'Feel her Love' The Last of Us Review - Season 2 Episode 5 - Key Kiddo

12 May 2025
Season two of The Last of Us keeps pushing. It’s brutal, intimate, and as emotionally raw as ever.

Episode five, “Feel Her Love,” hits at a turning point—smack in the middle of the season, where the stakes stop simmering and start to boil. This is where cracks widen, tensions peak, and choices get uglier.

The title alone is loaded. “Feel Her Love” isn’t some ironic wink. It’s a direct pull from the Last of Us Part II game, where the phrase appears as graffiti scrawled across Seattle walls. It’s tied to the religious cult known as the Seraphites (or “Scars,” depending on who’s talking). To them, love is doctrine. Sacred. Weaponized. 

The episode borrows that loaded phrase and reframes it not just as a threat, but a thesis: what does love look like when it curdles?

Abby’s flashback: character rehab or moral complexity?

At the heart of the episode is a flashback centered on Abby. It’s not filler. It’s the show asking you to sit with her pain. To look at the moment that calcified her drive for revenge. If you’ve played the game, you know Abby’s story mirrors Ellie’s—both fueled by grief, both cycling through violence to feel whole again. This flashback likely peels back to a key trauma: her father's death at Joel’s hands. It's the original sin that rewires everything she does.

This kind of narrative doubling isn’t new for The Last of Us. Joel’s massacre in the Season 1 finale was a moral fracture that rippled through time. Now we’re watching those ripples hit shore in Abby’s arc. The show doesn't want you to like her. It wants you to understand her. That’s different. And it’s riskier.

Meanwhile, Ellie and Dina’s scenes pull the lens in tighter. Their bond gets more screen time here, and not by accident. It’s tenderness pressed up against terror. As their relationship deepens, so does the sense of fragility. 

Every stolen moment between them reminds us what Ellie stands to lose.

feel her love the last of us episode review themes

In the game, Dina is Ellie’s compass—the thing that pulls her back from the brink. That emotional ballast seems to be playing out here too. Especially as Ellie, still haunted by Joel's death, starts to wrestle with the costs of vengeance. Love and violence are on a collision course. This episode nudges them closer.

New infected, new rules!

A fresh horror enters the scene: a new infected variant. 

No official name yet, but its presence shifts the tactical and emotional landscape. The show’s always been about more than clickers and bloaters. Each new infected type serves as metaphor. This one feels like escalation. Mutation as metaphor for emotional decay. Evolution in the face of endless trauma.

In the game, we saw shamblers and stalkers—evidence that the Cordyceps infection isn’t static. It adapts. Maybe this new threat hints at even darker corners of that evolutionary tree. Or maybe it’s just a narrative gut-punch. Either way, it works.

One of the leads faces a brutal ethical choice in this episode. That’s a core part of The Last of Us DNA: the illusion of right and wrong. Whether it's Joel saving Ellie and dooming humanity, or Ellie choosing to keep killing even when it costs her everything, this world doesn’t reward virtue. It just punishes indecision.

This episode leans into that tension. And in doing so, forces viewers into uncomfortable terrain. The fallout from this choice will echo, no doubt, shaping the back half of the season.

The cliffhanger: manufactured tension or earned dread?

The episode ends with a classic cliffhanger: a key character’s fate left dangling. It’s a tried-and-true move, but here it feels earned. Because this isn’t just plot mechanics—it’s emotional investment. Whoever’s on the edge by episode’s end is someone the audience has been conditioned to care about. Which means the wait hurts.

There’s a quiet symmetry building across seasons.

Abby’s path in Season 2 starts to mirror Joel’s from Season 1. Both commit monstrous acts for what they believe is love. Both carry the burden of trying to protect people who are already gone. And both wind up isolated by their choices. 

It’s a grim reflection, and the show knows it.

The cycle of violence—tit for tat, death for death—isn’t just background noise here. It’s the engine. And this episode presses the gas.

Ellie, meanwhile, is still caught between who she was with Joel and who she’s becoming without him. Her moments with Dina ground her. But the pressure’s mounting. Every loss chips away at what little innocence she has left. The more she leans into vengeance, the harder it’ll be to pull her back. The game showed that. 

The show, wisely, is letting us feel it in real time, pick axe blow by pick axe blow. 

“Feel Her Love” circles three major ideas: love, loss, and revenge. 

None of them are clean. 

Abby’s storyline deals with how love can become obsession. Ellie’s with how loss mutates into rage. Dina’s with what it means to love someone sliding into darkness. These aren’t separate threads—they’re coiled tight.

Visual cues help bind it all. Nature slowly reclaiming the cityscape isn’t just pretty set dressing. It’s thematic shorthand: decay, rebirth, the futility of man-made control. Even the way light filters through broken windows feels pointed. There’s no peace here. Just the illusion of it.

The Seraphites loom larger in this episode, even if mostly through implication. 

In the game, their strict ideology and ritualistic violence stood in contrast to the WLF’s militarism. They weren’t just another faction—they were a mirror. 

Fanatical belief masquerading as salvation. If the show leans into this dynamic, we could see Isaac and the WLF cross paths with Abby’s past or Ellie’s present very soon.

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My name is Jimmy Jangles, the founder of The Astromech. I have always been fascinated by the world of science fiction, especially the Star Wars universe, and I created this website to share my love for it with fellow fans.

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