The Last Of Us Season 2 Finale: Jesse’s Death Explained

The Last Of Us Season 2 Finale: Jesse's Death Explained






When you are lost in the dark, look for the spoilers. This article deals with the events of the final of season 2 of “The Last of Us”.

At a time when viewers could use a real series of choices to make the horrors of real life feel a little less horrible, well, well, “The Last of Us” season 2 Supplied exactly none of this. Not that anyone care was surprised, of course. However, newcomers to HBO adaptation may not have been fully Prepared how far the final took things. Freshly out of the episode of the comforting flashback last week, the culmination reminded everyone that the apocalypse is always the apocalypse and that the hordes of zombie infects do not always represent the greatest threat.

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Unfortunately, poor Jesse (Young Mazino) had to teach this lesson to the harsh and pay the highest price, which makes the death of the series (the most shocking (the most shocking (the most shocking (Apart from the tragic disappearance of Joel from the start, of course) In what turns out to be a battered recreation for the original game. At the very least, those who played “The Last of Us Part II” could not have asked for a more faithful representation of the events. The tragedy begins with Ellie (Bella Ramsey) on the war path in Seattle against her hated rival Abby (Kaitlyn Devers), degenerates with her inadvertent murder of two of Abby’s close friends and ends in the darker case of the series of unnecessary reprisals. Not that it is a comfort for one of the most sympathetic characters in the whole story … and the one who was about to become a father, to that. This little detail, Revealed a few weeks a few weeks ago during the great scene of the Great Romance of Ellie and Dina (Isabela Merced)is only a even more cruel turn of the knife.

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As always, the world of “last of us” does not concern anyone, so let’s unpack the premature fate of Jesse and the most shocking (and faithfully adapted) death of the show.

Jesse was too pure for the world of last of us

A hardened survivor, a chief born and a fair death waiting Perform – all of the above can be true simultaneously with regard to our very absent jesse. Introduced into the opening sequence of season 2 supervising brutal training in the hand of Ellie, Jesse quickly got attached to viewers as a figure without frills in the city of Jackson sanctuary. In one of the biggest departures of the game, the Craig Mazin and Neil Druckmann showrunners have slightly changed the character’s responsibilities. Not only has Jackson has a advice in power of decision -makers who calls for shooting for city dwellers, but Jesse had been positioned as a leading member of the council in its own right at some point in the future. It would not be, unfortunately, and it should probably have been the first major red flag that it was intended for a much brutal spell.

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Jesse was far from perfect, of course. His slightly domineering attitude has earned Ellie’s (light) contempt and her ex from Dina, as well as her altruism throughout the season. He and Tommy (Gabriel Luna) were the first to go after Ellie and Dina, after all, and Jesse ended up saving their two lives from the infected when all hope seemed lost. Again, his penchant for heroism also put him and Ellie in the throat of the other – especially when he prevented him from saving A young member of the Séaphites Who was marked for death, despite the reprimand with Ellie self -sufficiency for putting their “community” in danger. The series also added an additional layer of conflict by being part of the voting organization in Jackson, who finally decided not to leave Ellie and Dina embarking on their revenge mission against Abby and the Western Liberation Front. The viewers were supposed to assume that Jesse had been one of the few to vote in their favor, but a late revelation of season 2 turned out to be the opposite.

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Was our late hero simply too pure to survive the world of “The Last of Us”? In the end, it does not matter. If this story teaches us something, that’s this: some people get what they deserve, and others do not do it. This is what survivors do in their absence that counts.

Season 2 of “The Last of Us” is now in trouble on HBO Max.



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