The film maps hierarchical control through everyday domestic rituals: meal preparation, who sits where, who answers a visitor at the door. These micro-practices accumulate into macro-power. The real stakes are not a single quarrel but the slow normalization of a new order where resentment becomes routine and small injustices ossify. The Second Wife interrogates the gendered economy in which marriage functions as both shelter and cage. Financial dependency, reputation management, and reproductive expectations are woven into the characters’ choices. The new wife’s compromises are not merely personal failures but choices shaped by limited options. The film refuses simplistic sympathy; it shows how moral clarity is compromised by survival.