The Last of Us Episode 3 Is a TV Moment We'll Never Forget
By STUDY CARE( KAJEM SHAIKH) PUBLISHED
Following the shocking
ending to The Last of Us’s second episode, it feels like we’ve finally
completed the tutorial section of the new HBO series's video game adaptation. We know
what all the buttons do—and how the infected work—so now the entire world's map
is available to explore. That’s a good thing, because our hero, Joel (Pedro Pascal), must help Ellie
(Bella Ramsey) reach the Firefly oasis that she believes is somewhere
out there, still trying to find a cure.
The duo is now 10
miles west of Boston—which is info we receive from a very helpful location stamp at the start of
the third episode—and tensions are high after losing Tess to the
infected.
“I was thinking
about what happened and nobody made you go along with this plan,” Ellie
tells Joel. “You needed a
truck battery or whatever, and you made a choice. So don’t blame me for
something that isn’t my fault.” Yeah Joel, remember when you thought
that this was all just a side quest for the car battery you needed to find your
brother? Well, welcome to the main game now.
At an abandoned convenience store, Ellie finds an infected guy still alive—but crushed under heavy concrete. He makes those weird, velociraptor-like noises that infected humans make in this world, displaying some truly impressive work from the show’s makeup and prosthetics team. Toad from Mario suddenly has some major competition when it comes to guys with mushroom heads.
Next, Joel and Ellie find
something even worse: a mass grave of people, all of whom the army didn’t let enter a quarantine zone—because
they either had a chance of being infected, or the QZ was just too full.
Apparently, the soldiers would just execute these people en masse so that they
couldn’t turn. Flashing back
to 2003, I was worried that we were about to witness the horrible event
take place. Instead, we meet Nick
Offerman, playing a survivalist named Bill. With everyone in the town now gone, Bill pops
out of a secret bunker he built below his house stacked with guns, barrels of sulfuric acid,
and a stack of security camera feeds. He loots the gas station for oil,
steals a massive number of supplies from Home Depot, and even jacks his
neighbor’s boat. Then, he sets up a bunch of booby traps and—as he eats his
dinner—watches them go to work on some unlucky infected humans. “It doesn’t get old,” he says
to himself.
Bill lives
infection-free in this secluded fortress town for nearly four years, until another person named Frank
(Murray Bartlett), from the Baltimore QZ, stumbles into one of his
traps. Frank tells him that the quarantine zone is completely gone, and Bill
lets him out of a hole after testing to see if he’s infected.
Begrudgingly, Bill lets him inside and offers a
shower, a new set of clothes, and a home-cooked meal. Frank is in heaven. He thanks him with a song on the
piano... but he’s not very good. Bill shows him up by playing “Long Long Time” by Linda
Ronstadt, before revealing to Frank that he’s gay. Good news: Frank says, “I know,” and the two
tear up as they kiss. In an interview with TV Insider, showrunner Craig Mazin
revealed that he cast Offerman because he believed that “funny people have soul,” and “a connection that I think is
even stronger to what it means to be human.” Nice job, Mazin.
You were
totally right.
Frank never leaves. The two of them live together for another three years before he starts to truly feel the isolation of their living situation. He wants to spruce up the town and play a little Sims in real life, but Bill reminds him that “we will never have friends, because there are no friends to be had.” Cut to: Joel and Tess having dinner with them outside. Timeline-wise, it’s only been roughly seven years since we flashed-back to 2003, so I’m guessing this scene takes place somewhere in 2010—still over a decade before our current journey with Joel and Ellie.
Tess thanks the couple
for the beautiful meal, but Bill is still on edge.
Joel talks some business and
offers up some bartering deals. They trade a gun for some strawberry seeds.
Later, Frank and Bill eat strawberries and giggle in delight. “I was never afraid before you
showed up,” Bill tells Frank. Oh my god, stop you two! Love?! During the
apocalypse?! I’m going to
cry at the mushroom zombie show.
The couple grows old
together in their little town, all to themselves, until Frank falls ill.
He
plans one final day with Bill, and it’s set to the incredibly recognizable “On the Nature of Daylight”
by Max Richter. It's a song heavily used in films including Arrival, Stranger
Than Fiction, Shutter Island, Jiro Dreams of Sushi, and
many more. Why? Because it works wonders on those tear ducts. Frank and
Bill crush up enough sleeping pills to end their lives together—and go to sleep
for one last time.
When Joel and Ellie
finally arrive in present day (well, August 2023), there’s a key left for them
and a hand-written note. “I
used to hate the world and I was happy when everyone died, but I was wrong
because there was one person worth saving,” Bill wrote. “That’s why men like you and me are
here.
We have a job to do, and God help any motherfuckers who stand in our
way.”
The weight of three
significant losses in his life finally bears down on Joel, and he takes a
moment for himself outside. Finding Bill’s car in the garage, he prepares to set out and
look for his brother Tommy once again. Tommy was a former Firefly,
Joel
mentions, so it’s possible that he knows where this doctor outpost is located.
I want to take this time to bring up the option that they could just stay here
forever and be safe—but I know that it’s not in the cards for these two. Even though, you know, the town Bill
made kept two people safe for nearly two decades.
Well, it’s a road trip
now, folks. Let’s hope the infected can’t drive cars.
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