You know what gets me about the episode 2 of TLOU? It`s the fact that for the most of the episode Joel is having a serious beef with a literal 14-year old. And it’s just so fun to watch, but my favorite moment happens when they enter the hotel and Joel does his little jumpy jump to demonstrate how shallow the water really is. He could`ve just taken one step, there is no need for the dramatics. But no no no, mister Joel I`m-the-baddest-bitch-in-Boston-QZ-and-I’m-so-mature-and-I-hate-fun Miller decides to jump like a school girl to stick it to a literal 14 years old. Why do you ask?
Sinopsis: my gc with the characters of tlou :) enjoy!
Part 1 // Part 2 // Part 3 // Part 4
C: Hey guys! Carm here. This was just an idea I had three hours ago and I just NEEDED to put myself in the story yk. Let's see if the plot changes in the near future and if it brings a background with it.
Remember to stay hydrated, sleep well and masturbate ♡
I know the torture scene is badass and all, but when they get to the “It`s not a town name, it’s a resort” Joel`s face cracks me up every time! He just looks so genuinely appalled by the idea of a resort. His face goes on such a journey of “A resort? Really? Like a place where you have FUN? I’m vehemently against fun! I haven’t had fun since 2003 and you dare to live in a resort? Well, not anymore, because you`re super fucking dead!" 💀💀💀
Just feeling very emotional about the finale. I've never liked change- (as a kid I cried for 20 mins when the Beast changed into a human in Beauty and the Beast) and now I'm crying because things will never be the same between Joel and Ellie. I haven't played the game but I have heard bits and pieces of spoilers which now make more sense having this new plot point. Like I just want to live in the first 8 episodes forever (not literally ofc) but just the memory of their relationship in the first 8 episodes cause I loved it it was perfect but I know that this has changed everything between them and IM SO SAD that we can't go back. I hate change:(
i hear so many people say "um we don't need anymore pandemic movies" when we haven't really had any pandemic movies and i just think it's fascinating because like. we have had basically no art explicitly about the pandemic (there's art clearly inspired by it but very little actually about it) and that's a recurring theme throughout history we don't necessarily make popular art explicitly about traumatic events while we're in them we didn't write books about spanish flu and movies about world war i were controversial for at least a decade and yet there seems to be this perception that the pandemic is everywhere in popular culture even though it's very much not.......idk it's interesting to me.