After abandoning their truck in Kansas City, Joel and Ellie attempt to escape without drawing the attention of a vindictive rebel leader.After abandoning their truck in Kansas City, Joel and Ellie attempt to escape without drawing the attention of a vindictive rebel leader.After abandoning their truck in Kansas City, Joel and Ellie attempt to escape without drawing the attention of a vindictive rebel leader.
Keivonn Woodard
- Sam Burrell
- (as Keivonn Montreal Woodard)
Zay Domo Artist
- Young Rebel Boy
- (uncredited)
C. Stephen Campbell
- Rebel Soldier
- (uncredited)
Patrick Chan
- Stranger
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Another fantastic episode
The Last of Us: Another great episode last night. What I like about it is how human it is, there has just been maybe two scenes where zombies appeared and you hardly even notice it.
The real story is the human element, not the zombie apocalypse.
I think where shows like the Walking Dead made their mistake was constant repetition of the same narrative.
It is early to say but I feel the benefit of the The Last of Us being based on a game is that it has a finite and self contain story where that story already has a test audience.
I also like how the show pays homage to video game styled missions... the "I'm too big to fit in there, can you fit through that tiny hole and open the door" so I don't have to smash the window etc. I haven't played the game but I know that's a tried and tested video game technique.
I also think that it kinda adds more reality to it in a way, cos I wouldn't smash a window... I'd be like, get in there and open the door. 😂
Once again we have a whole episode which explores relationships. So far that has been the focus;
Joel and his daughter, Sarah.
Joel and his partner, Tess.
Bill and Frank Joel and Ellie.
It's very nicely done because it shows us that as much as Joel wants to be this cold blooded self serving person, there are people he cares about.
It's really refreshing to have a series that crafts these relationships without it feeling overwhelmingly expositional.... Although pretty much most of it is a character study and exposition. It's just done well and written cohesively.
The real story is the human element, not the zombie apocalypse.
I think where shows like the Walking Dead made their mistake was constant repetition of the same narrative.
It is early to say but I feel the benefit of the The Last of Us being based on a game is that it has a finite and self contain story where that story already has a test audience.
I also like how the show pays homage to video game styled missions... the "I'm too big to fit in there, can you fit through that tiny hole and open the door" so I don't have to smash the window etc. I haven't played the game but I know that's a tried and tested video game technique.
I also think that it kinda adds more reality to it in a way, cos I wouldn't smash a window... I'd be like, get in there and open the door. 😂
Once again we have a whole episode which explores relationships. So far that has been the focus;
Joel and his daughter, Sarah.
Joel and his partner, Tess.
Bill and Frank Joel and Ellie.
It's very nicely done because it shows us that as much as Joel wants to be this cold blooded self serving person, there are people he cares about.
It's really refreshing to have a series that crafts these relationships without it feeling overwhelmingly expositional.... Although pretty much most of it is a character study and exposition. It's just done well and written cohesively.
Please Hold on to my Hand
A fairly solid episode ...
(SPOILER FREE)
Featuring guest performances from Melanie Lynskey and Jeffrey Pierce ( who played Tommy in part 1 and part 2 of the games), we are introduced to a solid, and far more riveting episode compared to the more emotional and sombre tone seen in the last. I heavily enjoyed this episode as it provided both complex and mature themes as well as showing some much deserved (and possibly needed) character development for both Ellie and Joel, who didn't receive much development in Long, Long Time (episode 3) due to heavy focus on both Bill and Frank instead.
While there was heavy criticism for the narrative choices and differences in the previous episode, I am glad that the creators chose to make original characters for this episode as it affects the events that occur. Both Jeffrey Pierce and Melanie Lynskey gave great performances for this episode and are contenders for best guest drama actor/actress at the Emmy's along with Anna Torv (Tess), Nick Offerman and Murray Bartlett (Bill and Frank).
9/10.
While there was heavy criticism for the narrative choices and differences in the previous episode, I am glad that the creators chose to make original characters for this episode as it affects the events that occur. Both Jeffrey Pierce and Melanie Lynskey gave great performances for this episode and are contenders for best guest drama actor/actress at the Emmy's along with Anna Torv (Tess), Nick Offerman and Murray Bartlett (Bill and Frank).
9/10.
Episode 104, the journey continues
After catching up on some movies and other shows I have fell a little behind on The Last of Us, so I'm taking today to catch up on the two episodes I missed.
Now Episode 104 "Please Hold to My Hand" starts out fantastically with Joel and Ellie being the center point of the episode. Some great cinematography, really making this apocalyptic world so eerily beautiful. There's always been something beautiful to me about nature retaking man made environments.
Unfortunately though the episode took a bit of a down turn for me when they introduced this group that attacked Joel and Ellie. While I love antagonists who are developed and fleshed out, the biggest problem is this groups leader Kathleen. She's not threatening in anyway, and she has no real presence. Her right handman is more threatening than she is. But Kathleen I just can't take her seriously and every scene with her in it just bored me.
Other than Kathleen the episode didn't do much to progress anything. The introduction of Henry and Sam is great so it'll be exciting to see how they play out in the next episode.
One last thing and this is just a nitpick as a gamer, I wish they kept that execution during the shootout in the drugstore. Joel kills one of the attackers by cutting his throat open on a broken fridge door. Irregardless of my nitpick that scene was great and it added a new level of tension that the game I must say didn't.
Overall it was a good episode but not as good as recent episodes in the season.
IMDb: 7/10 Letterboxd: 3/5
Watched on HBO Max in 4k Dolby Vision.
Now Episode 104 "Please Hold to My Hand" starts out fantastically with Joel and Ellie being the center point of the episode. Some great cinematography, really making this apocalyptic world so eerily beautiful. There's always been something beautiful to me about nature retaking man made environments.
Unfortunately though the episode took a bit of a down turn for me when they introduced this group that attacked Joel and Ellie. While I love antagonists who are developed and fleshed out, the biggest problem is this groups leader Kathleen. She's not threatening in anyway, and she has no real presence. Her right handman is more threatening than she is. But Kathleen I just can't take her seriously and every scene with her in it just bored me.
Other than Kathleen the episode didn't do much to progress anything. The introduction of Henry and Sam is great so it'll be exciting to see how they play out in the next episode.
One last thing and this is just a nitpick as a gamer, I wish they kept that execution during the shootout in the drugstore. Joel kills one of the attackers by cutting his throat open on a broken fridge door. Irregardless of my nitpick that scene was great and it added a new level of tension that the game I must say didn't.
Overall it was a good episode but not as good as recent episodes in the season.
IMDb: 7/10 Letterboxd: 3/5
Watched on HBO Max in 4k Dolby Vision.
The Heart and Soul of The Last of Us
This episode is exactly why I have been excited about this series. We see the humanity and the relationship between Joel and Ellie throughout this episode which is exactly what The Last of Us is about. Sure, it is about clickers and killing infected and getting ambushed by enemies, but at its core it is the story of Joel and Ellie's relationship.
This episode is the first one so far in this series that really feels like the story has gotten going and we are learning everything we already knew about Joel and Ellie (but in the way Pedro and Bella portray them) but we're getting something deeper.
This episode is true to the characters, true to the story, but it goes deeper in a way that was impossible in the game.
This episode is the first one so far in this series that really feels like the story has gotten going and we are learning everything we already knew about Joel and Ellie (but in the way Pedro and Bella portray them) but we're getting something deeper.
This episode is true to the characters, true to the story, but it goes deeper in a way that was impossible in the game.
Good deviation
HBOs The Last of Us continues to present itself in an organic nature. A lot of what happens in this episode doesn't happen in the game- and that is great. In the video game there's just not enough wiggle room for sidecontent, as it's more streamlined and would otherwise take away from the gameplay.
I'm the game, Joel just goes on a killing spree by murdering tons and tons of people that stand in his way. Here, each kill feels more impactful because they're reduced. That way Joel definitely gets more room to reflect on his actions.
Also I like the chemistry between Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey. They really sold it for me.
I'm the game, Joel just goes on a killing spree by murdering tons and tons of people that stand in his way. Here, each kill feels more impactful because they're reduced. That way Joel definitely gets more room to reflect on his actions.
Also I like the chemistry between Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey. They really sold it for me.
Did you know
- TriviaCraig Mazin enjoyed the use of Ellie's joke book in the game and felt its inclusion in the series allowed effective development between her and Joel.
- GoofsJoel is paranoid enough to spread broken glass to act as an alarm, and yet he and Ellie bunk down in full view of the door, where anyone passing by could see them, and shoot them.
- Quotes
Ellie Williams: Joel.
Joel Miller: What?
Ellie Williams: Can I ask you a serious question?
Joel Miller: Yeah.
Ellie Williams: Why did the scarecrow get an award?
Joel Miller: [pause] Because he was outstanding in his field.
Ellie Williams: You dick! Did you read this?
Joel Miller: No. Now go to sleep.
- ConnectionsReferences Mystic River (2003)
- SoundtracksAlone and Forsaken
(uncredited)
Written by Hank Williams
Performed by Hank Williams & The Drifting Cowboys
[Appears 5 minutes into episode]
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Lethbridge Viaduct, Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada(Driving montage: Destroyed railroad bridge)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 46m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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