Sabrina’s rebellion is explicitly feminist. She doesn't just want to be a witch; she wants to be the Witch—an equal. By Season 3, she literally storms Hell to overthrow Lucifer not because she is evil, but because Satan is a "deadbeat dad."

In a shocking turn, the show kills its protagonist—not once, but twice. Sabrina Spellman splits herself into two entities (Sabrina Morningstar, Queen of Hell, and Sabrina Spellman, the witch). In the final battle against the Eldritch Terror "The Void," Sabrina Morningstar dies in her father’s arms. The remaining Sabrina sacrifices herself to save her friends, freezing herself in a timeless stone while her mortal body dies of hypothermia.

The show plays its occultism terrifyingly straight. The witches do not worship the devil ironically; they baptize in blood, pray in Latin, and view Judas as a hero for betraying Christ. In Part 2, Sabrina literally goes to court in Hell (a bureaucratic nightmare of flesh and flame) to plead for her mortal boyfriend’s soul.

If you love slow-burn horror, campy dialogue, and Kiernan Shipka delivering monologues while wearing crown thorns, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina is essential viewing. Just don’t expect a happy ending. Witches don't get those.