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No, 'The Last of Us' Doesn't Need Pedro Pascal To Survive

No, 'The Last of Us' Doesn't Need Pedro Pascal To Survive

Elle20-05-2025

https://www.elle.com/uk/life-a...Listen, I cried too. I wept when he was (spoiler alert) brutally killed off a few weeks ago. And I bawled last night, when he was reincarnated through flashbacks for episode six of season two, in which father-daughter tensions simmered up and the paradox of parental love (AKA you can't win) blistered the surface. But repeat after me: The Last of Us season two does not need Pedro Pascal to be great – no matter how much you enjoyed watching his character Joel shoot clickers in the head.
It goes without saying that this opinion is not based on Pascal's performance in the multi-Emmy-winning show, nor is it rooted in any kind of loyal devotion to the original video game's plot (reader, I have not played it). This is, instead, a reaction to the onslaught of online commentary that's decried The Last of Us as 'boring' or 'unwatchable' since his character died at the start of the season two. 'Somebody please give Pedro's back a rest, he's been carrying season two like Christ on the cross and he's only been in 3 out 7 episodes,' said one X user.
My question is: are they watching the same show I'm tuning into every Monday night? From where I'm sitting, The Last of Us has transformed into a powerhouse of women and non-binary actors, each bringing layered, multifaceted and tenacious female characters to life on screen.
At the centre of it all is, of course, Bella Ramsey, whose performance as Ellie is nothing short of phenomenal, from the tender, heart-wrenching moments she shares with Pascal to the piercing, vengeful looks she gives her enemies right before they see their demise. But there's also her new sidekick, Dina. Played by Isabela Merced with just the right combination of warmth and sass, the blossoming sapphic love story developing between Dina and Ellie is refreshingly realistic – for a zombie apocalypse-set TV show, at least. There's no over-the-top declarations of love or indulgent depictions of teenage lust; there are just two best friends, slowly plucking up the courage to reveal their feelings, while muddling their way through an extraordinarily dangerous revenge plot.
The nuanced moments shared between Ellie and Dina shouldn't be written off as filler between action-packed fight scenes; they speak to the humanity of these characters. And as we know from series one's tear-jerking episode 'Long, Long Time' – which zoomed in on the relationship of a gay couple who'd managed to find happiness in the apocalypse – that's exactly what The Last of Us does best.
The portrayals of formidable women don't stop there, though. We've also got Catherine O'Hara's sardonic therapist Gail, whose withering one-liners bring a slight touch of comic relief to even the bleakest scenarios. And let's not forget Kaitlyn Dever, who shines as this season's villain, Abby. Yes, we're supposed to hate her character, but that doesn't mean we can't respect the performance. Even more impressive is the fact that Dever filmed the scene in which she murders Joel just weeks after she lost her mother to breast cancer. 'My mom's funeral was three days before I did my first day. So I was sort of in a fog. I was in a daze,' she told Entertainment Weekly. 'I was able to sort of… I don't know, just really let it go and not think about it too much because the words on the page are so powerful anyway.'
So yes, we all miss Joel and we'd all like to see more Pedro Pascal on our TV screens. But there are other ways to do that (we recommend his newest film The Uninvited). Right now, The Last of Us is providing us with an electric array of female characters, all portrayed with astonishing power by the actors behind them. That should be celebrated, not derided. Just as Joel died to save Ellie, Pascal's exit from the show gives the women and non-binary members of the cast room to grow. And guess what? They're just as good at killing clickers.
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The soul of The Last of Us is in Gustavo Santaolalla's music

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Before he could fully make his mark, Santaolalla's family fled the Argentine junta dictatorship in 1978, moving to Los Angeles, where his unique sound soon caught the attention of filmmakers. Snapped up to score the 2000 film Amores Perros and 2003's 21 Grams, their success led to Santaolalla composing the soundtracks for Brokeback Mountain and Babe l, both of which won him Oscars. Santaolla's sonic secret? Embracing the eloquence of silence. 'I work so much with silence and space, because silences sometimes can be louder than a note that you're playing,' says Santaolalla. 'I remember on Brokeback Mountain when I first sent them the music, the producer said 'I thought you were pulling my leg at first, because you wait so long to play the next note!'' 'Silences sometimes can be louder than a note that you're playing.' After winning two Oscars back to back, Santaolalla carefully considered his next career move. Despite being a self-professed 'terrible gamer' Santaolalla tells me he always loved watching his son play, mesmerized by the on-screen kineticism. 'I always thought that if somebody connects this at an emotional level with a player, it's going to be a revolution.' It turns out, the universe had picked up on Santaolalla's newest interest. Post-Oscars, he was approached by several game companies to do music, but turned them down because 'I'm very picky about the work that I do.' That includes a lucrative gaming project that he is careful not to name. 'Everyone thought I was crazy!' he chuckles. Still, Santaolalla quietly hoped that a more emotionally-resonant project would materialize. 'So, I waited… and then Neil appeared,' Santaolalla says. 'When Neil told his colleagues that he wanted me to do this, [his colleagues ] said, No, Gustavo is not going to be interested — he won two Oscars! But when Neil [told me] the story, and that he wanted to do a game that connects with people on an emotional level… I was sold. What even Neil Druckmann wasn't prepared for, however, was that Gustavo's music would become just as crucial a presence as Ellie and Joel. In a post apocalyptic world where life is scarce and danger lurks around every corner, silence hangs in the air like a threat. Santaolalla's scuffed notes, discordant melodies and screeching fret slides reverberate across the dilapidated city streets, feeling as unpredictable as the world Ellie and Joel inhabit. 'I love the use of imperfections, even errors or mistakes.' 'I love the use of imperfections, even errors or mistakes,' Santaolalla explains. 'Any professional guitar player when they're recording tend to avoid all kinds of noises; when you run your hand on the fretboard or little glitches in your playing. But sometimes, I'll push those in my mix, and I think that humanizes it. That's why many people have said that my music becomes like a character — a presence. It's why I play things myself.' In the second game, Gustavo's music becomes a physical part of the fiction, with Ellie carrying a guitar throughout her quest for vengeance. She takes out the instrument during welcome moments of downtime, offering cathartic respite. And just like Gustavo's score, these beautiful vignettes break up the harrowing silence, which carries through in the second season of the show. 'I love the TV series too,' says Santaolalla. ' For the show, Neil associated himself with another incredible talent, Craig Mazin — the guy that did Chernobyl — who knows that media and that language. I think it was a big, big challenge, because when you go from one media to another one, people say no, I like the original better! So, I think, once again, that the way we have used the music has been instrumental to keep that fan base attached.' He adds that 'I think that when a story is really great, like a theatrical piece — like Shakespeare — it doesn't matter who plays the character. Obviously Pedro Pascal's Joel is different than the Joel from the game, but the substance of the character is so powerful that those things are just superficial. They could have done this as a series, as a feature film, as a puppet theatre piece, or an animation and it will still land regardless — because it's just great writing.' Now as Santaolalla finds himself releasing his very own instrument — the Guitarocko — it feels like the culmination of the musical journey he started as a teen. Melding the traditional Bolivian 10 stringed ronroco with the form factor of a Fender Stratocaster, Gustavo feels a father-like pride for his musical creation: the 73-year-old is invigorated by what The Last Of Us has given him at this stage in his career. 'I've been blessed with the fact that I have connected with an audience since I was very young,' he says. 'But the way I connect with the fans of The Last of Us and the way they connect with the music… here's a special devotion that is really beautiful. I have this new audience which is fantastic, and I love that they didn't know me as an artist or as a film composer! Now they look for my music, and they discover these things. It's been a gift for me, at this point — after everything that I've been through — to be involved with a project like this.'

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