into stepping aside. It's a dangerous plan, but Helena wants her freedom back so badly. What is most interesting is that she suddenly gets so cold and determined, and there is no fear. She's not afraid anymore; she's furious.

This scheme also illustrates how much Claudio has derailed her. The woman who had once played fair now employs his own dirty methods against him. The hatred has escalated beyond quiet suffering; it's a strategy for vengeance.

4. Claudio discovers the camera and reasserts control (Episode 4 - Under Suspicion)

Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix
Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix

In Under Suspicion, events take a sinister turn when Claudio discovers the secret camera. Far from backing down, he becomes more menacing. Helena understands she can't outwit him so easily, and for an instant, terror creeps back. But it is not the same anymore. She is no longer the same helpless woman.

Her silence becomes cold stares and a refusal to respond. Even in terror, she doesn't bat an eyelid. This scene reminds us that, occasionally, hate does not scream. It observes, waits, and plots. Helena is moving closer to committing the unthinkable.


5. Helena becomes the prime suspect after Claudio vanishes (Episode 5 - Doubts)

Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix
Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix

In Doubts, Claudio is gone, and everyone's attention is on Helena. What's surprising is how unflappable she is. While everyone else is freaking out, she says nothing, and stays calm, unruffled, and impassive. Her feelings don't fit someone who's just lost a husband, and that's the whole thing. She isn't mourning because she never loved Claudio.

Her silence is telling. It's not so much about keeping a secret. It's about being finally free. The audience starts to guess what she's done, and the series skillfully ramps up the tension. This is Helena's moment of peace, and it's served with a smile that speaks louder than words ever could.


6. Confronting Claudio face‑to‑face without fear (Episode 7 – The Prosecutor’s Fall)

Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix
Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix

In The Prosecutor's Fall, Helena finally confronts Claudio. For the first time, she meets his gaze, her voice firm and eyes unclouded, no shaking, no weeping. She describes how much he tormented her, how he robbed her of herself, and how years of domination only increased her loathing.

Claudio's ultimatums ricochet off her now. She stands tall, unshackled, and not fearful. This encounter is not a collapse. It's an awakening, revealing a woman who has reclaimed her strength, finally. It is one of the most definitive indicators of abiding hatred transmuted into power.


7. The hidden camera in L.A. reveals lingering trauma (Episode 18 - New Life)

Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix
Unspeakable Sins (2025) | Image Source: Netflix

In New Life, Helena and Iván are on the run in Los Angeles. For a brief moment, it looks like they've found tranquility. But of course, then another hidden camera pops up, and someone is still watching her. Helena's smile disappears, and we see the fear creeping back in. Claudio may be dead, but what he did has followed her. This final shot isn't about hate, it's about what hate turned her into.

She's free, but she can never uncoil. The series concludes with a chilling reminder: even when the abuser is dead, the wounds linger. Helena's hate defined her, but so did the trauma.


Helena's rebels slowly, while Unspeakable Sins carries many years of silent suffering. Her hatred for Claudio was not only emotional but also strategic, purposeful, and, in the end, lethal. Every moment watched by the audience was another separate piece of Helena undergoing a metamorphosis, from a controlled wife into a woman reclaiming power on her own terms.

Even with Claudio's death, the marks of his abuse linger on, teaching us how sometimes freedom is dearly priced. She did not simply hate Claudio. She outsmarted him, and in doing so, she became the most memorable force in the show.

Edited by Debanjana