logo
We also have lots of questions about the season of premiere of ‘The Last of Us'

We also have lots of questions about the season of premiere of ‘The Last of Us'

CNN14-04-2025

The Season 2 premiere of HBO's 'The Last of Us' aired on Sunday and, to be honest, we have more questions than answers.
Season 1 left off with Joel and Ellie approaching the survivor safe haven Jackson after a harrowing cross-country trek that culminated in the action-packed finale at the hospital, where Ellie was ready to sacrifice herself to the Fireflies to find a cure to the outbreak. Joel wound up saving Ellie, killing anyone who got in his way and lying to her about happened at the hospital.
A five year time jump in the premiere resets the storyline: Joel and Ellie now have a life in Jackson. Joel is a leader in the community working alongside his sister-in-law Maria (Rutina Wesley) and has started attending therapy. Ellie is a full-fledged teenager who is an eager patrolwoman and lives in Joel's garage. She is also still holding her immunity secret close to the vest.
The dynamic between Joel and Ellie is off and their relationship seems more distant than ever.
The debut episode took us another step further, too, with the introduction of new threats and a host of new characters, all of which made for a season opener that left us with some major question marks, outlined below.
(HBO, like CNN, is owned by Warner Bros. Discovery.)
During Joel and Gale's (Catherine O'Hara) therapy session, Gale used an untraditional method to urge him to open up about why he thinks Ellie may be mad at him. She told Joel that 'you can't heal something unless you're brave enough to say it out loud,' and called him out for killing her husband Eugene in an attempt to heal her own trauma as an example of how its done.
Gale acknowledged that Joel had no choice but to kill Eugene but didn't go into why, although we assume it was because he had been infected. She softened up and then offered him help if he would just be honest with her. (Of course, he wasn't and abruptly ended the session.)
We know that Gale is a character original to the TV series and not featured in the video game but Eugene is a character of the 'Last of Us Part II' video game's canon. In the game, he's a former Firefly member who had a wife named Claire before he died of a stroke. Actor Joe Pantoliano has been cast to appear as Eugene this season, perhaps through flashbacks, but little else is known about how the producers will incorporate this character into the series.
The crux of this episode focused on the distance between Joel and Ellie. Ellie is a 19-year-old angsty teenager, frustrated by Joel's overprotectiveness but there must be something else at play because distance between these two was icier than the streets of Jackson.
Does Ellie know the truth about what happened at the end of last season in the hospital yet or does she just suspect Joel wasn't being honest with her and is harboring resentment because of that? Will this come to a head down the line? All signs point to yes.
As if the 'Last of Us' world doesn't have enough problems already, the season premiere proved there aren't just monsters outside of the gates of Jackson.
It all played out during a New Year's Eve celebration when Ellie and Dina (Isabela Merced) shared a kiss in the middle of the dance floor – in front of all the partygoers and Dina's ex-boyfriend Jesse (Young Mazino).
Seth (Robert John Burke), a local bar owner, interrupted Ellie and Dina's magic moment, saying they were at a 'family event.' After he called them a homophobic slur, Joel pushed Seth to the ground in Ellie's defense, which seemed to upset her even more. It was a whole scene and it was awful. As Ellie and Dina's relationship develops, is this reaction from the townsfolk going to become a theme? We sure hope not.
Before you ask, yes, 'Gossip Girl' viewers, Seth is played by the same actor who played Bart Bass. Leave it to Bart Bass to be awful.
Abby (Kaitlyn Dever) and her crew kick off the episode in a graveyard of Fireflies by the hospital from which Joel and Ellie escaped. She is distraught and grief-striken and appeared to have information that Joel killed a loved one of hers. (It was not specified who.)
'Slowly,' she said, referring to how she wants to kill Joel. 'We kill him slowly.'
One of the men in her group suggested they head to an outfit Seattle where a guy named Isaac (Jeffrey Wright) can take them in and help them get a lead on where Joel is.
After the five year time jump, Abby appeared to have finally found Joel in Jackson. With a terrifying look of conviction on her face, the episode ends with Abby slowly approaching the walls of Jackson.
At the very end of the episode, theres a dramatic close-up of a broken pipe in the streets of Jackson that has some living cordyceps spiraling out from it. It's eerie and creepy and is a solid cliffhanger for what's to come. It also could be what creator and executive producer Neil Druckmann was talking about when he previously teased the threat Jackson finds itself under.
In an interview with CNN in March, Druckmann said that viewers will get to see what it would be like 'if a whole horde (of zombies) penetrated the walls of Jackson and got inside' and that viewers will see 'what's at stake here in this world for this community.'
It sounds like it'll be a pretty action-packed event when the time comes, especially considering what Ellie observed when she and Dina came upon an infected girl in the premiere. She told Maria and the town counsel at one point that they were much smarter than the usual mindless zombie out for blood. Hold on to your horses, people.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'The Last of Us' co-creator reacts to fans angry over Pedro Pascal's shocking exit: 'He's in literally everything else'
'The Last of Us' co-creator reacts to fans angry over Pedro Pascal's shocking exit: 'He's in literally everything else'

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'The Last of Us' co-creator reacts to fans angry over Pedro Pascal's shocking exit: 'He's in literally everything else'

Pedro Pascal may have been brutally dispatched from The Last of Us, but at least he's, in the words of series co-creator Craig Mazin, "in literally everything else." "He did a thing. Everyone lost their s---, and then I had to do that same thing, because he did the thing, I loved doing the thing, I thought it was great," Mazin told Variety during Thursday's "A Night in the Writers' Room" event in Los Angeles. Though Mazin and co-creator Neil Druckmann were simply following the story set forth in the video game The Last of Us is based on, fans were still shocked by the death of Pascal's series lead Joel in the second episode of the second season. That shock has transformed for some into anger, which has given voice to ample criticism. "The big complaint that I've gotten is, 'Why did you kill Pedro Pascal?' And I keep explaining, we didn't kill him! He's a man, he's alive. He's fine. And he's in literally everything else. So I don't know what the problem is!" Mazin joked. Fans aren't the only ones still reeling from having to watch Joel die at the hands of Kaitlyn Dever's Abby. Pascal himself told Entertainment Weekly in April that he's in "active denial" about his own character's fate. "I realize this more and more as I get older, I find myself slipping into denial that anything is over. I know that I'm forever bonded to so many members of the experience and just have to see them under different circumstances, but never will under the circumstances of playing Joel on The Last of Us," Pascal said. "And, no, I don't spend a lot of time thinking about it because it makes me sad." The Chile-born actor's sister, Lux, also said in May that she "wanted to throw the iPad" when she got to the scene depicting Joel's death. Lux joked that it's "not the first time he's done it to me, it's not the second time he's done it to me. I think it's the fourth time he's done it to me. Because how many deaths has he had? Game of Thrones, Equalizer 2, The Last of Us — each is more violent than the other.... Seeing my brother die that way, I didn't like it at all." Some of the "everything else" Mazin referred to include Ari Aster's film Eddington (releasing July 18), which Pascal was recently seen in Cannes promoting at the seaside town's illustrious annual film festival. He can be seen Friday in theaters in Celine Song's Dakota Johnson and Chris Evans rom-com Materialists, and he also stars as Reed Richards in July 23 Marvel release The Fantastic Four: First Steps, a character he'll reprise for Avengers: Doomsday. Read the original article on Entertainment Weekly

This week's TV: Julianne Moore in ‘Echo Valley,' the BET Awards, and Ryan Reynolds narrates a nature doc
This week's TV: Julianne Moore in ‘Echo Valley,' the BET Awards, and Ryan Reynolds narrates a nature doc

Boston Globe

time4 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

This week's TV: Julianne Moore in ‘Echo Valley,' the BET Awards, and Ryan Reynolds narrates a nature doc

BET Awards Tonight at 8 p.m. on BET: High-energy funnyman and ubiquitous 'brand ambassador' Advertisement US Open Thursday on Peacock, USA Network, and NBC: The 125th US Open tees off at Pennsylvania's Oakmont Country Club course. The competition will run until the finals on June 15. Watch out for longshot qualifiers 17-year-old high school junior Mason Howell, who's been playing the game since he was 3, and 34-year-old former Oakmont caddie turned dentist Matt Vogt. Odds-on favorites include champs Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler. Advertisement 'Father' Friday on Hulu: Atsuko Okatsuka lands a second comedy special entitled 'Father,' following her 2022 HBO solo special, 'The Intruder.' The LA-based Taiwanese American stand-up, actress, and writer (who's only the second Asian-American woman to have her own HBO comedy special), cites Margaret Cho among her inspirations. Here, exchanging HBO for Hulu's Hularious comedy slate, Okatsuka debunks her fans' claims that she's maternal in a one-hour stand-up showcase. They've got it all wrong, she corrects. She is, in fact, 'Father,' and riffs on her estrangement from the family washing machine, among other daffy domestic anecdotes. 'Underdogs' Sunday at 9 p.m. on NatGeo, simulcast on ABC, then streaming the next day on Disney+ and Hulu: Instead of scrolling through reels to watch a lion fending off a mama giraffe while munching on her baby's lollipop head, switch on wry Thelma Adams is a cultural critic and the author of the best-selling historical novel ' ,' about Josephine Marcus, the Jewish wife of Wyatt Earp.

Tony Awards biggest moments: Cynthia Erivo holds space, Nicole Scherzinger wins big
Tony Awards biggest moments: Cynthia Erivo holds space, Nicole Scherzinger wins big

USA Today

time6 hours ago

  • USA Today

Tony Awards biggest moments: Cynthia Erivo holds space, Nicole Scherzinger wins big

Tony Awards biggest moments: Cynthia Erivo holds space, Nicole Scherzinger wins big Show Caption Hide Caption Cynthia Erivo arrives at Tony Awards red carpet in an intricate gown Cynthia Erivo and Cole Escola pose for cameras wearing an intricate gown at the Tony Awards red carpet. NEW YORK – Broadway has fallen head over heels with a pair of helper robots. "Maybe Happy Ending," a heart-tugging romantic dramedy about androids in near-future South Korea, was the big winner at the Tony Awards June 8, taking home six prizes, including best musical, best director (Michael Arden), and best actor (Darren Criss). The fiercely original show opened to glowing reviews and meager box office last fall, but has gradually become one of the hottest tickets in New York – a rare word-of-mouth success story in the ultra-competitive Broadway landscape. This year's ceremony saw the joyous Afro-Cuban musical "Buena Vista Social Club" and Netflix prequel play "Stranger Things: The First Shadow" scoop up multiple prizes apiece. Kara Young ("Purpose"), Francis Jue ("Yellow Face") and lifetime achievement award winner Harvey Fierstein delivered some of the most stirring speeches of the night, while the Pulitzer Prize-winning "Purpose" conquered the unlikely hit "Oh, Mary!" for best play. Here are more of the biggest moments from this year's star-studded event: Tony Awards 2025 winners list: 'Maybe Happy Ending,' 'Eureka Day,' more win honors Tonys host Cynthia Erivo 'holds space' with Oprah Winfrey in opening number At the top of the telecast, Cynthia Erivo playfully shot down a bevy of suggestions about how to add pizzazz to her opening number. (Blast George Clooney out of a human cannon? Hard pass.) The "Color Purple" powerhouse then ran into Winfrey in the wings, asking her, "What do you do when everyone is telling you what you need to do?" Winfrey dispensed her wisdom, saying, "Forget about them, babe. The only thing you need to do is be yourself." Grinning, Erivo proceeded to grab Winfrey's finger – recreating her viral "holding space" meme with "Wicked" co-star Ariana Grande from last fall. Watch: Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo sing 'For Good' in first 'Wicked: For Good' trailer "There's no place like home," Erivo said onstage, in one of her many nods to "Wicked" and "The Wizard of Oz" throughout the night. "And Broadway has always been mine." Sarah Snook says 'Succession' group chat has been going wild since her Tony win Sarah Snook, who's best known to HBO fans as Shiv Roy on "Succession," earned her first Tony Award for best leading actress in a play for "The Picture of Dorian Gray," giving a marathon performance as 26 different characters in the one-person show. Several "Succession" alums have graced Broadway this past year, including Jeremy Strong ("The Enemy of the People"), Kieran Culkin ("Glengarry Glen Ross"), Juliana Canfield ("Stereophonic"), and Molly Griggs ("John Proctor is the Villain"). "We haven't done much flaunting of awards in photos, but it's such a special group chat," Snook told reporters backstage. "It's a really special group of people and we're all theater nerds deep down." Last spring, Cate Blanchett's production company Dirty Films acquired movie rights to bring "Dorian Gray" to the screen. Snook said that she hasn't yet heard anything about the potential adaptation, although she would be open to reprising her roles. "I don't know how this gets turned into a film," Snook admitted. "It's a particularly complex piece to do as a theater show. Dramaturgically, it holds up, and I think Kip would be an incredible director for that project. And if I got to be a part of that, that would be a dream come true." Nicole Scherzinger, Audra McDonald, 'Hamilton' reunion hit Tony performance highs To celebrate the 10th anniversary of "Hamilton," Lin-Manuel Miranda, Leslie Odom Jr. and the original Broadway cast took the stage for an electrifying medley of the most beloved songs from the groundbreaking hip-hop musical, including "My Shot," "The Schuyler Sisters," "You'll Be Back" and "The Room Where It Happens." Audra McDonald also brought the audience to its feet with her ferociously emotional rendition of "Rose's Turn" from "Gypsy." 'Hamilton' reunion! Watch original stars perform 'Satisfied' at film screening Earlier in the night, "Sunset Boulevard" leading lady Nicole Scherzinger took our breath away with a stunning rendition of "As If We Never Said Goodbye," introduced by the show's original Broadway star, Glenn Close. 'Sunset Boulevard' review: Nicole Scherzinger is transcendent in bold new revival Scherzinger went on to win the Tony for best leading actress in a musical, in what was considered a neck-in-neck race with McDonald. 'Maybe Happy Ending' star Darren Criss dedicates Tony Award to his wife and kids In one of the closest races of the night, Criss took home best leading actor in a musical for "Maybe Happy Ending," trouncing formidable contenders Jonathan Groff ("Just in Time") and Tom Francis ("Sunset Boulevard"). The former "Glee" star got choked up as he thanked his wife, Mia, for helping raise their two young children amid his demanding Broadway schedule. "The real hero about this, for this remarkable journey, is my wife, Mia, who took a massive swing on allowing me to do this and to allow this crazy upheaval in our life to make this logistically possible," Criss said. More: Darren Criss on why playing a robot in 'Maybe Happy Ending' makes him want to cry "And for bearing the brunt of raising two tiny friends under 3 so that I could raise a singing robot at the Belasco Theatre eight times a week. Mia, you're the very pedestal that upholds the shiny, spinny bit in our lives, and your love and your support for me and our beautiful children, combined with the miracle of working on something as magical as 'Maybe Happy Ending' has been and will always be, award enough." Cole Escola sprints onstage, thanks Grindr hookup in Tony speech Escola, the deranged genius behind "Oh, Mary!", won best leading actor in a play for their inspired turn as first lady Mary Todd Lincoln. Channeling Bernadette Peters in an off-the-shoulder Wiederhoeft gown, Escola feverishly sprinted to the stage, where they thanked fellow best actor nominees, including George Clooney and Daniel Dae Kim. "It's an honor to be in your company," Escola said. "It's been a sincere pleasure spending time with you over warm salads at all these (Tony) luncheons." They continued to thank their mom and their "whole gang" of friends. "Oh, and Tebow from Grindr and Amy Sedaris, who always reminds me how important she is to me. And she is." Written by Escola, "Oh, Mary!" imagines Lincoln as an alcoholic wannabe cabaret star. Asked by reporters whether they would consider an Eleanor Roosevelt comedy next, Escola joked that she is "played out. It would have to be something original, not another historical figure."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store