‘Last of Us’ stars get real ab

‘The Last of Us’ series adaptation of the iconic Sony PlayStation game has been an instant hit with fans and critics. Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey, right, play the lead characters Joel and Ellie. Images: Naughty Dog/ HBO

‘Last of Us’ stars get real about ‘ability to corpse’ among monsters

Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey share their ‘The Last of Us’ journey: From getting antsy with David Attenborough to thumb-skills.

‘Last of Us’ stars get real ab

‘The Last of Us’ series adaptation of the iconic Sony PlayStation game has been an instant hit with fans and critics. Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey, right, play the lead characters Joel and Ellie. Images: Naughty Dog/ HBO

The live-action TV series adaptation of Sony’s insanely popular video game The Last of Us has been keeping viewers glued to their screens. It has been hailed as “the best video game adaptation ever made” by critics on Rotten Tomatoes and chronicles humanity’s fight for survival against a dystopian backdrop.

‘The Last of Us’: Where to watch…and second season loading

Deadline reported that the TV series scored the second-largest premiere after House of the Dragon since Boardwalk Empire’s launch in 2010. No wonder HBO already renewed The Last of Us for a second season after its first two episodes aired.

Fortunately South African fans have been able to get in on the action through Showmax with Episode 7 of the Season One being released today on the streaming platform.

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A scene from the TV adaptation of the Naughty Dog PlayStation game ‘The Last of Us’. Image: HBO

‘The Last of Us’: What to know

The nail-biting action unfolds 20 years after modern civilisation has been destroyed by a viral outbreak. The Mandalorian and Game of Thrones star Pedro Pascal is Joel, a hardened survivor hired to smuggle (very reluctantly) the 14-year-old Ellie (Bella RamseyHis Dark Materials and Game of Thrones) out of an oppressive quarantine zone in Boston.

Ellie is immune to the Cordyceps plague, basically rendering her one of the last hopes for the survival of humanity. Joel must get her safely to the Fireflies, an enigmatic Utah-based group who want to use Ellie’s unique immunity to synthesise a cure.

What starts as a seemingly small mission sets Joel and Ellie on a brutal and epic odyssey across the American wasteland, with both having to rely on each other for survival.

ALSO READ: ‘The Last of Us’: Series elevates the themes of love and family

Interview with Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey

The Last of Us stars Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey got real in an interview.

Why did you want to make The Last of Us?

Pedro Pascal: At the start, I would have to say that it was Craig Mazin (writer and executive producer) and HBO. I hadn’t heard of the game before I got the job. But the first couple of scripts were given to me and I thought they were astonishing. It was very revelatory to find out that the source material was an immersive video game experience.

Because of Craig’s scripts, meeting Craig, and knowing the level of quality storytelling that HBO is capable of, were the primary reasons. And then it was nothing but gift after gift.

Bella Ramsey: The scripts were the best I have ever read, and it became like a spiritual experience reading them.

When new ones came out, I would have to be on my own in a place where no one could talk to me, and I’d just digest them. It was so good!  It really felt like I was transported away for an hour and I think that translates perfectly onto screen.

I was aware of the video game although I hadn’t played it, and it seemed like a really cool thing to be a part of. It was great to work with incredible collaborators, including Pedro Pascal!

ALSO READ: Last of Us 2: PS4’s most anticipated game released to mixed reviews — Here’s why

Bella, did you choose to avoid playing the video game so as not to be influenced by Ashley Johnson’s performance?

Bella Ramsey, left, plays teenage heroine Ellie in ‘The Last of Us’. Images: HBO/ Naughty Dog

BR: Yes. In a Zoom call I did with Craig and Neil [Druckmann] (writer and executive producer), they asked if I had played the video game. I said I hadn’t and they said, “Keep it that way”, because they wanted to protect me and they didn’t want me to feel I had to copy the game and Ashley’s iconic Ellie.

Also, I think there was an element of trust that they put in us. Craig and Neil have said that Ashley and Troy [Baker, who played Joel in the game] did not have a reference of how to be Ellie and Joel; they were just Ellie and Joel.

I felt like Ellie was part of me already; she was one of my skins. I did disobey orders a bit and watch some of the gameplay because it was so good. With the game they have created these amazing movies, essentially, and I thought they were fantastic. It was helpful to have that reference.

Pedro, are you a gamer at all and, if so, have you picked up a PlayStation controller now you’ve finished shooting the season?

Pedro Pascal, right, plays the gruff father-figure Joel in ‘The Last of Us’. Images: Naughty Dog/ HBO

PP: I was under the same orders. Craig asked if had played the game. I said I hadn’t and he said, “Keep it that way”, to me, as well.

But I went behind his back and asked to be sent a PlayStation by Naughty Dog! I attempted to play the game with my nephews and they lost their patience and took the console away from me.

I don’t have the thumb-skill, but I did love the experience and I am grateful to my lack of skill because I feel I wouldn’t leave the house, because it’s such an immersive experience — especially as the further you go, the more the story unfolds. I find that fascinating. For me, it was like studying any other source material although in a very unique way.

I needed it to marry myself to the tone and to draw inspiration from Troy Baker and Ashley Johnson’s work, and also what Neil Druckmann and the team at Naughty Dog had achieved, visually and tonally. It provided essential puzzle pieces for me to go into this adaptation, which was so beautifully created.

Had you both watched the Planet Earth episode where Cordyceps invades the body of an ant?

PP: I remember that the first script I received began with the David Attenborough piece. And I remembered having seen that, and the way that it started with the power of the ants that move like a collective field across nature, devouring everything in their way, and the only thing that defeats them are the fungi.

And it would use their bodies as hosts to continue spreading the fungi. It’s so clever to use that as a way to get into such a familiar genre. 

BR: I’m not sure I’d seen that documentary but when we started filming I watched [Louie Schwartzberg’s film] Fantastic Fungi and found that incredible. I do remember the ant thing in the first script. It was so cool and scary. 

How much did you enjoy shooting the action sequences, Bella?

BR: I love stunt stuff! I think if I weren’t an actor, I’d like to be a stunt performer. I like pushing myself, physically, so it was cool.

At the beginning I was told there would be some stunt stuff but not too much. Then it did turn into quite a lot and I loved getting to fight in a controlled environment where no one got hurt. It was the perfect situation.

Actually, I did get a little hurt. I was very much thrown into it.

There wasn’t a ton of training. For the set pieces we’d do a few hours of rehearsals before we got on set. But there were some instances where I was just told to do something and that was the best way for me because I wasn’t overthinking it. The delusional trust put in me was really helpful!

How important is the humour between Joel and Ellie to lighten the tone and to help bond their relationship?

PP: It’s a good job we’re not in the same room now because our ability to corpse*, as the British say, is infinite! Maybe because the subject matter is so dark, the humour between the two characters is a softening of a very calcified character as the straight man. 

And for us, going into the subject matter we’re dealing with and living with, it was a way for Bella and I to bond — through lots and lots of laughter. 

BR: There was too much laughter at times; it was painful! Ellie almost immediately starts chipping away at Joel and being sarcastic and trying to make him laugh and fails most of the time.

She is relentless and the moment she does make him smile for the first time, that’s a great achievement, making this grumpy-guts laugh. It’s a really sweet part of their relationship.

What would be an especially fond memory of the shoot?

PP: For me, it is those attacks of the giggles. I start to think about what I hear being suppressed in Bella’s throat, like a fungal disease the contagiousness of the laughter was brutal. We’d be on a mountain, among corpses, among monsters…

* to laugh uncontrollably