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The Last of Us [SPOILERS]

  • 20-06-2013 2:57pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 6,721 ✭✭✭Otacon


    ShaneU wrote: »
    Can we move all the spoiler discussion to another thread, it's far too easy to accidentally click on them on the mobile site

    Done.

    Please note that this thread will contain spoilers from The Last of Us.


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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,835 ✭✭✭✭cloud493


    How about that ending huh? :pac:


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,721 ✭✭✭Otacon


    Yeah, like OMG

    :pac:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,835 ✭✭✭✭cloud493


    Can't believe Joel turns out to be Nathan Drake 20 years later/.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,721 ✭✭✭Otacon


    http://www.edge-online.com/features/the-last-of-us-the-definitive-postmortem-spoilers-be-damned/

    A really good read, especially Ashley Johnson's take on the ending.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,605 ✭✭✭C14N


    cloud493 wrote: »
    But we've seen what Joel went through, for 20 years. Yes he did questionable things. But he's a broken man, and he finally lets his guard down for this kid. I don't think its up to them to decide Ellie should die for a cure that might not even work. Maybe if it was her own choice, she'd have gone for it. But Joel thought he was acting in both their interests. It was a selfish act, no question. But I think justified.

    Indeed, he initially shoved Ellie away because he knew she was vulnerable and he didn't want to be hurt again after both his daughter and Tess.

    I really think it should have been Ellie's decision, I just think that she definitely would have been willing to go through with it (and Joel definitely does too). The problem with what Joel did for me was that he didn't give her that choice because he knew what she would say. He made up another story instead and killed Marlene so that Ellie would never find out.

    What's really sad about the ending to me is that Ellie seems to distrust Joel now but she has nothing to do but play along because he's the only person she has left. It doesn't take a master of observation doubt him really ("oh there's dozens of test subjects and they gave up on the cure after less than a year so they just stuck me in some hospital clothes and piled me into the car without letting me say hi to my longtime friend Marlene or even just taking a break at the base of the group who have taken care of me since my mother died, makes sense"). She's like a prisoner and she'll never have the same love for Joel that she did throughout the game.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 6,721 ✭✭✭Otacon


    C14N wrote: »
    What's really sad about the ending to me is that Ellie seems to distrust Joel now

    Read the interview in the link above - specifically, Ashley Johnson's take on the final 'OK' statement. It is something I didn't consider but makes sense.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,983 ✭✭✭mystic86


    C14N wrote: »
    She's like a prisoner and she'll never have the same love for Joel that she did throughout the game.

    wow, that's some statement. Quite the exaggeration and assumption right there.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,605 ✭✭✭C14N


    Otacon wrote: »
    Read the interview in the link above - specifically, Ashley Johnson's take on the final 'OK' statement. It is something I didn't consider but makes sense.

    I actually did and I think it was interesting. What I also thought was interesting was Stanley's part at the end though.
    It could really be read in several different ways, and it is open-ended and it is a somewhat ironic ending.

    I quite like it for that because it is clearly an ending open to interpretation. When I played I was horrified at what Joel was doing, I felt a bit sick afterward. I think it's a good thing though that they did it in such a way that other people read it differently and everything I said above is just my opinion, I'm not trying to argue it as a fact (sorry if it comes across like that). It's great to have a game that doesn't basically tell you how to feel at the end and clearly different people react to it very differently. It would have been a lot worse if it was just "yay, both our heroes are okay! Rainbows and lollipops for all" or if it was "Joel is now literally Hitler".
    mystic86 wrote: »
    wow, that's some statement. Quite the exaggeration and assumption right there.

    It's not an exaggeration but of course it's an assumption, everything that the game doesn't just tell you is.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,983 ✭✭✭mystic86


    C14N wrote: »
    It's not an exaggeration

    you're telling me you believe she is actually a prisoner now? That if Ellie said she was leaving that Joel would forceably stop her? I really think you've judged Joel wrong. Yes, I said wrong, like it's not a matter of opinion :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,835 ✭✭✭✭cloud493


    I think Joel thinks he's doing whats best for Ellie, keeping her alive. Its possible after her killing of David, and all the stuff she did keeping Joel alive when he was wounded, she wanted it to be for something, like a cure.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 6,721 ✭✭✭Otacon


    As I mentioned in the other thread, I would have done exactly what Joel did. Perhaps it was selfishness, but the callous nature of the Fireflies and the experiences the characters went through up to that point, made it easy for me to go through the hospital.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,605 ✭✭✭C14N


    mystic86 wrote: »
    you're telling me you believe she is actually a prisoner now? That if Ellie said she was leaving that Joel would forceably stop her? I really think you've judged Joel wrong. Yes, I said wrong, like it's not a matter of opinion :D

    I didn't mean literally a prisoner, I meant psychologically. There's nowhere else for her to go and she'll never know for sure what he did at the hospital so she'll never be fully committed to leaving. She's just stuck in this difficult place now where she'll always think there's something really terrible about Joel while he pretends that nothing ever happened.

    But obviously that is all just interpretation and assumption. Not fact or even author's original intent. Honestly though, do you think if Ellie did try to leave that Joel would just let her?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,835 ✭✭✭✭cloud493


    No I agree. Like I said on the other thread, what gives them the right to choose? A set of ideals they choose when and where to apply, like in the fact they order Joel to be killed, despite everything he did to get her to them. They were no different from the military, except you actually had to fight them :p


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,983 ✭✭✭mystic86


    C14N wrote: »
    I didn't mean literally a prisoner, I meant psychologically. There's nowhere else for her to go and she'll never know for sure what he did at the hospital so she'll never be fully committed to leaving. She's just stuck in this difficult place now where she'll always think there's something really terrible about Joel while he pretends that nothing ever happened.

    But obviously that is all just interpretation and assumption. Not fact or even author's original intent. Honestly though, do you think if Ellie did try to leave that Joel would just let her?

    There IS nowhere else to go anyway, there is nowhere for anyone to go when you think about it. I fully belive that Ellie gets almost as much from Joel as Joel gets from Ellie. Look at those scenes about everyone she cared about/who cared about her eventually left her or died.

    Not simply no, but ultimately he wouldn't force ably stop her.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,983 ✭✭✭mystic86


    I'm not saying it's a straight forward interpretation. And I'm not saying Joel wasn't being very selfish. But I'm saying it's more complicated than that, and Joel is far from evil or a monster to my eyes.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,605 ✭✭✭C14N


    mystic86 wrote: »
    I fully belive that Ellie gets almost as much from Joel as Joel gets from Ellie. Look at those scenes about everyone she cared about/who cared about her eventually left her or died.

    I agree, most of the way through the game it seemed like Ellie cared even more for Joel than he was willing to care back but that's why I found the ending so tragic, because I saw it as the bond being permanently damaged from Ellie's point of view.
    mystic86 wrote: »
    I'm not saying it's a straight forward interpretation. And I'm not saying Joel wasn't being very selfish. But I'm saying it's more complicated than that, and Joel is far from evil or a monster to my eyes.

    It is indeed very complicated and a lot of people do sympathise with Joel but for me, this was the most effective game I've played at subverting everything and making me feel like the monster, even more so than in Spec Ops
    when you kill the innocent crowd with white phosphorus
    and that's what I thought was so great about it.

    It's not another game that basically says "you're killing a load of people, but they're the bad guys so don't worry about it" and it does that earlier than the ending too.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,509 ✭✭✭NotorietyH


    I think what's really interesting about Joel and what makes the ending just such a emotional sucker punch, is that for the whole game Joel has been protecting Ellie from physical dangers, primarily, and because it's tied into the gameplay, you are too.

    Before you get to the fireflies, he has the conversation with her, offering her a choice, saying it's not too late to turn back, and she says no, that after all she's done, it can't have been for nothing. At the time, before the ending, I thought it was Joel still being protective of her, but really, by the end you realise that he was trying to protect himself. By the end Joel has really completely failed in protecting Ellie psychologically. I think part of her asking him again if what he said about the fireflies is true, is part that she doesn't really trust him, but also she's hoping his answer will change, as she is so burdened by the guilt of what she has done, that for it to be pointless, is soul-crushing. So for the 20 hours (for me) that Joel has been protecting Ellie from all these physical dangers, he failed at protecting her from the most crucial danger. That part that will eat away at her until there's nothing left.

    Watched the ending again earlier, and there's the lovely bit where he briefly rubs his watch as he says "I struggled with surviving a long time," I think for Joel, he no longer feels any guilt, that all the violence has taken its toll, that all he has ever wanted is his daughter back, and he gave up the struggle, and gave in completely and utterly to self-interest.

    I won't take credit, but I wanted to say I saw someone on another forum say that Joel did effectively die at the end of Fall, in a thematic sense, when he fell on the metal. That basically that's the point where he lost his soul. Where everything became purely about Ellie for him at the expense of everything else, including Ellie's wishes.

    I'd say myself, that it's also the point where Ellie effectively "dies", as immediately after, she assumes the Joel role, and she starts killing, well in terms of killing while being controlled by the player. Especailly culminating in the showdown with David. Any lingering sense of innocence or naievty is lost then. As a sidenote I thought they did a great job of gradually getting Ellie more involved in combat up until the point when you take control of her, so that it did, for me at least, feel like a natural progression.

    The only hope for her to recover any sense of being a 'good' person is for her to save humanity. That's taken away from her by Joel, and she's doomed to follow him down the path of complete self-interest.

    It's a really interesting examination on what happens when society collapses, and people lose the inherent moral code, of right and wrong, that occurs in society, and reduces everyone back to the level of animals basically. How quickly or slowly people begin to compromise and abandon their morals to survive, and how for some, abandoning their morals is the only way they can survive with the guilt and shame over the things they've done. I think Joel is pretty much there in the end, and as a result, Ellie is closely following him down that path.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,084 ✭✭✭✭Kirby


    Otacon wrote: »
    http://www.edge-online.com/features/the-last-of-us-the-definitive-postmortem-spoilers-be-damned/

    A really good read, especially Ashley Johnson's take on the ending.

    A great read. Thanks for the link.

    I read this bit and it made me laugh. For anybody who didn't read the article, the letters are Neil Druckmann and Bruce Straley. They are directors at Naughty Dog and worked on the game.
    ND: There were times where Bruce was so stressed out, he was like, “We have this girl here! And I don’t know how to make this layout fun! And how do you close off a street? It doesn’t make sense!”

    BS: There were several lunches where I’m surprised Neil didn’t punch me because I just had to vent. Because you can’t vent to the team like that. You have to be the spearhead, but I’m over there ripping my hair out, going what the **** have we done, man?

    ND: How do we get out of this? How do we get out of this?

    BS: I’m giving somebody super powers today. Who’s getting them? Because somebody has to have super powers.

    ND: We kept joking like, Ellie’s going to have powers where she can control plants and it’s going to open up all these new mechanics.
    :P It would have been so easy to do. But I'm glad they didn't.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,719 ✭✭✭Grumpypants


    cloud493 wrote: »
    Can't believe Joel turns out to be Nathan Drake 20 years later/.

    Nathan Drake is in the game well Nolan North anyway.

    My take on the ending is that the Fireflies had tried this experiment with others and they had died or at least it didn't work so Joel wasn't totally lying, it was on one of the recorders found in an office in the hospital.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,292 ✭✭✭SouthTippBass


    Nathan Drake is in the game well Nolan North anyway.

    My take on the ending is that the Fireflies had tried this experiment with others and they had died or at least it didn't work so Joel wasn't totally lying, it was on one of the recorders found in an office in the hospital.

    Was it in that last room you need a shiv to enter? Because thats the only one I missed in the game! Used all my blades for nailbambs for that final push. Was disgusted as I had 75% of a blade, but couldnt find any more :(


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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,509 ✭✭✭NotorietyH


    Nathan Drake is in the game well Nolan North anyway.

    My take on the ending is that the Fireflies had tried this experiment with others and they had died or at least it didn't work so Joel wasn't totally lying, it was on one of the recorders found in an office in the hospital.

    No, that recorder stated that they studied several other cases but had never seen a case like Ellie. That the virus had mutated. I thought that initially at the start but I'm almost certain he said he'd never seen anything like Ellie's form of the virus. You can check all the articifcats in the main menu after completing the game. I think the recorder is there. I must give it a re-listen.

    Just a bit more on what I wrote above too. I don't think Joel is the bad guy or anything, I think he's completely human. I know myself I'd more than likely make the choice he did. After losing so much over the 20 years, that he just wasn't willing to give one last thing. I think there's very few people who wouldn't fall back on acting in self-interest in a complete societal collapse.

    Marlene maybe, but I think she struggled with it too. She says in one of teh recorders that some of her men survived and she should have taken Ellie herself. I think at the back of her mind, or maybe even closer to the front, she didn't just hand Ellie over to Joel out of necessity, that partly, she didn't want to be the one to hand her over. I think that she was hoping that when she got to the fireflies, it would all be done already, to take that decision out of her hands. Though for her ultimately there wasn't a choice really, she felt she absolutely had to go through it, whereas for Joel, there wasn't a choice either, for him he had absolutely had to let Ellie live.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,719 ✭✭✭Grumpypants


    I found two recorders near the end I think one said they had been doing tests on others but had not had a break through then the second one talked about Ellie but that was the woman not a surgeon but then it was in a cut scene that they mention it had mutated and they had to reverse engineer it. Then Joel says but I thought it grows in the brain.

    I might be remembering wrong. or getting it mixed up with the monkey scene recorder. Those test also failed. Need to play it again.

    Anyway I was going in thinking it is not going to work all the other tests failed so I must have picked it up from somewhere. I went into that surgery and blasted those doctors without a second thought, even went over and got the one cowering on the ground lol.

    I was thinking im getting her and getting out of here none of these pricks are going to stop me. .


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,721 ✭✭✭Otacon


    A good chat between Adam Sessler, Kirk Hamilton and Zac Minor on the game.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,447 ✭✭✭richymcdermott


    My interpretation was that Joel never wanted to be alone again and after all the things he went through with the loss of sarah all those years ago and the death of tess i feel as if he did not want to be alone and when he seen ellie on the bed in the medical room when he says baby girl , never said till the opening scene with his daughter sarah , right there you know he cares for her as a daughter.

    Ellie Knew that he was lying but she needed to hear his side of the story so that she can lie to herself to choose her own narrative on how to carry on living.

    We came across monkeys, giraffes and horses and at the university we seen plants were growing once again. As Joel said Its all about surviving another day.


    While Joel is indeed a broken man , haunted by his past and what he done may have been selfish to not to live alone once again and relive the nightmare that 20 years ago , i feel as if i would do the same.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,292 ✭✭✭SouthTippBass


    Best use of a giraffe in a game.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,084 ✭✭✭✭Kirby


    My interpretation was that Joel never wanted to be alone again and after all the things he went through with the loss of sarah all those years ago and the death of tess i feel as if he did not want to be alone and when he seen ellie on the bed in the medical room when he says baby girl , never said till the opening scene with his daughter sarah , right there you know he cares for her as a daughter.

    I think that "baby girl" moment happens a little earlier. I might be wrong but I believe he calls her that as they hug in the burning building after she kills David. So basically that's the point he has fully committed to her as his daughter, a good bit before the hospital room.

    Especially as the next scene in spring shows Joel telling her how he used to play his six string and how he will teach her how to play.......just like he was talking to his daughter.

    Ellie's father moment happens before his though I think. We can see her care for him in increments more and more throughout the game. She kills for him when he is being drowned in the "him or me" moment. And then when she jumps from the safety of Henry down to the danger of Joel and says "We stick together, right?"

    And then ofcourse her complete panic when he get's impaled in the hospital and her willingness to get him out of there. Her "baby girl" moment is definitely when she curls up to him as he lies dying on the bed after being impaled. She fought so hard to get him the medicine and she just lies there hoping it works. That hit it home for me.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,509 ✭✭✭NotorietyH


    Yeah I'm not a hundred percent certain about that recording now, but I'm almost sure, because if there were other people who were immune and they knew about it would kind of undercut the impact of the ending. Joel keeps humanities last hope for survival to himself, or Joel keeps one of humanities last hopes of survival to himself. I think you'd lose a lot of the emotional weight of the lie Joel tells if Ellie isn't the only possibility of a cure.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,447 ✭✭✭richymcdermott


    Kirby wrote: »
    I think that "baby girl" moment happens a little earlier. I might be wrong but I believe he calls her that as they hug in the burning building after she kills David. So basically that's the point he has fully committed to her as his daughter, a good bit before the hospital room.

    Especially as the next scene in spring shows Joel telling her how he used to play his six string and how he will teach her how to play.......just like he was talking to his daughter.

    Ellie's father moment happens before his though I think. We can see her care for him in increments more and more throughout the game. She kills for him when he is being drowned in the "him or me" moment. And then when she jumps from the safety of Henry down to the danger of Joel and says "We stick together, right?"

    And then ofcourse her complete panic when he get's impaled in the hospital and her willingness to get him out of there. Her "baby girl" moment is definitely when she curls up to him as he lies dying on the bed after being impaled. She fought so hard to get him the medicine and she just lies there hoping it works. That hit it home for me.

    you are right , my bad .

    just occurred to me their. :pac:


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,509 ✭✭✭NotorietyH


    For me all those recordings were about reinforcing the importance of Ellie just before Joel makes his decision. I think that was Naughty Dog just laying out the stakes. That's why Marlene's recording is there where she talks about the weight of the decision and how much she cares for Ellie, but still makes the choice to go through with it. It's a direct mirror of Joel's relationship with Ellie but with Marlene making the opposite conclusion to Joel.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 13,084 ✭✭✭✭Kirby


    NotorietyH wrote: »
    Yeah I'm not a hundred percent certain about that recording now, but I'm almost sure, because if there were other people who were immune and they knew about it would kind of undercut the impact of the ending. Joel keeps humanities last hope for survival to himself, or Joel keeps one of humanities last hopes of survival to himself. I think you'd lose a lot of the emotional weight of the lie Joel tells if Ellie isn't the only possibility of a cure.

    To be honest, the more I think about it the more I think there really isn't a vital necessity for Ellie's Vaccine. Was she really the last hope? I'm not so sure. According to the doctors, Ellie's mutation would maybe enable them to find a vaccine....not a cure. They can't cure the currently infected, just stop more from becoming infected.

    We know from one of the college student's journal entries that over 60% of the world had become infected.....and that estimate is way out of date. Would a vaccine really have made a difference? Surely it would be too late to help.

    And remember, there is no guarantee that the Firefly's would have distributed it evenly or even at all. They were quite the military outfit. And even if they did want to, how could they? It's not as if they could pop it into FedEx. Society has broken down.

    It seems to me that the world got on fine while humanity was crumbling. Plant life, animals, etc. Humanity would live on anyway without a cure anyway as the infected slowly die of old age, exposure or starvation, and isolated settlements in the middle of nowhere live on unmolested by the infestation.


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