We're still not over the death of Joel (Pedro Pascal) but,Watch Jukkalan Online 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
Previous:Mary Shows Up
Next:Better Buy: Previous
The Great Barrier Reef is not 'in danger,' UNESCO saysI spent a week using AI tools in my daily life. Here's how it went.Here are the 2024 SAG Awards winnersA giant crocodile relative had terrifying teeth like a T. rex5 Apple Vision Pro issues: Reports of 'spontaneous cracking' and more pile upThe complete list of winners at the 2024 Film Independent Spirit AwardsHMD announces a Barbie flip phoneAT&T will give a $5 credit to customers for its major outage downtimeElon Musk's X is launching audio and visual calls for regular users. Yay.Emmanuel Macron enlists Schwarzenegger to troll Trump on climatePSVR2 support for PC might happen soonCustom Snapchat Spectacles let divers explore deep underwaterIowa vs. Illinois basketball livestreams: Game time, streaming dealsSpaceX launches reused rocket and lands it, barelyTennessee vs. TAMU basketball livestreams: Game time, streaming dealsBetter sleep deal: Get a Philips SmartSleep WakeHow to file taxes for free onlineA commercial astronaut training site and its massive pool are coming to BritainMWC 2024: Motorola has a phone that's somehow also a braceletWordle today: The answer and hints for February 26 Back to the Essence by The Paris Review Venice Dispatch: from the Biennale by Olivia Kan Worm Moon by Nina MacLaughlin Chestnut Trees by Hermann Hesse Notes on Nevada: Trans Literature and the Early Internet by Imogen Binnie Our Staff’s Favorite Books of 2021 by The Paris Review David Wojnarowicz’s Home in the City by Hannah Gold Megha Majumdar, Fiction by Megha Majumdar Redux: Furry Faces by The Paris Review Vesna by The Paris Review You Can’t Put Your Arms Around a Memory by The Paris Review By Your Name by Madeleine Schwartz Photographic Neuroses: Alec Soth's A Pound of Pictures by Gideon Jacobs Redux: Conceptual Baggage by The Paris Review Objective Correlatives by Stephen Shore Redux: Which Voice Is Mine by The Paris Review Claire Schwartz, Poetry by Claire Schwartz Diary, 2008 by Annie On John Prine, Ferrante's Feminisms, and Paterson by The Paris Review Redux: An Ordinary Word by The Paris Review
1.5549s , 10107.1953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Jukkalan Online】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network