Fighting for Survival, Facing Clickers and Figuring Out a New Future: Isabela Merced, Gabriel Luna and Young Mazino Talk 'The Last of Us'
What it takes to endure in dystopian times sits at the heart of HBO's smash-hit series — for audiences, and for both its returning and new stars.
Stories about the world as humanity currently knows it ending, then those that remain endeavouring to cling to whatever life is left and make the most of it, aren't just stories of survival. As they fill screens big and small — be it in movies in the Mad Max and A Quiet Place franchises, or in TV shows like The Last of Us, Fallout, Station Eleven and Paradise, to name a mere few recent and diverse examples — they tell tales of needs, costs, threats, changes and choices. A sensation in the video-game domain since 2013, and as a HBO series from a decade later, The Last of Us knows that what it takes to endure, the price paid and the type of person that such an experience makes you all firmly beat at its heart. Adapted for television by Chernobyl's Craig Mazin, it's equally and just-as-acutely aware that the kind of new existence that should spring after apocalyptic horrors is as much its focus.
There was no escaping those ideas in a TV smash that proved one of the best new shows of 2023 in its first season. There's no avoiding it in one of the biggest and most-anticipated small-screen returns of 2025, either (in a year that's been filled with huge comebacks so far, thanks also to Severance season two, the third seasons of The White Lotus and Yellowjackets, Hacks season four, plus Daredevil: Born Again as well). The Last of Us season two picks up five years after the events of season one, with Joel (Pedro Pascal, The Wild Robot) and Ellie (Bella Ramsey, Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget) engrained in the survivor community of Jackson, Wyoming — and with how to forge a path forward, and to create a better future for the younger generations navigating existence after the cordyceps infestation, as clear in its sights as a clicker spied through a rifle scope.
For Gabriel Luna, season two is indeed a return. A star of Terminator: Dark Fate, True Detective, Agents of SHIELD, Matador and more before stepping into the shoes of Joel's younger brother Tommy, and seen in Fubar and heard in Secret Level since The Last of Us debuted its first season, he's back in a part that's stuck with him. "Even during hiatus, I never really felt completely removed from the flow of the story," he tells Concrete Playground. Accordingly, he's not new to pondering the show's depths, and also thinking about its true monsters — not clickers, aka the long-term infected after their exposure to the fungus that's largely wiped out the planet, but some of the people taking doing whatever is necessary to the extreme in the nightmarish situation that the likes of Joel, Ellie, Tommy and the latter's wife Maria (Rutina Wesley, Queen Sugar) have been weathering.
As the second season unpacks Jackson's hard-earned new status quo — where post-pandemic normality is the aim, but guarded walls, patrol runs, trauma counselling, and other such security measures and coping tactics will never not be elements of the daily routine — Isabela Merced and Young Mazino are fresh to The Last of Us' realm. The former plays Dina and the latter is Jesse, both of whom will be familiar to anyone that's played The Last of Us Part II. Merced joins the series after 2024's Madame Web and Alien: Romulus, plus the movie adaptation of Dora the Explorer, featuring in Instant Family and Sicario: Day of the Soldado, and leading Nickelodeon TV series 100 Things to Do Before High School before that. Mazino's resume also spans back to 2013, as Merced's does, but he's best-known for Beef, which earned him an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie.

Scott Ehler, Max
As Dina and Jesse, Merced and Mazino find themselves thrust into season two's big schism, as Luna's Tommy also is. Gone is the surrogate father-daughter closeness that Joel and Ellie carved out in season one, with their relationship instead evolving into the frequent next step as children grow up: distance and rebellion, and a parent dismayed at their connection changing so drastically. Audiences know, of course, that's there's more to the tension between Joel and Ellie thanks to the events of the first season — thanks to decisions and actions that also link to fellow cast addition Kaitlyn Dever (Apple Cider Vinegar) as Abby.
New faces (The Studio's Catherine O'Hara is another), both friends and foes; acrimony between a pair that earned their bond, and each other's trust, the hard way in season one; a love triangle; contemplating what type of community that Jackson wants to be; a quest for revenge; an early showdown with clickers: The Last of Us kicks off its seven-episode second season with all of the above. Before that even arrives, a third season was locked in, too. When Luna, Merced and Mazino travelled to Australia to help launch HBO's dedicated streaming platform Max Down Under — where you'll find The Last of Us season two streaming from Monday, April 14, dropping its instalments week by week — we chatted with the trio about where the new chapter takes the series, what excited Merced and Mazino about becoming a part of it, how Luna approached coming back, digging into those survivalist themes and facing down clickers, among other topics.
On What Excited Merced and Mazino About Joining The Last of Us for Season Two — and the Unexpected Injuries That Came Along the Way
Isabela: "Initially there's the pull of the massive, just enormous size of the show — and the amount of cast members, the amount of action scenes. That was the initial pull. And then with all of the writing, it's so deep and it's so much that you can chew on and really get yourself into and throw yourself into. I love how Craig writes his characters, so I was excited to just be one of those."
Young: "Yeah, I second everything she just said. You can tell the writing's excellent in the first season, and so I was so excited to get to chew on those words. And it's fun.
And the physicality of it, getting to do fun things like riding horses and shooting guns and running around fighting clickers."
Isabela: "Oh that's right, you pulled a muscle."
Young: "Yeah, yeah. My hamstring exploded in one scene and I think you can hear me going like 'aaaah' at the end of that — and I think they kept it in the episode, too. So good times, yeah."
Gabriel: "I had almost pulled a quad, and then I remember, then I did pop my calf, I think. It's healed now."
Young: "Yeah, you've got to warm up."
Gabriel: "You've got to, but it's hard when it's so cold. I mean -20 degrees, it's hard to get warm."
Young: "I'm just eating a sandwich on the steps of my trailer and they're like 'alright, you ready?' I'm like 'yeah'. And then next thing you know, I'm booking it like 15 times in a row."
Isabela: "You're an athlete, too."
On How Luna Approached Stepping Back Into Tommy's Shoes for the Second Time
Gabriel: "Even during hiatus, I never really felt completely removed from the flow of the story. This just always — I just remained in contact with Craig and we'd talk a lot, and text about different things and ideas for the second season. And so even while off on other jobs, this job very much took up residence and has a lot of real estate in my heart and my mind, and I think about it a lot.
So I went into it ready to get back to work. And I think some of that is being excited for what was to come. Knowing what happens in the second game as far as Tommy is concerned, it was all something that I had been champing at the bit to get back into anyway.
We talked about all of our injuries, but just trying to stay as physically ready as I could, even though Craig was telling me 'you know what, you know you're 55 in this story, so you can't be in too good a shape'. I was like, 'well, that's where the acting will come in, because I don't want to die out there'.
It was a lot, but I was, I felt, ready — and we were ready, and we got it done."
On How Season Two's First Episode Sets the Scene for What's to Come
Gabriel: "For Tommy, he is a new father. He's been forced to lock in — kind of a born to dilly-dally, forced-to-lock-in type of guy— but he's really taken on that role and those responsibilities willingly, with a lot of love and compassion for his family first, and then, of course, his community.
So he's had to mature quite a bit. He and Maria have Benjamin [Ezra Benedict Agbonkhese, Snowpiercer], their son. And he's also a bit of the go-between and the mediator between a lot of elements of his family."
Isabela: "[For Dina and Jesse] You kind of catch them in the middle of the love triangle. So yeah, you kind of feel that tension — and it's interesting because you leave the audience with a lot of questions, but they'll get answered."
Young: "Yeah, you see the breadth of the aftermath of something that just happened, and we're stepping into this uncharted territory of what's to come."
Isabela: "It was interesting as actors to sort of have to do that as a first scene together."
Young: "Yeah, that's interesting — and it's clever, it's clever writing, too, to establish that so quickly, which I think people will see in the first episode."
On Digging Into the Show's Themes, Including What It Means to Survive, What It Requires and Costs, and Building a New World
Gabriel: "When preparing for the first season, I enlisted the help of my friend Jack Nevils, who trains army snipers, and he was our military consultant on Terminator: Dark Fate. And the one thing that he said to me very early in the process that stuck and resonated was 'you know, I've been in these places where when resources are low, people become monsters, and it happens very quickly — that descent happens swiftly'.
And so it's kind of carrying that sense of the paranoia of a lot of the threats. The monsters are a known quantity; it's the people that you encounter, and their deception and their intentions and their designs, that you have to be wary of.
I think I'm a very open person in my personal life, and very trusting and want to give people the benefit of the doubt, but I think within this world your senses are heightened and your awareness — I think it's important to open that awareness and to be able to clock the threats."
Young: "I was just thinking, there's the world-building and the environment, but then I think it it's also important to look at the character. And I personally pull threads of very specific people that I know in my life, and kind of combine them to amalgamate into this character that I think would serve this story."
Gabriel: "Yeah, and a good point — while they are the greatest threat, people, they're also the greatest resource. If you can find the right people and move together, yeah, that is how you survive."
Young: "Community."
On What Merced Draws Upon When Facing Clickers, Including in Season Two's First Big Showdown Accompanied by Bella Ramsey as Ellie
Isabela: "That's kind of the first bit of clicker action we get in the series, is that — and I find it fascinating that I didn't know what to expect in the process, but I saw the clickers on that day for the first time, and the actors that are playing them are usually stunt people and they get them as close as possible to what you see on the show in the final result. So I got to see their real movements and their actions, and their general demeanour is so frightening, I think, because it's so unpredictable.
They did a really good job choreographing them — and it's really, really fun. And as a fan of the game, just to see that in person, it's really cool.
The Last of Us season two streams from Monday, April 14, 2025 Down Under, via Max in Australia and Neon in New Zealand. Read our review of the first season.
Images: HBO.