The
Last of Us is a video game. And when
some people hear those two words (video +
game) they immediately picture an overweight, virgin teen growing out of a
sofa with a barrel full of pork rinds sitting next to them, pushing buttons to
make a pixelated figure jump up and down.
That might somewhat be true, but sometimes that pixelated game you're
envisioning is more than just collecting coins and saving a princess. Sometimes that controller is attached to a
visually stunning, character driven story, set during a zombie apocalypse.
Without
a blink of an eye or even the slightest hint of hesitation, I can easily say
The Last of Us has been this summer's best story experience. Even if video games hold about as much
interest to you as a passing fart, The Last of Us has a story any person, from
any walk of life can relate to.
WARNING:
Full plot and
details exposed throughout this article, so if you haven't yet played TLOU,
please do not read on. Play the game
first, and then come back. Yes, it’s
that frigging good!
"I leave you with your friends for a couple of hours, and what do I come home to?
Brains and guts all over the carpet--again--that's what!"
STORY:
Joel,
a father who lost his daughter, Sarah, to a zombie outbreak, becomes withdrawn
and uncaring in the new post-apocalyptic world.
After taking a job to escort a young girl named Ellie, to a safe haven,
all those buried paternal feelings return, and he slowly transforms into the
loving man he once was before the world turned to crap. An unbelievable story and gaming experience
ensues, as both Joel and Ellie find themselves dependent on each other through
the hardships a world of zombies and cannibals have to offer.
"Alright, I'll shoot 'em, but I'm not eating 'em."
A BAD ENDING &
BAD JOEL?
In
interviews, Naughty Dog has said the ending didn't test well and the team was
thinking about changing it. You can
contribute these feelings to people who felt Joel ends up being a bad guy in
the end. But if you consider Joel’s
decisions throughout the story and his character's motivations, the ending
becomes perfect. He makes a choice at
the end, not because the story calls for it, but because of who he is inside.
Joel
starts off the game as a protective loving father. You see this character trait stuffed in quiet
moments with Sarah, as the two of them converse affectionately. When Sarah is then killed in Joel's hands
during the outbreak, not only does she die, but the paternal Joel dies
too. And when we catch up with Joel
twenty years later, his current mindset is to put the least possible effort
into surviving. But while escorting
Ellie—even though he tries to fight it and remain hollow—Joel finds his
paternal side slowly returning.
"I wonder if anyone re-tweeted me."
Let’s
talk trust. Toward the end of the story,
Ellie happens to run into David, the leader of the marauders who Joel and Ellie
have been killing throughout the story to survive. Even though David tells Ellie repeatedly that
he won't harm her—he even helps her survive a zombie onslaught—did you ever
once get the feeling you could trust him?
No, and that untrustworthy feeling comes to fruition when he throws Ellie
in a cage and tells her she'll be hacked up for food.
"I said: hot--sauce--with--my--eggs. Not ketchup!
Maybe now you'll remember my order next time."
Now
take David's character and compare him with Joel. Both are doing what needs to be done to
survive. But here's the question: would
David put his life before any of his men?
Nope. But Joel would do anything
he could to keep Ellie safe, just like any caring father. He puts himself in harm's way throughout the
story fighting bands of mercenaries, government officers, and zombies.
Joel
even lies.
This
is what most people have a hard time swallowing. "But
he lied to Ellie at the end!"
Sure, but he did it to keep her safe.
Joel’s paternal trait was built around an instinct to keep his child protected. Sarah or Ellie's life comes first before
anyone or anything else, even if that means not saving humanity.
"I want you to tell me the truth, Joel.
Did the teenage mutant ninja turtles really exist, before all of this?"
People
keep saying: but the Fireflies had a cure—they knew how to save humanity. Really?
So a bunch of people working with timeworn machines during a zombie
apocalypse knew for certain, that
killing an innocent girl would definitely save humanity? The only thing that Joel knew for certain,
was getting Ellie away from the Fireflies would save her life. And that became reason enough for his
actions.
THE PERFECT
ENDING:
Naughty
Dog hit us with an unexpected finale that makes perfect sense when you consider
the whole story as a character study. But wait!!! What if Joel did side with the Fireflies and helped
kill Ellie at the end? Well…then every action,
conversation, and heartfelt moment—even Joel mourning his daughter by carrying
her watch—would have been built up for nothing.
All the worrying and caring for his daughter, and for Ellie…gone,
because the plot needed Joel to save the world.
Would that really have made more sense?
"Maybe your not listening: Mickey Mouse was not real."
"Then why did people celebrate his birthday, Joel?"
"He was a frigging fictional mouse, and--you know what? Forget it.
From now on, stick to zombies. Damn...where is a clicker when you need one?"
Instead,
Joel decides to remove everyone that can harm Ellie. And that’s not even the best part of the
final moments. The best part comes in
the form of a bittersweet question: Ellie asks Joel flat out, whether
everything he told her about the Fireflies not needing her is true. Again, the paternal instinct kicks in and Joel
tells her of course. And since she
trusts him to no end—and even if she thinks
he’s lying—you get one of the most perfect endings I've ever had the pleasure
to witness. She says okay and BAM—cut to black. Perfect.
Two people in a screwed-up world finally realizing that they need each
other. What else can you ask for?
"Oh my God, a spider!"
"What!?! Get it off! Get if off!"
"Hahaha...totally punk'd you on that one. There is a zombie though."
CONCLUSION:
In the end, the game/story is a character based
drama involving two people, who under unlikely circumstances find themselves
depending on each other. The story is
about Joel and Ellie, not the zombies, not the Fireflies, and definitely not
humanity. Joel didn't travel all that
way in the game to save
humanity. He did it because he felt as
though Ellie needed saving, and he was the only one who could do it. Some people will never come to think of Joel
as a noble individual, but that's alright, because in a post-apocalyptic world,
there is no black or white, there's just gray.
Joel isn't bad. He's just a man
trying to do what he can to save his child.If you like this article, check out:
Watch Dogs: What Went Wrong?
6 comments:
No he's bad. Definitely a bad guy.
You know what, anonymous? You do make a great point. Dang it...you're right, he's bad. What were we thinking? Thanks for the help:)
Joels not a bad man at heart, at the end of the day killing a child like that is just pure wrong. Joel was acting out of love and a father's instinct, he would not be able to come back from another loss like that.
Its stupid how people say he 'doomed Humanity', humanity was already doomed in the first place. If you really think about it a vaccine could actully cause more deaths as people would be killing each other left right and center for it, if you haven't noticed its 20 years too late, the damage has been done.
If anyone deserves to live in that world it is Ellie, she and Joel owe the world NOTHING.
Maybe the end of mankind was meant to be.
'Everything happens for a reason' - David
Joel is neither a villain nor a hero, he’s a survivor, there is no good or bad there’s just survival. Some people say he’s a villain because he kills people, the Fireflies etc. EVERYONE in that world kills people, you kill to survive. That’s like saying people in our society today are ‘evil’ for mass killing and eating animals, we eat them so society today can ‘survive’. How many species in the last 100 years have been wiped out because of Human expansion? Quite ironic when you think about it like that isn’t it.
He saved Ellie because the fireflies were going to slice her brain open for a chance to get a vaccine, not even a cure that was not 100% going to work. He grew to love her as a daughter and would do anything to not lose her and go through that pain again (his daughter’s death). Joel’s parenting instincts surfaced as the game progressed as he was a good father in the old world. I actually feel more sorry for Joel overall as the poor guy has lost so much and seen so many awful things the last 20 years. He was pretty much forced to make that decision at the end, because in his mind he didn’t have a choice (as Neil Druckmann stated in an interview). You are supposed to ‘feel’ what Joel feels.
When Ellie says ‘Okay’ she realises in that moment Joel needs her and she needs Joel. She has never felt an emotional connection this strong with someone before (even marline) that’s why she got very upset in the ranch scene. No one in that world really cares about Ellie’s wellbeing, sure they care about her immunity, but not her as a person. Even marline who promised her mother she would look after.
Joel is the opposite, he cares about Ellie, not her immunity.
Why do the people you encounter in the game deserve to live and get a vaccine? So saving the one person you live for and love is selfish? Would you give up an adopted daughter who you grew to love like your own in a messed up world like that? Really, would you?
Joel is not a villain he’s simply human. I personally would have never given up Ellie even for a vaccine, civilization is already gone along with humanity. That’s the world they live in now, vaccine or no vaccine.
Sorry for such a long post it’s just I have never really expressed my opinion on this game before so it’s kind of bottled up haha. Best review of the story I’ve seen so far, I pretty much agree with everything you wrote. Keep up the good work!
Thank GOODNESS that I finally found someone who feels this way about Joel. I think people are so used to the "hero" storyline that is so often told in video games (and all forms of media), where the protagonist always puts the world's needs before their own.
But Joel is one of the most human and realistic characters I've ever seen. In split-second decisions, he makes choices to protect those that he cares about. And in the world that he lives in, that's what any person would do. Why sacrifice a young girl's life for a world that has already gone to hell?
I agree with another commenter who said that Joel and Ellie didn't owe the world shit. Ellie being killed would not have been worth it, and would have gone against the entire build up of Joel and Ellie's relationship.
Jessica you are absolutely correct! I'm so glad I found someone who agrees too:) Thanks for stopping by and commenting. Have a great day.
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