Spoilers for The Last of Us season 2, episode 6

Summary

  • Joel's past trauma influences his protective behavior towards Ellie, stemming from an abusive childhood.
  • The opening scene explores Joel's father's abusive behavior, impacting Joel's exceptional care for Ellie.
  • The episode sheds light on generational trauma and repair, offering hope for breaking the cycle.

It's fair to say that, other than episode 2 of HBO's The Last of Us season 2, episode 6 of the hard-hitting post-apocalyptic series has been one rollercoaster of an emotional ride. The penultimate episode sees Joel make a return in a series of flashbacks set deep within a theme of fatherhood, trauma and forgiveness, where fans also got to see more of Joel and Ellie's relationship unfold, involving the good, the bad and the ugly parts.

Last of Us fans got to see how Joel's fiercely protective role over the years had evolved into who he was before he died, due to fighting to protect his little brother Tommy from their abusive father. In episode 6's opening scene, viewers saw Joel as a boy covering up for Tommy and how he'd do anything to save the people he loved most. This protectiveness goes all the way back to episode one of season one of The Last of Us when Joel, Tommy, and Sarah fled their home when the Cordyceps first broke, and Joel not wanting to help a couple with a child, preferring to keep driving so he could keep them as safe as possible. Now, as fans saw the lengths yet again that Joel would go to, like killing Eugene, who had been bitten and had plenty of time to say goodbye to his wife, Gail, before he turned, the show's creator and writer unspool the "generational trauma" in its opening scene and the impact it had on Joel and Ellie's relationship.

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Neil Druckmann and Halley Gross Break Down Joel’s Generational Trauma in Episode 6

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Pedro Pascal as Joel in 'The Last of Us' Season 2.

Talking to Entertainment Weekly, Druckmann and Gross explained how viewers got to see a deeper look into Joel's psyche in The Last of Us episode 6, which included an introduction to his father, Javier Miller, in the episode's opening scene. During the impactful moment, Joel's father talked about how his own father used to beat him and how he hoped that, even though he may not have done everything right, he was better than him. "I think I've done the right things, but I'm not entirely sure. I just know that I did things better than my dad, who beat me even worse."

Druckmann explained the importance of this particular scene regarding how Joel then went on to treat Ellie and his hellbent devotion to always protect her and those he cared about, so that he could be a better father than his own. "Joel's doing the best he can with the tools that are in front of him, but he loves Ellie unconditionally," Druckmann explains. The creator went on to reveal that even though he wanted to highlight what had initially set Joel on his violent and overly protective route, the scene had merged into something else that he called "not only generational trauma, but generational repair and hope."

Halley Gross expressed that Joel's ability to reflect on that moment with his father while having a heart-to-heart with Ellie on the porch, where he said that he hoped that she could do a little better than him if she ever had a child, meant that there was "a glimmer of hope for the future for Ellie" and that the "generational trauma" could be broken. "To me, what the arc of this episode provides is a platform to say, when we live with intentionality, we can make healthier choices, but what that requires is reflection," Gross said. "That requires Joel to look back at his father and his identity and say, 'I want to be that better dad.' What it's going to require of Ellie is some level of reflection of saying, 'This is who I am. Who do I want to be?'".

The Last of Us Season 2 streams on Max, with new episodes dropping every Sunday until May 25.

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Release Date
January 15, 2023
Network
HBO
Showrunner
Craig Mazin
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  • instar53504431.jpg
    Pedro Pascal
    Joel Miller
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    Bella Ramsey
    Ellie Williams

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming
Checkbox: control the expandable behavior of the extra info

Directors
Craig Mazin, Peter Hoar, Jeremy Webb, Ali Abbasi, Mark Mylod, Stephen Williams, Jasmila Žbanić, Liza Johnson, Nina Lopez-Corrado
Writers
Neil Druckmann, Craig Mazin, Halley Wegryn Gross
Franchise(s)
The Last of Us
Creator(s)
Neil Druckmann, Craig Mazin

Source: Entertainment Weekly