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‘The Last Of Us' Season 2, Episode 6 Recap And Review: Bizarre Changes Ruin A Good Episode

‘The Last Of Us' Season 2, Episode 6 Recap And Review: Bizarre Changes Ruin A Good Episode

Forbes19-05-2025

The Last Of Us
Credit: HBO
At last, we get the flashbacks. Not interspersed with the rest of the story, but all at once in a single episode that slams hard on the brakes after last week's intense finish and gives everyone a moment to breathe before the big Season 2 finale next week. Unsurprisingly, I have mixed feelings about all of this. Spoilers ahead.
For the most part, this was a really great episode, in no small part because it plucked some of my very favorite moments from The Last Of Us Part II and put them to screen. The museum scene, in particular, was handled really well here.
I complained in the Season 2 premiere that the scene with Joel singing 'Future Days' not being present was a mistake, and I'm going to stand by that complaint now. I'm glad we get that scene in this episode, but I think it still would have been better to include it in the first episode of the season, and then have the rest of the stuff with the guitar and birthday in this episode. For one thing, last week's episode – when Ellie starts playing that song in the theater – would have landed harder. But also, I don't know that all of these flashbacks needed to be cordoned off into a single episode like this. More on that in a second.
The Last Of Us
Credit: HBO
The episode essentially gets us through all the intervening years between when Joel and Ellie come to Jackson and the present. It does this by going from one birthday to the next. Early on, they're doing okay. The museum trip is lighthearted and honestly just such a beautiful moment between these two. It kind of makes you wish they hadn't gone and killed off Joel so that we could keep seeing their relationship grow and mature over the years.
Then the problem years come. Ellie starts acting out. She starts fooling around with girls, something Joel isn't prepared for on multiple levels. She gets a tattoo to cover her bite mark. She tries to move into the garage and Joel doesn't let her – but later relents and helps her make the move after he hooks up power and makes some other upgrades.
Things soften a bit when he gives her the guitar the following year and sings her the song (which I can't help but to compare to the video game version, which is better). But the last birthday is where everything falls apart, and this is all new content. None of this was in the game.
The Last Of Us
Credit: HBO
When Joel finally allows Ellie to go on patrol, he brings her with him. They play it safe. This annoys her. When they're contacted on the radio to go help with some infected, they find Eugene hiding out in the woods. He's been bitten. Joel wants to kill him then and there, but Eugene begs him not to. He wants to go talk to his wife, Gail, before he dies. There are things he needs to say – in person – before he kicks the bucket. Ellie checks him and tells Joel he still has hours before he turns. They can make it back in time. So Joel reluctantly agrees and tells Ellie to go get the horses and meet them up the trail.
'I promise,' he tells her, just like he told her at the end of Season 1 after the Firefly massacre. This is probably something he shouldn't have said, since he clearly had no intention of keeping said promise. He takes Eugene to a nice view and kills him and then Ellie shows up and she's understandably unhappy. When they return to Jackson, Joel feeds Gail a line of BS that's still at least comforting. Ellie is angry enough at this point, having realized that he almost certainly lied to her about the Fireflies also, that she spills the beans, outing Joel and his lie about Eugene. And so begins the fracturing of their relationship. This is why she's so upset in the premiere.
I'll save what bothers me about this whole segment for a moment and move on to the final scene. This takes place the night of the dance when previously we saw Joe on the porch and Ellie march past him without a word. Only we see more this time. Ellie comes out to the porch and asks Joel if he lied about the Fireflies. She tells him if he lies again, they're finished. So he tells her the truth. She asks if they could have made a cure, and he nods. She tells him that she doesn't know if she can ever forgive him . . . 'But I'd really like to try,' she says. And they have a nice, heartfelt moment. And we realize that not long after this, Joel will die and these are, in fact, their last moments together.
Okay, so my problem with the Eugene scene is that it just doesn't work. Joel didn't need to kill him like that and if he really did need to kill him, he should have done it without promising Ellie something else. Meanwhile, if he was prepared to lie to her, why not just lie again and tell her started to turn? Joel doesn't lie when it's convenient, apparently, only when it's used to make him look bad.
And boy does this entire flashback make him look bad. When Joel lies to Ellie about the Fireflies, it's a profound moment, a major choice – and something Ellie sees through at the time, to some degree, but accepts because she loves him. It's not a flippant little lie to shoe her away. But this time, with Eugene, it really is. She's just inconveniently there when he has to do what he thinks is necessary, so he lies to her without batting an eye. Are w just supposed to accept that Joel is a chronic liar now? All of this cheapens the moment at the end of Season 1, cheapens the big lie, makes it less profound, makes Joel look like a scumbag for no reason. None of this even needed to exist in the first place. Just have a scene where Joel admits to Ellie that he lied and have Ellie really upset about it. You don't need Eugene or Gail or extra lies on top. The story is weaker for these additions.
The Last Of Us
Credit: HBO
Perhaps even worse than the Eugene lie is what comes next.
I have a few problems with the porch scene. The first is Joel just admitting that they could have come up with a cure. This wasn't in the game, and here it feels like yet another way to make Joel look pathetic. I'm glad he told her that he did what he did because he loved her. I'm glad that he told her she won't be able to understand that until she has a child of her own. All of this is true. But why say the Fireflies could have made the cure when that was never 100% guaranteed? Quite the contrary. Even a rudimentary understanding of medicine and vaccines suggests that they would not have been able to come up with a cure. And all that's beside the point. Ellie was mad because she felt betrayed, like her purpose was taken away, she was robbed of her agency, and the likelihood of a cure doesn't figure into in any of that.
So why not just tell her this? Why not tell her that it was a bad gamble. That they were betting her life and whatever potential use her blood and DNA might have been in the future on a really risky, really arrogant crapshoot? Or just have him lie more since you're already painting him as this terrible liar. All of this just makes Joel look bad, both because he can't defend his actions with more conviction, and because it reinforces the idea that the Fireflies were somehow in the right.
So alongside these great heartfelt, emotional beats we get Joel looking like a lying prick and then just folding and telling Ellie that the Fireflies were right and he was wrong, she can go on living with the guilt she's been carrying for not dying as a child-sacrifice to the hubris and folly of foolish men. It's just a very frustrating light to cast Joel in and he deserves better.
Second, what in Odin's name are they doing moving this scene so far ahead in the story? This is a conversation we don't see until the very, very end of the game. Now we're getting the Future Days song that effectively opens the game, the museum sequence and the final scene all at once in a single episode. It's just . . . kind of baffling and infuriating. The poignancy of this scene, following all the horrors Ellie endures (and causes), is impossible to overstate.
It's a bit like revealing Abby's motives in Episode 2, rather than allowing viewers to wonder and only set things out much later, robbing us of any surprise and leaving us without this later revelation to grapple with (now we get it in a villain monologue!). But frankly, this is much worse. I'm left scratching my head in disbelief. There's simply no way that they can end the show better than this scene (and the very brief moments after).
Finally, the game's version of the scene is far better overall. Ellie doesn't threaten Joel. Her approach is less aggressive, more mature and measured. When he tells her he'd do it again, she accepts that. She gets it. Their interactions feel natural. Joel is less weepy and more in-character. The one moment where he loses his composure hits really hard because Joel is inherently a very gruff, emotionally closed-off person. When he does break, we notice.
Meanwhile, at no point does Ellie ask him about the cure. He never admits that it would have worked. It's all so much more subtle with more understated writing, and better, more nuanced performances. All the problems with this scene were created by the show's writers when they had a perfectly good scene already (to put at the end where it belongs).
What did you think of Episode 6? Let me know on Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook. Also be sure to subscribe to my YouTube channel and follow me here on this blog. Sign up for my newsletter for more reviews and commentary on entertainment and culture.

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THE LIBRARIANS: THE NEXT CHAPTER Recap: (S01E03) And the Ghost Train
THE LIBRARIANS: THE NEXT CHAPTER Recap: (S01E03) And the Ghost Train

Geek Girl Authority

time34 minutes ago

  • Geek Girl Authority

THE LIBRARIANS: THE NEXT CHAPTER Recap: (S01E03) And the Ghost Train

Memory and time travel are always tricky things to manage. On The Librarians: The Next Chapter, 'And the Ghost Train,' Vikram (Callum McGowan) and Connor (Bluey Robinson) get front row seats to a dictator's ambitious attempt to control time to ensure he holds power forever. Two lovers are caught up in his plan, and Vikram sees himself losing Anya in their plight. RELATED: Catch up with our recap of the last episode of The Librarians: The Next Chapter , 'And the Dance of Doom!' Meanwhile, Lysa (Olivia Ross) seizes an opportunity to learn more about her connection to Anya. Mrs. Astolat (Caroline Loncq) is an unseen presence this time out, but Charlie (Jessica Green) reveals her anxiety over blowing her chance to be a Guardian. Our Librarians team members may have questions and insecurities, but do they ever know how to rise to the occasion. Photograph by Aleksandar Letic The Librarians: The Next Chapter, 'And the Ghost Train' Connor and Lysa move equipment into Vikram's study as he and Charlie play a game of 'Real or Not Real' to test his knowledge of major figures from the past 200 years. Charlie's impressed that Connor and Lysa are working together. She mentions to Vikram that Connor and Lysa celebrated their last success by going out together without inviting Charlie or Vikram. Vikram asks if Charlie's feeling left out. Charlie insists she's only concerned that the team isn't gelling and could make mistakes, which may endanger Vikram. Lysa and Connor return with the next-to-last of the boxes. Connor asks Charlie to open a magic door to Caucasylvia, a landlocked republic in central eastern Europe. He wants to take Vikram on a history lesson to investigate a story about a missing king. Charlie insists on going with them, but Lysa tells her to let the boys go alone and invites her to brunch instead. Caught off guard, Charlie agrees. Trains and Fairies Upon arriving in Caucasylvia, Connor gives Vikram a quick explanation of Cold War tactics. They are in a warehouse of trains. Connor points out the closest one and calls it the Royal Train of King Kavod III (Radivoje Bukvić). Boarding the train, Connor tells Vikram that Kavod disappeared aboard this train exactly 48 years ago to the day and hour. Connor says the king's disappearance remains unsolved to this day. Picking up a small figurine, he mentions there was a rumor of an evil fairy. He tosses the fairy figurine to Vikram, who finds it intriguing. They move onto the next train car, passing a clock showing the time, 4:55. RELATED: Read our Leverage: Redemption recaps At a restaurant, Lysa asks Charlie about the portrait of Anya. Charlie tells her that Anya is Lysa's ancestor from Vikram's time. Lysa's shocked to learn that Vikram's in love with Anya. Charlie realizes that Lysa only invited her out to question her about Anya. Their phones ping at that moment with a message from Mrs. Astolat asking them to see her at the Annex ASAP. Foregoing their meals, they head out immediately. Ghost Train As Connor tells Vikram about Kavod's paranoia, Vikram examines the figurine closely and concludes it's actually a petrified time sprite. The clock in this train car begins to turn backward to 4:17. Suddenly, the train car is full of ghostly figures, dining at the tables, dressed in clothes and uniforms of a different era. The train begins to move. Lysa and Charlie return to the Annex and find a sticky note from Mrs. Astolat directing them to check the pendulum. Charlie calls Vikram to report that the pendulum is tracking a moving magical artifact. Vikram shares that it's a train. RELATED: 5 Great Books About Libraries and Librarians Vikram theorizes that the train is reenacting the king's disappearance thanks to the release of magic from the well. 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Shaking her hand, the king thanks the woman, a member of the British Intelligence Agency, for doing this job for him. She pulls her hand away, admitting that everyone has their price. Connor wonders how they could go from meeting for the first time to kissing to her shooting him in such a short time. Vikram steps to the doorway of the other car, where she gives her papers to the bodyguards. Back in the primary train car, she tells Kavod he should confirm the item's authenticity. Kavod unwraps an item, revealing a living time sprite in a glass cylinder. If the artifact she brought him is genuine, it will affect the sprite. RELATED: TV Review: Leverage: Redemption Season 3 Kavod opens the cylinder slightly, and the sprite petrifies. He is ecstatic. Connor asks Vikram if there's anything they can do for the sprite. Vikram says the Nectar of Niobe can reverse the effect, but he doesn't have any on him. Meanwhile, Kavod explains to the woman that the artifact will help him rule forever. Connor tells Vikram they need to know what is in the briefcase. The Librarians: The Next Chapter – Photograph by Aleksandar Letic Falling Into Place Just then, a woman screams as she falls off the train's roof. Vikram heads to to roof access. He and Connor climb up. There's another clock on the roof. This one shows the time is 5:17. They hear a chime, and the minute hand jumps back to 5:12. Vikram notes that when the chime rang, the spirit field phased out momentarily. Ahead of them, the woman climbs onto the train's roof. She mutters, 'Cufflinks,' over and over. Falling to her hands and knees, she rolls off the roof, screaming. She lands safely and stands up, looking regretfully at the passing train. Vikram is fascinated and insists they learn who she is. He tells Connor about seeing the bodyguards checking her papers. That's their chance to learn her identity. Her Caucasylvia papers show her name as 'Ava Ryba' (Natalie Mitson). Waiting List Bound In the Annex, Charlie expects to be thrown back on the waiting list. She tells Lysa that The Library invited her and three other candidates to try out for Guardian. She was the only one who didn't make the cut, although she doesn't know why. Stone (Christian Kane) gave her a second chance when Vikram returned. RELATED: Read our The Lazarus Project recaps Her phone rings. Vikram tells her to find a British spy using the alias Ava Ryba and find out what artifact she gave King Kavod. She and Lysa track that alias to a spy named Bella Goodridge (Sorel Johnson). She's alive and drawing a pension to her home in Sussex, England. Connor and Vikram stride quickly through the train cars they've already seen the time loops in. However, this time, Connor notices the man Bella is kissing doesn't have chewed fingernails. They realize that Bella and the king's double were lovers. Bella brought the artifact in exchange for the double's freedom. The real king and his bodyguards enter. 'Don't you just love love?' asks Kavod III. Bella Lysa and Charlie enter a dark room to find Bella Goodridge, but the body in the bed is a decoy. Bella ambushes them from behind, tripping them up and sending them tumbling to the ground. Once they explain why they're there, she apologizes and serves them tea. Charlie tells her Kavod's train has come back to life. Bella has no trouble believing it, explaining she left the Scythe of Time on the train. On the train, the king inspects the Scythe of Time with Connor and Vikram standing nearby, witnessing. On the phone, Connor explains the artifact is the item Old Father Time hands to the New Year Baby. Whoever has the Scythe can use it to communicate with their past selves. RELATED: Read our Doctor Who recaps Kavod's memory ghost closes the case and tells Young Bella/Ava that he's decided not to release his double, Nikolai. Young Bella tells him the Scythe in the case is a fake. She knew he'd betray her, so she hid the real one on the train where it would still affect the time sprite but where he couldn't find it. When she and Nikolai are safely off the train, she'll give the king the Scythe's location. The Librarians: The Next Chapter – Photograph by Aleksandar Letic Kavod calls Nikolai in and shoots him. Bella grabs the gun. Kavod says the only way to save Nikolai is to use the Scythe to warn herself. She shoots Kavod. Nikolai gets up and stumbles away with her, holding the gun on the bodyguards. They make it to the baggage car, where Nikolai makes her promise not to let Kavod get the Scythe. She promises and plans to uncouple the car where the king and bodyguards are. Kissing him, she swears that she'll come back to him. Grabbing Second Chances She climbs up to the roof but falls off. Vikram looks at Nikolai, bleeding out while repeating, 'Bella,' and sadly describes how Nikolai and Bella's pain stretched across decades. Connor asks Vikram if he's lost someone. Vikram says that after 200 years, he's lost everyone. He takes the phone and addresses present-day Bella, asking her for the Scythe's location. Tearfully, Bella ends the call and tells the women to leave her alone. Charlie tells her that second chances are rare and she needs to jump at the opportunity to help Nikolai now because she couldn't 48 years ago. RELATED: Revival : Check Out 9 First-Look Photos From Melanie Scrofano-Led Series Bella asks how fast the train is going. Lysa says about 90 miles an hour. Bella responds that they'll need a very fast car. Using the magic door, they travel to a farm near where the train is running and steal a red Datsun. The plan is to transfer Bella onto the train in the brief moment when the spirit field resets. Charlie despairs at getting her to the train on time. Vikram reassures her that she can do it, and they transfer Bella successfully. On the train, Bella transforms into her younger self. As they move through the dining car, Vikram realizes the ghosts are no longer ghostly. The realities are syncing, and the train will do real damage as it becomes more solid. Bella shows them she hid the Scythe in the clock in the first train car, disguised as the hour hand. Kavod comes in and takes it. Bella tries to shoot him, but now that he has the Scythe, he is always in a different spot when she fires her gun. Just in Time Vikram approaches Kavod and tries to warn him of the danger. Kavod believes he is invincible. Vikram reaches out quickly and makes contact with the Scythe briefly. The bodyguards shove Vikram away. Vikram stands up holding the petrified time sprite. With a smile, he uncorks a bottle, announcing it is the Nectar of Niobe. He pours it on the time sprite and revitalizes it. It flies at Kavod, furious, and reverses his life out of existence. RELATED: Read our recaps of The Librarians: The Next Chapter Vikram tells Bella to go to Nikolai and fulfill her promise. She holds Nikolai as he dies. His ghost disappears. The train's dining car ghosts disappear next. The train slows down and stops when it hits an old statue of Kavod. Bella returns to her present-day self and thanks Vikram for her second chance. At the Annex, Vikram explains that when he made contact with the Scythe, he sent a message back to himself to bring the Nectar of Niobe with him to Caucasylvia. Connor checks in with him and lets him know that if he ever needs a friend, he's there. Vikram thanks him for that. Lysa and Connor decide to go for drinks, inviting everyone. Vikram declines, but Charlie happily accepts. Left alone, Vikram pulls out the Scythe and considers it solemnly. New episodes of The Librarians: The Next Chapter air on TNT on Mondays at 9 pm ET. STRANGER THINGS: Netflix Announces Premiere Dates for Epic Final Season Diana lives in Vancouver, BC, Canada, where she invests her time and energy in teaching, writing, parenting, and indulging her love of all Trek and a myriad of other fandoms. She is a lifelong fan of smart sci-fi and fantasy media, an upstanding citizen of the United Federation of Planets, and a supporter of AFC Richmond 'til she dies. Her guilty pleasures include female-led procedurals, old-school sitcoms, and Bluey. She teaches, knits, and dreams big. You can also find her writing at The Televixen, Women at Warp, TV Fanatic, and TV Goodness.

Defending-champion Tennessee beats Wake Forest 11-5 to win Knoxville Regional
Defending-champion Tennessee beats Wake Forest 11-5 to win Knoxville Regional

Associated Press

time35 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Defending-champion Tennessee beats Wake Forest 11-5 to win Knoxville Regional

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Manny Marin hit a two-out, three-run home run, and Andrew Fischer followed with a two-run shot in a seven-run third inning as No. 14 overall seed and defending-champion Tennessee spotted Wake Forest two runs before winning the Knoxville Regional 11-5 on Monday night. The Volunteers (46-17) travel to play No. 3 seed Arkansas (46-13) in a best-of-3 super regional with a berth in the College World Series on the line. Luke Costello had a one-out single off Tennessee starter AJ Russell in the second and Matt Conte hit a two-out home run to give the Demon Deacons a 2-0 lead. Wake Forest reliever Zach Johnston (2-2), who allowed just one run after entering in the third inning with the bases loaded and no outs, walked two in the fourth and left after allowing an RBI single to Reese Chapman that tied it at 2-all. Duncan Marsten entered and threw a wild first pitch to allow the go-ahead run to score. Levi Clark was hit by a pitch for the second time to put two runners on before Marin homered to right-center field from the ninth spot in the order. Fischer followed a single by Gavin Kilen with a shot to right for an 8-2 lead. Matt Scannell answered with a two-run shot to left-center in the fifth and Austin Hawkes singled in a run in the sixth to make it 8-5. Dean Curley singled in a pair in the Tennessee seventh and Kilen had an RBI double in the eighth to cap the scoring. Brayden Krenzel (3-0) got the win, and Liam Doyle got the final seven outs for his first save. Tennessee is aiming for an eighth appearance in the College World Series after winning it for the first time last season. The Vols were runners-up in 1951. ___ AP college sports:

Texas Tech ends Oklahoma's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ with walk-off 3-2 win
Texas Tech ends Oklahoma's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ with walk-off 3-2 win

Associated Press

timean hour ago

  • Associated Press

Texas Tech ends Oklahoma's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ with walk-off 3-2 win

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma's run of four straight Women's College World Series titles ended when Lauren Allred's walk-off sacrifice fly gave Texas Tech a 3-2 victory in the semifinals on Monday night. Coach Patty Gasso's Sooners (52-9) were down to their last strike in the top of the seventh inning when Abigale Dayton summoned a bit of magic, hitting a tying two-run homer against Red Raiders ace NiJaree Canady. It was just her third longball of the season. But the Red Raiders (53-12) responded quickly in the bottom half. Mihyia Davis singled with one out and Hailey Toney followed with a double. Allred hit a flyball to right field and Sydney Barker's throw to the plate was wide, allowing Davis to score easily. Texas Tech, in its first trip to the WCWS, will play Texas in the best-of-three championship series starting Wednesday. The Longhorns reached the finals for the third time in the past four years. They lost to Oklahoma in 2022 and 2024. Oklahoma had won nine straight elimination games. Canady lost the shutout but got the win. She is the two-time reigning National Fastpitch Coaches Association Pitcher of the Year and was the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year last season. Formerly with Stanford, Canady signed a name, image and likeness deal worth more than $1 million to go to Texas Tech. ___ AP sports:

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