The Last of Us Season 2 Episode 3 Review: Picking Up the Pieces
The Last of Us season 2 gets Ellie's next journey started as the Jackson community reels from unimaginable losses.
When the episode jumps forward three months, Jackson is still picking up the pieces, literally and emotionally, from the losses they suffered. Tommy and Jesse (Young Mazino) are helping to rebuild the buildings lost in the attack. Ellie is trying to convince Gail (Catherine OâHara) that she is emotionally fit to be discharged from the hospital after recovering from the injuries she suffered.Â
Ellie tells Gail that âYour final moment with someone doesnât define your whole time with them,â and it seems like a part of her is saying that to try and convince herself of that fact as much as sheâs trying to convince Gail that she believes it. Gail does let her be discharged, but itâs evident that Gail knows Ellie is just trying to say the right things. She knows she canât really keep Ellie there, sheâs probably worked with Joel enough to know how similar they are, but she also knows that Ellieâs not really as okay as she claims to be.
After sheâs discharged, Ellie goes by Joelâs house, where she sees a makeshift memorial set up by Jacksonâs residents across his white picket fence. Letters and flowers sit where they likely have for the last three months, a stark reminder that not only has Ellie lost someone she deeply cares about, the town has lost a pillar as well.
When she goes through Joelâs things, she finds a box with his broken watch and his revolver. She moves the watch aside, going straight for the gun, and we can already see the wheels of revenge turning in Ellieâs mind, fueled by the grief that is clearly still present as she cries holding Joelâs jacket.
In another surprising turn from the games, Ellie asks Jacksonâs council for support in going after Abby. Dina (Isabela Merced) finally reveals an important piece of information that sheâs been sitting on until after Ellie recovered â she knows the names of Abbyâs crew and that theyâre all part of the Washington Liberation Front (WLF) from Seattle. Ellie uses this information, and a rousing speech about how sheâs seeking justice, not revenge for Joelâs death, to try and convince the Jackson council to send people to help her. There are a lot who support Ellieâs quest and want to help her, even surprisingly Seth, but there are also some who donât see the need to follow violence with violence, especially while the town is still in the process of rebuilding. Even Tommy is hesitant when Ellie first comes to him with the idea, he loves his brother dearly, but his first priority right now has to be Jackson.
The council votes no, even with Maria (Rutina Wesley), Tommy, and now Jesse there to back Ellie up. But that doesnât stop Ellie and Dina from setting off on their own for Seattle. Ellie and Dina bond over their journey, and I hope that anyone who was disappointed by last episodeâs decision to not have the two on patrol together as they are in The Last of Us Part II can rest a little easier knowing that Dina and Ellieâs relationship is still progressing. Merced and Ramsey have such an easy chemistry, their characters connecting over everything from Ellie leaving coffee beans at Joelâs grave on their way out of town to talks of their first kiss at the dance to Ellie vulnerably sharing the story of the first time she killed somebody. Trauma often brings people together, no matter how brutal or devastating the event might be.