We're still not over the death of Joel (Pedro Pascal) but,Ask Me What You Want (2024) like it or not,The Last of Usis entering a new chapter — and that means some brand new opening credits.
The change in opening credits between Season 2, episode 2 and episode 3 isn't a big revamp, but it's still pretty devastating in a subtle way.
So what's the difference?
SEE ALSO: 'The Last of Us' Season 2, episode 3: Why does Ellie sprinkle coffee on Joel's grave?Aside from the crushing absence of Pedro Pascal's name at the very start of The Last of Us' opening credits, the sequence in Season 2, episode 3 looks pretty much the same as usual: The camera winds through a morphing, cordyceps-inspired tapestry, with fungal plants sprouting into the shape of a city alongside the names of the cast and crew.
The change, however, comes right at the very end. In previous episodes, the camera moved through a spiral of fungus to show a blurry and overgrown landscape, from which two distant silhouettes — mean to represent Joel and Ellie (Bella Ramsey) — sprout up from the ground. In episode 3, however, the smaller silhouette is the only one that remains.
Seeing the two shapes in previous episodes re-enforced the idea that it was Joel and Ellie against the world, two survivors struggling through a post-apocalyptic landscape together. Now, the message is clear: Ellie is on her own again. Joel is gone, and she's going to have to carve out her own path.
New episodes of The Last of Us Season 2 premiere on HBO and Max Sundays at 9 p.m. ET.
Watching The Last of Usand want to play the games? Here's how.
Topics The Last of Us
20/20 by Sadie SteinA Week in Culture: Sophie Pinkham, Moscow and Kiev by Sophie PinkhamMark Twain Designed His Own Notebooks, and Other News by Sadie SteinConfessions of an Accidental BookWordle today: Here's the answer and hints for July 7A 1912 EighthWatch The Paris Review on Charlie RoseAnd Tremble by Sadie SteinBig Box by Sadie SteinEmma Cline’s “Marion” by Lorin SteinGoogle Play Store will soon let Android users download gambling appsEmma Cline’s “Marion” by Lorin SteinHate groups are moving to encrypted online platforms, making them harder to trackWhat We’re Doing: Not Staying in Room 1212Wrench by Eric NeuenfeldtEarth's core is wilder than you can imagineBig Box by Sadie SteinIn the Ninth by Mark ChiusanoSecret Erotica, Jane Austen, and Other News by Sadie SteinShort Story by Sadie Stein Arshile Gorky’s Muse Recalls Their First Date Sometimes the Pie Just Calls Your Name by Rick Bragg Black Friday drone deals 2023: DJI, Holy Stone, more Solawave's new Radiant Renewal Wand is now available Forging Intimacy Cooking with Émile Zola by Valerie Stivers Black Friday gaming keyboard deal: Razer Huntsman V2 hits all You, Too, Can Live in Norman Mailer’s House Redux: Excessive Doom Scenarios Gwyneth Paltrow's drinking tea and he's Ken: The 8 best tweets of the week 44 Black Friday headphone deals: AirPods Pro at record Seeing Beyond the Tip of Your Nose 'The Hunger Games' is having a resurgence on TikTok: Here's why The Moment of Writing by Amit Chaudhuri Cyber Monday Anker Soundcore deals: headphones, earbuds, speakers An open letter to Elon Musk: Leave stan Twitter alone Tchaikovsky’s Cure for All That Ails (the Stomach) 'Succession' memes and Gaston's eggs: The 9 best tweets of the week Poetry Rx: You All Have Lied Black Friday 2023 laptop deals at Walmart: Save up to $551
2.6865s , 10107.1328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Ask Me What You Want (2024)】,New Knowledge Information Network