We're still not over the death of Joel (Pedro Pascal) but,Lesbian sex movies 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
Goodbye to the Gem RoomThe Art of Memory by Presca AhnThe Case for Seasonal Sentimentality by Mary Laura PhilpottEssential Apps You Should Install on a New PC Running Windows or macOSThe Ruin: Roosevelt Island’s Smallpox HospitalThe Insouciant Sentence by Jeff DolvenStaff Picks: Fat Ladies, Flowers, and Faraway Lands by The Paris ReviewStaff Picks: Sappho, Joan Didion, and SnoopyGhost Club: Yeats’s and Dickens’s Secret Society of SpiritsMother Mold: Keith Edmier’s Frozen FacesCooking with Ivan DoigThe Complete SentenceStaff Picks: Caterpillars, Cells, and Charlottesville by The Paris ReviewRacy Public Art Exposes Paris’s Invisible BordersThe Laws of Simple Sentences by Jeff DolvenOn November First, the Ghosts ArriveDear Lynda: Fickle Secret Admirers and Knowing the Ending by Lynda BarrySamuel Beckett's Sitcom PitchesArt and Biology: Ernst Haeckel’s MasterpiecesWhen Someone You Know is Gay Tesla China sales return to growth in August despite competition · TechNode NASA's Perseverance rover on Mars just started dropping samples — on purpose Alibaba yields “good results” from three Alibaba welcomes Tencent’s WeChat Pay as a payment option on its e Evidence of 'water worlds' found by scientists in deep space Seasun Games’s Mecha BREAK showcases NVIDIA’s AI NPC technology at Gamescom 2024 · TechNode China’s CATL to operate 10,000 battery swap stations by 2030 · TechNode NASA's Artemis ship Orion snaps mind Chinese ride How NASA might find life on a moon of Saturn while skipping the hardest part The deep sea discoveries and sightings of 2022 are fascinating Huawei to unveil triple foldable phone on September 10, same day as iPhone 16 launch · TechNode iOS 18's vocal shortcuts can give Siri a new name Samsung and TSMC to co China’s MiniMax introduces company's first Sora Best soundbar deal: Save on the LG 2.1 soundbar at Walmart The 5 most overrated tech products of 2024 (so far) Men are switching sexualities on dating apps to game the algorithm 'House of the Dragon' Season 2: Which Houses are Team Green and Team Black so far? Japan gives $2.4 billion in incentives to Toyota and more for battery making · TechNode
2.3418s , 8200.8828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Lesbian sex movies】,Openness Information Network