Miami Herald

‘The Last of Us’ told the story that we needed to see | Review

- LZ GRANDERSON Los Angeles Times

To understand why Episode 3 of HBO’s “The Last of Us” was the best episode of television in 2023, you first need to take a journey back in time. The year is 1980 and the scene is a noisy Times Square.

As the shot pans left, Montgomery MacNeil can be heard singing off camera. Slowly, the bright lights of Broadway give way to darkness, until the only illuminate­d spots left on screen are Montgomery’s apartment and a flashing marquee that reads “Palace.”

“Is it OK if I call you mine?” he croons in the Oscar-winning film “Fame.”

Montgomery has a crush on a classmate — a young man who does not feel the same.

Of course, unrequited love is a familiar theme in film and television. What made this memorable was seeing this dynamic between two men. In 1980,

America was comfortabl­e seeing a man serenade another only if it came in the form of a joke. And then came the AIDS epidemic, and storytelli­ng about queer love in the mainstream seemed to revolve solely around tragedy and trauma, beginning with 1985’s “An Early Frost.”

Same-sex serenading on camera felt reserved for the dying. Really up until 2010, in the second season of “Glee,” when Blaine sang “Teenage Dream” to his love interest Kurt.

In 1980 in “Fame,” Montgomery is confessing the love he has for a classmate essentiall­y to himself. Thirty years later and Blaine is not only singing directly to a blushing

Kurt, but he also is doing so in front of the school with everyone’s blessing.

So what elevates “Long, Long Time,” the episode of “The Last of Us” that aired this year on Jan. 29? It isn’t simply that it featured a tender same-sex serenade, or that it vaulted the featured song to new chart success.

It is why the character Bill is singing to Frank that transforms the moment.

In the postapocal­yptic world portrayed in this show, dating apps do not exist. Friends are hard to come by. Lovers even more so. And Bill is a closeted conspiracy theorist in his 50s. The first time he meets Frank, Bill is pointing his shotgun at him. The pandemic wiped out most of civilizati­on and left behind a world void of trust and resources, although Bill makes it clear he didn’t like people even before the zombies took over.

In those previous onscreen moments, Patrick, Blaine and Montgomery each already knew themselves to a certain degree when the music started. But Bill is fumbling out of darkness. Even before everything went to hell, Bill lived a life without romance. Recognizin­g his encounter with Frank could very well be his last shot at companions­hip,

Bill is not only coming out in this key scene, but also pleading to be saved.

He uses the words of Linda Ronstadt’s 1970 hit single, “Long, Long Time,” to essentiall­y ask Frank the same question we all ask when searching for someone to go on this journey with: Is it OK if I call you mine?

Queer content has come a long way since Montgomery was serenading himself in his “palace” in New York back in 1980. What hasn’t changed is the LGBTQ+ community’s obsession with youth — an affliction shared with the larger society. We normally don’t see middle-aged men like Bill and Frank grow old together on screen, much less use song to express love.

Their arc is groundbrea­king and a storytelli­ng masterpiec­e. The chemistry between actors Murray Bartlett and Nick Offerman is unrivaled, while the pacing of the script and direction allow for character developmen­t without becoming laborious. Of the 24 Emmy nomination­s the series received, seven were for “Long, Long Time.”

 ?? LIANE HENTSCHER/HBO TNS ?? In Episode 3 of ‘The Last of Us,’ Bill (Nick Offerman), left, and Frank (Murray Bartlett) expand the audience's ideas about LGBTQ+ characters.
LIANE HENTSCHER/HBO TNS In Episode 3 of ‘The Last of Us,’ Bill (Nick Offerman), left, and Frank (Murray Bartlett) expand the audience's ideas about LGBTQ+ characters.

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