![]() ![]() ![]() This is particularly meaningful: If Bill and Frank ever left the home, they would always have the song without the piano. Joel finds their bedroom door locked and Ellie finds a note explaining Bill and Frank’s decision - and a set of keys.Īs Joel and Ellie drive off, they find a cassette tape of Ronstadt’s “Long Long Time” in the car. He wishes to live one final day, and asks Bill to give him a fatal dose of medication so he can die in his sleep/in Bill’s arms.īill sadly agrees but tells Frank he too will take the pills as he has nothing to live for.Ī few days later, Joel and Ellie come across their home. In 2023, Frank has succumbed to an uncurable illness. ![]() Bill and Frank bond over Linda Ronstadt’s “Long Long Time” (Photo credit: HBO) What Happens to Bill and Frank in “The Last of Us”? Ironically, the other piece in the piano, Offenbach’s “Tales of Hoffman,” is also about lost love. ‘Cause I’ve done everything I know to try and make you mineĪnd I think I’m gonna love you for a long long timeīill has been alone for years, so quite literally, there’s been no one at his side.įrank asks, “Who’s the girl you’re singing about?” To which Bill replies, “There is no girl.”įrank says, “I know,” understanding that being gay wasn’t something Bill could express, with the inability to show or explore those feelings being the “wounds unseen.” This is confirmed later when Bill says he’s never been with a man intimately. That’s what someone told me but I don’t know what it means ![]() Sounds like good advice but there’s no one at my sideĪnd time washes clean love’s wounds unseen ![]()
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