More tension, more monsters, and another stunning hour of TV. By Evan Romano Published: Jan 22, 2023.
Tess spills lots of gasoline and grenades on the ground, and knowing her time is up, plans for a blaze of glory. After much struggling, Joel and Tess manage to kill the clickers—named for the clicking sound they make as they move—and escape to the roof of the museum. They debate whether they're going to get where they need to go by taking "the long way or the short way," before they realize that "the short way" is also "the dead way." She's gotten bitten ("Oops," Anna Torv heartbreakingly delivers, still with just the right smidge of snark), and by hook or by crook realizes this is going to be the end of the line for her. As they arrive at what was once the Fireflies HQ, they instead see a bunch of dead bodies; Joel, at this point, is perceptive. They debate whether or not to shoot her (spoiler: they don't), and then climb up out of their dark shelter to get Ellie where Marlene needed her to go: a Some may be looking at this show from a point of comparison with the source material— [we've got a story doing that too!](https://www.menshealth.com/entertainment/a42478320/the-last-of-us-hbo-show-video-game-differences/)—but my attempt is to look at this with fresh eyes. Ibu is incredulous at first of the Cordyceps growing in the body that the government official has her examining. Here, The Last of Us takes us to Jakarta for the origin of the outbreak—or, at least, as far back as this world's authorities might be able to trace. I am, however, a major fan of horror, sci-fi, and the post-apocalyptic genre, and have largely managed to shield myself from the major plot points. Episode 2, directed by co-showrunner and The Last of Us game creator Neil Druckmann, has just a few important plot-based takeaways, opting instead mostly for us to spend some time with the characters and world we're only now getting to know. [Halloween](https://www.menshealth.com/entertainment/a41626593/halloween-movies-in-order/) isn't all Michael Myers stabbing people; John Carpenter and Debra Hill knew that for the impact to be felt, you have to build up characters and tension along the way.
Infected,” the second episode of HBO's dystopian drama, showed us how Joel and Ellie process a traumatic loss.
The bulk of the zombies are saved for the final sequence, but even with only a few of the monsters, the museum fight is intense and very well-constructed. Nasty all around, and if the fight sequence in a few spots perhaps drifted too close to feeling like a game level (the shots from Joel’s POV, for instance), for the most part, Mazin and Druckmann have a clear sense of how each action beat has to work as drama, rather than something interactive. The show does a good job of establishing the rules of play — the zombies track you by sound, not sight, for instance — as well as continuing to make the creatures feel distinctly gross in appearance and everything else. She is humanity’s potential salvation, but she’s also a girl who just lost someone she had grown to like a lot in a short amount of time. But perhaps the most important thing the episode does is to make sure we see Ellie as a person first, rather than a walking vaccine incubator. If The Walking Dead wanted to build a set like that, it would have necessitated situating most or all of a season there to amortize the cost. She is not only immune to the infection, but the Firefly doctors believe she may be the key to creating a vaccine to protect future generations from this plague. And it’s the strength of Torv’s work that in turn makes Tess’ death hit much harder than the loss of any character should after only two episodes. One step, then the next step, and maybe the one after that are all he can allow himself to think about. But in this case, the scientist’s certainty that there is no way to treat this infection serves as a contrast to the whole reason Joel is meant to take Ellie to parts west. She has studied spores and fungi all her life, and she understands instantly that there is no cure for this — that the only way to save humanity is, “Bomb. The zombie apocalypse is days away, and the government of Jakarta is finding this out before anyone else.
This week brought a more in-depth look at post-apocalyptic Boston as well as more details about what exactly has happened to the planet.
A professor of mycology, Ibu Ratna (Christine Hakim), is brought in by the government to examine the corpse of a woman who had gone on a murderous rampage under the apparent influence of “cordyceps” — a mushroom with bad vibes that is generally unpleasant to be around. Even in the Jakarta prologue, the first real sign that something isn’t right is when the professor cuts into a subject’s leg and no blood spills out — only a fibrous white substance. But as Joel and Tess explain to Ellie — who only knows about the plague from what she has read in books and heard through the grapevine — there are still large numbers of mindless infected killing machines all across the city, writhing on their bellies in the streets in order to stay connected to an underground fungal network. There is a scene about halfway through this episode when Tess leaves the other two behind to scout for a pathway behind some rubble, and Joel and Ellie’s awkward conversation is almost painful to witness. In fact, throughout the episode, our heroes end up trashing a lot of the past. The fungal origin of this zombie-style apocalypse has also inspired some spectacularly creepy imagery, from the tiny tendrils that snake out of the infected’s mouths to the darkness-dwelling creatures whose heads look like split mushrooms. (Asked where she learned to juggle a sharp knife, she cracks, “The circus.” Told that their path to Beacon Hill can go “the long way” or “the ‘we’re dead’ way,” she replies, “I vote ‘long way,’ just based on that limited information.”) Because she talks incessantly, by the time the travelers hit their first big roadblock, she has explained a lot about what her life has been like up until now: spending her days in classes with the other QZ kids, learning about the culture they can’t see firsthand and spending her free time exploring the places she’s not supposed to go. Once again there is a pre-opening credits prologue, set in Jakarta in 2003, revealing the origins of the mayhem we heard about on Joel’s radio in Austin last week. This episode offers several good “get to know you” scenes for Ellie, who was initially introduced as a sassy detainee, aloof and angry. Only when the camera angle changes can we see that she is actually asleep indoors, in one of those rotting old buildings. This week features more of a grand tour — and honestly, it’s kind of awesome. A big reason so many people are drawn to movies and TV shows about the End Times is that there’s something both exciting and eerie about seeing the bones of our world, gnarled and repurposed.
Joel, Ellie, and Tess explore the fringe of civilization with disastrous results. Here's how the HBO thriller's second episode plays out.
“There’s a Firefly base camp out west, with doctors working on the cure,” says Ellie. Against all advice from Firefly leader Marlene (Merle Dandrige), Ellie tells Joel and Tess all about her bite, and her resistance to the cause of mankind’s near-extinction. When pressed on what they can do to stop the thread, Ratna’s answer is a single, horrible word, spoken in English: “Bomb.” Effectively, the woman violently attacked a number of colleagues at her place of work, a flour and grain facility. (Not a joke: a widespread number of fans left the Last of Us series premiere pointing at bread as the source of the apocalypse, with Joel’s half-assed Atkins Diet, or maybe just his inability to make a grocery run, literally saving his life. “Cordyceps cannot survive in humans,” says Ratna, leaning on her years of expertise, denying the truth on the microscope slide right in front of her.
Episode 2 of The Last Of Us starts in Indonesia 2003. Authorities show up and take a woman away. This is Ibu Ratna, a Professor in Mycology who happens to ...
A big part of the game’s allure comes from the developing relationship between Joel and Ellie over time. The TV show though disrupts that slightly with the bizarre flashback at the end of episode 1, and then takes 26 minutes before Joel and Ellie even say anything to one another. In fact, all those sequences with Ellie and Tess talking to one another would have worked so much better if Tess and Joel switched places, allowing Joel to learn more information about this young girl. The changed lore with the infected, showing off the tendrils that are all connected, is a nice touch too, but it also negates Tess and Ellie’s bit of dialogue where they discuss the infected giving off fungal spores when killed. Anyway, she eventually manages to get her lighter to work, but only after one of the infected assaults and kisses her with its tendrils sticking in her mouth. The scene is perfectly worked from the game, with Joel and Ellie looking at the State House in the distance. Tess struggles to get her lighter to work as floods of then infected pour into the building. When one of the infected moves on the ground, Joel shoots it in the head. The group make it to the State House, where Joel goes forward and investigates. Outside though its all bone-dry so the trio decide to press on and continue through the building. Ibu is shocked to learn that “Patient Zero” (the first person to spread the infection by biting) is still out there, but Ibu has been brought in to try and try and find a vaccine and cure what’s occurring. so Ellie does and it causes Joel to fight one off.
They confirm she is Ibu Ratna (Christine Hakim) professor of mycology at University of Indonesia. Ah yes, the unwitting scientist dragged in by government ...
Joel and Ellie, a safe distance from the Capitol, see the conflagration, register the loss of a comrade, and keep going. - Is the idea of a Zombie Siesta new in z lore? She tells Joel to promise to get the girl to Bill and Franks. The fungus is waking up the infected (which we saw earlier having a nap), giving them a boost of vitamin Cordyceps. Tess clambers over it to scout the way, leaving Ellie and Joel to get to know each other, a bit of human interaction that goes nowhere fast. Dr Ratna is taken to a lab, squints at a sample of the fungus Ophiocordyceps through the microscope and is told it was taken from a human. The three are stopped in their tracks (after a sudden collapse that conveniently occurs after they get through a doorway) by the sound a strangulated glottal cackle coming from a hallway. (This mycorrhizal framing of zombies reinforces the deep-ecology theory of Last Of Us; they are of the Earth, whereas humans are the mutation.) Tess argues they push on, bring Ellie to the State House and get the car battery and other booty from the Fireflies. Joel wants to return the girl to the Quarantine Zone (QZ) and continue without her. She knows (and we know from the last episode’s cold open) the fungus can’t live in the heat of the human body. And thus the second episode cold open takes us to Jakarta, Indonesia in 2003, a short time before the outbreak went global.