Review: HBO's 'The Last of Us' is the best video game adaptation ever (2024)

As a general rule, video games don't usually make for good TV.

In spite of their often movingnarratives, startling imagery and millions of fans around the world, Hollywood has had a devil of a time trying to turn even the most popular games into creatively and commercially successful films and TV shows. There are the decent if hokey adaptations, like Netflix's"The Witcher" (also based on a book series);the boring ones such as Paramount+'s lethargic"Halo"; and the unspeakably terrible ones, likethe 1993 "Super Mario Bros." film, which plays like a bad "Saturday Night Live" sketch (an upcoming Mario film, featuring Chris Pratt voicing the titular plumber, has already been maligned online before its release).

Review: HBO's 'The Last of Us' is the best video game adaptation ever (1)

This is why it feels like HBO's adaptation of the acclaimed PlayStation game "The Last of Us" (Sunday, 9 EST/PST,★★★out of four) is such a big achievement. From "Chernobyl" creator Craig Mazin, "Us"is a high-gloss zombie apocalypse storylike"The Walking Dead," but with just as much feelingas fighting. Starring "Game of Thrones" alums Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey, it brings the visceral, intimate quality of a video game without feeling like you're stuck in an uncanny valley playing one."Us"is an aggressively competent series, if not a transcendent one, but the dozens of failed gameadaptations that came before it bend the curve decidedlyin this one's favor.

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"Us" takes place in a post-apocalyptic world that is just a bit different from zombie stories you've seen. This time, the world-ending culprit isn't a virus but a fungus that kills and controls its host body and isspreadby bites from an infected body. These zombies, referred to in the show as "infected," are covered in porous growths, can runand are harder to kill. The fungi don't take long to end the world, and the series opensin 2003 when everything went wrongbefore jumping 20 years ahead to a totalitariansociety that has perseveredin the face of death and destruction.

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Review: HBO's 'The Last of Us' is the best video game adaptation ever (2)

Joel (Pascal) lost his daughter Sarah(Nico Parker) in the initial outbreak, and two decadesof trauma have turned him into a hard, unforgiving man. He and fellow survivorTess (Anna Torv, "Mindhunter), are trying to escape the fascist-controlled "Quarantine Zone" in Boston when they cross paths with Ellie (Ramsey). She'sa 14-year-old born into the dystopian world who might be the key to eradicatingthe fungal infection.Eventually, Joel agrees to bring Ellie west to a group of doctorswho aresearchingfor a cure.

More:USA TODAY's review of the original video game

It's clear, even for someone who has never played a single minute of "Us" on a PlayStation, that there'ssomething special about the story, and that Mazin has donea thoughtful job bringing it to life. The broken, overgrown cityscapes Joel and Ellie pass through are haunting and beautiful, and the mushroom zombies impressively repulsive and far scarier than that description would suggest. "Us" is likely to face endlesscomparisons to "Walking Dead," giventhe latter's one-time status as the show-of-the-moment, but "Us" feels visually distinct from thatseries, which was all boring blood and guts and Georgia backwoods.

Review: HBO's 'The Last of Us' is the best video game adaptation ever (3)

Ramsey and Pascal are fantastic, well-suited to their roles and bursting with cheeky chemistry in their every scene. Ramsey is silly and playful, as she was in the 2022 film "Catherine Called Birdy," and a magnet for your eyes amid the chaos, as she was in "Thrones." Unburdened by the bulky helmet and monotone he's saddled within Disney+'s "The Mandalorian," Pascal finally gets to act.

Like a cut scene in a video game, the story sometimes meanders away from Joel and Ellie's journey west and focuses on other slices of humanity surviving in the wake of the end of the world, and these vignettes are whatreally makes "Us" compelling. You might wish the show would focuson them even more.The third episode, abouta survivalist played by Nick Offerman and the man he falls in love with (Murray Bartlett, "The White Lotus"), features the kind of writing and acting that can knock you flat.

"Us" isn't really a groundbreaking series, butit is well done, compelling and gripping, a superb example of a zombie story done the right way. It could be bolder and take bigger risks. But that's the trouble when you're working from a known story with a dedicated following:gambling with storytelling isn't usually rewarded. More than anything else, "Us" feels designed not to offend those gamers who love the original so much, down to a massive super-zombie showing up in one episode who feels straight out of a "boss fight" in the game.

We're simply not used to getting smart, visually arresting and even watchable video game adaptations. "Us" might be the best one yet, even if it's just a darn good TV show.

Review: HBO's 'The Last of Us' is the best video game adaptation ever (2024)
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