This story comprises spoilers for The Last of Us Season 1, Episode 7.
An deserted mall on the finish of the world just isn’t a reasonably sight. Stores, looted and left in disarray, supply solely damaged mannequins and empty cabinets. Glass shards blanket the flooring. Fluorescent bulbs flicker. A spot as soon as often known as a middle of commerce has turn out to be a dirt-strewn husk of its former self.
Yet when The Last of Us’s teenage heroine, Ellie (performed by Bella Ramsey), gazes upon one such constructing within the newest episode, she’s entranced. Her face, bruised from a current fistfight, lights up. Her eyes widen, and a small smile kinds on the corners of her mouth. Long earlier than she truly verbalizes it, she’s clearly determined that this plaza is the best sight she’s ever seen.
Like the drama’s splendidly poignant third episode, Sunday’s installment, “Left Behind,” follows an intimate, self-contained plot. In the current, Joel (Pedro Pascal) and Ellie’s journey to a lab that may examine Ellie’s immunity has come to a halt after Joel is damage in an assault. Much of the hour as an alternative chronicles a single night that passed off months earlier than the 2 met, when Ellie and her greatest pal, Riley (Storm Reid), snuck out of the Boston quarantine zone. The episode thus delves into Ellie’s backstory and the way she skilled the sort of loss that instilled in her a potent concern of being alone.
But “Left Behind” isn’t outstanding merely for filling within the blanks of Ellie’s previous. Rather, it’s a quiet celebration of the world that when existed—a world the viewers is aware of all too effectively and, the present posits, all too typically takes with no consideration. In postapocalyptic tales, world constructing usually emphasizes the brand new actuality: new vocabulary to be taught, new techniques of presidency to know, new social norms to parse. The Last of Us has its share of this—the strolling useless will not be “zombies”; they’re “infected”—however the sequence retains an in depth eye, via Ellie, on what’s been misplaced. Ellie’s fondness for even a dilapidated buying middle provides a reminder of how easy pleasures will be as vital as meals and shelter. This ruined complicated is significant not as a result of it homes a sick assortment of Halloween decorations, however as a result of it’s a monument to Ellie and Riley’s friendship. Genuine human connection is uncommon sufficient in a standard world. For Ellie, who doesn’t but know of her immunity, it’s a lifeline—which is why, after they’re each bitten on the finish of the episode, being with Riley for so long as she will is price the price of slowly dropping her thoughts.
As Riley guides Ellie across the mall, she guarantees to indicate her “wonders.” These change into odd machines, together with a photograph sales space, an arcade recreation, and a merry-go-round. Ellie has demonstrated a deep affection for cultural artifacts like these: She reads comedian books, pins film posters to her dorm-room partitions, and listens to music via her Walkman as she jogs. Such objects could appear frivolous to others, however Ellie’s delighted by them. When she spots the picture sales space, she asks if it’s a time machine. When she rides the carousel, she describes her plastic steed as “a magic horse.” In Ellie’s awe, The Last of Us, fairly than assuming that humanity’s price saving, supplies a compelling motive for doing so. Ellie is herself a “wonder,” in different phrases: Yes, she’s pivotal to the mission as a result of she’s genetically beneficial, however she’s additionally immensely able to find amusement and pleasure in what little she has. That capability for creativeness, the present argues, is a uniquely human high quality that should be protected.
In its depiction of tradition as important to humanity, The Last of Us shares DNA with Station Eleven, one other excellent HBO adaptation (in its case, of a novel) set in a postapocalyptic panorama. But whereas the significance of artwork served as Station Eleven’s focus, The Last of Us is extra delicate, monitoring artwork’s ambient affect on its characters. In Episode 3, Frank (Murray Bartlett) paints portraits of Bill (Nick Offerman) that he proudly shows round their house. In Episode 5, the underground tunnels main out of Kansas City are coated in colourful drawings, just like the illustrations that Sam (Keivonn Woodard) product of superheroes whereas hiding out. And in Episode 6, the survivors dwelling within the thriving Jackson settlement collect to observe a film. The artwork proven in The Last of Us can be extra lowbrow: Ellie cherishes her pun e book, flips via a porn journal she finds, and quotes from a sequence of comics with which she’s obsessed. Portraits and pun books—these objects have significance as a result of they assist forge shut bonds. They’re expressions of care, as essential because the thread Ellie finds to stitch up Joel’s wounds.
My colleague Ian Bogost wrote lately that turning The Last of Us right into a tv sequence revealed that “there just isn’t that much to the story,” not once you’re now a viewer as an alternative of a participant involved with getting Joel and Ellie previous hordes of contaminated. I disagree. Sure, this episode included little ahead momentum of the overarching plot, however that’s the purpose: The present is not only about whether or not Joel and Ellie will save the world. It’s about what’s left to save lots of, and why they need to reserve it in any respect. As a TV sequence, the story now has room to meditate—on ideas as monumental and existential as the worth of being human and caring for another person, in addition to on extra minute particulars, such because the class of a working set of escalators in an deserted mall. And identical to Ellie when she first laid eyes on the construction, the present is discovering many wonders to ponder—and to treasure.