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Fallout is an American post-apocalyptic drama television series created by Graham Wagner and Geneva Robertson-Dworet for Amazon Prime Video. Based on the role-playing video game franchise created by Tim Cain and Leonard Boyarsky, the series stars Ella Purnell, Aaron Moten, Kyle MacLachlan, Moiss Arias, Xelia Mendes-Jones, and Walton Goggins.[a]


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Amazon purchased the rights to produce a live-action project in 2020, and the series was announced that July, with Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy's Kilter Films joined by Bethesda Game Studios in the production. Nolan directed the first three episodes. Bethesda Game Studios producer Todd Howard, who directed various games in the series, signed on to executive produce alongside Nolan and Joy. Robertson-Dworet and Wagner were hired as the series' showrunners in January 2022, and Goggins and Purnell were cast in February and March, respectively.

The series depicts the aftermath of the Great War of 2077, an apocalyptic nuclear exchange in an alternate history of Earth where advances in nuclear technology after WWII led to the emergence of a retrofuturistic society and a subsequent resource war. Many survivors took refuge in fallout bunkers known as Vaults, unaware each Vault was designed to perform sociological and psychological experiments on the Vault Dwellers. More than 200 years later in 2296,[2] a young woman named Lucy leaves behind her home in Vault 33 to venture out into the dangerously unforgiving wasteland of a devastated Los Angeles to look for her father, who had been kidnapped. Along the way, she meets a Brotherhood of Steel squire and a ghoul bounty hunter, each with their own mysterious pasts and agendas to settle.

Bethesda had been approached multiple times about a television adaptation of the Fallout video games since the developer released Fallout 3 in 2008, according to Bethesda's Todd Howard, though he felt none of the suggestions met the vision of the Fallout series.[3] Bethesda's marketing executive Pete Hines had also cautioned the company in 2015 about the potential impact of a poor adaptation of their video games, saying, "There's way more things that can go wrong than can go right with this," since the adaptation's director may override the vision of the series.[4] Hines pointed to the example of the 2005 Doom film as an example of a bad adaptation.[4]

The situation changed when Jonathan Nolan approached Bethesda with his idea of a Fallout television series, having been an avid player of the game series. Howard, having seen what Nolan had created with the Westworld series, found that Nolan had a clear vision for the adaptation, and agreed this approach was a good way to bring the game series to the television screen.[3][5] Bethesda gave Nolan freedom to craft a story as long as it remained true to the Fallout universe but served as its own unique story within the game series and not translate one of the existing games to television.[5]

The television adaptation was formally announced in July 2020 under Amazon Studios (later renamed Amazon MGM Studios) with Nolan and Lisa Joy developing the work.[6] Joy described the series as "a gonzo, crazy, funny, adventure, and mindfuck like none you've ever seen before".[7]

The series is canon with the games. Howard wanted an original story, instead of an adaptation of the games,[9] but the series continues game storylines and factions, such as the Brotherhood of Steel. The series' 2296 setting is the furthest in the future that the Fallout franchise has occurred.[10] On April 18, 2024, Amazon Prime Video renewed the series for a second season.[11]

Filming began on July 5, 2022, in New Jersey, New York and Utah.[16] Wasteland scenes were additionally filmed in Kolmanskop, a former mining operation-turned-ghost town, on Namibia's infamous Skeleton Coast. The desolate location is where desert sands meet the sea, where the western Namib Desert reaches Namibia's South Atlantic coastline. As a result of the treacherous seas offshore, the "skeleton" coast is dotted with both historic and recent shipwrecks;[17] some scenes were filmed at the wreck of the Eduard Bohlen.[18] Nolan directed the first three episodes of the series, with Stuart Dryburgh and Teodoro Maniaci serving as cinematographers.[19][20]

In January 2024, it was revealed that Ramin Djawadi had composed a score inspired by the works of Inon Zur's Fallout series compositions.[22] Fallout also features a licensed soundtrack like the video game series.[23][24]

Upload feels a little like the Greg Daniels take on The Good Place you never knew you wanted. The sci-fi comedy is set in a technologically advanced future in which humans can be uploaded into a virtual afterlife when they're close to death. Robbie Amell stars as Nathan, a young app developer who dies in a self-driving car accident and whose consciousness ends up in the luxurious digital world known as Lakeview thanks to his shallow but wealthy girlfriend, Ingrid (Allegra Edwards). The series has a lot of fun taking jabs at our reliance on technology while imagining what the world of the future will look like, and Nathan's budding relationship with Nora (Andy Allo), his "angel," or more accurately, his customer service rep, is a real highlight. -Allison Picurro [Trailer]

Author Harlan Coben is already a streaming legend on Netflix, where several of his mystery books have been adapted into limited series. Now he's got one on Prime Video, the YA-leaning "this town is full of secrets" mystery Shelter. It follows Coben's character Mickey Bolitar (Colin in Black & White's Jaden Michael) as he searches for a missing classmate following the sudden death of Mickey's father. It's an interesting change of pace for Prime Video, which has lots of success with mysteries and thrillers adapted from books, as evidenced by its plethora of "dad shows," but not much in the young adult space. -Tim Surette [Trailer]

Amazon and the BBC's adaptation of Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett's beloved fantasy-comedy novel Good Omens is about a demon and an angel who team up to prevent the Antichrist from bringing about the end of the world because they've grown rather fond of Earth and its inhabitants, and it features some of the best casting television has ever seen. David Tennant as the hedonistic demon Crowley is so good it's like he was born solely for this purpose, and the way he plays off Michael Sheen's angel, Aziraphale, makes for a perfect odd-couple pairing that leads to the show's best moments. Although meant to be a six-episode limited series, Prime Video brought it back for a second season based on unrealized ideas from Gaiman and Pratchett, and a supporting cast that includes Michael McKean, Frances McDormand, and Jon Hamm makes it worth your while. A third season will wrap up the story. -Kaitlin Thomas [Trailer | Review]

To All the Boys I've Loved Before creator Jenny Han stays comfortably in her lane with this series about teenage love, teenage love triangles, and teenage love summers. Lola Tung plays Belly, a young woman who heads out on a summer vacation to her family beach house, where she's reunited with old friends and new potential boyfriends in the form of a friendly local and the eldest brother of her family friend. Things get complicated! In Season 2, the back-and-forth between boys continues, with the added specter of a potential sale of their precious beach house hovering over them. -Allison Picurro [Trailer | Review]

Cosmic thinker, musician, activist, and film director Boots Riley (Sorry to Bother You) tries his hand at television with this seven-episode coming-of-age series about a teenage boy growing up in Oakland. But since this is a Boots joint, you know there's a fun wrinkle. This kid, played by When They See Us Emmy winner Jharrel Jerome, happens to be 13 feet tall. -Tim Surette [Trailer | Review]

Australian Kate-medians Kate McCartney and Kate McLennan crafted this darkly comedic series that combines the thrills and intensity of a murder mystery with the kerfuffles of an odd-couple pairing when a dead man turns up in a Tasmanian beach town and the local sergeant is forced to team up with an outside senior investigator. Like, what if Broadchurch were funny? -Tim Surette [Trailer] 

Missing Mike Schur's universe of thoughtful comedies, like The Good Place and Parks and Recreation? Check out Freevee's charming Primo, which Schur executive produces. The coming-of-age comedy, inspired by the childhood of series creator Shea Serrano, follows San Antonio teen Rafa (Ignacio Diaz-Silverio) as he navigates high school while being raised by his mother and five uncles, who all have different ideas for what it means to be a man. -Kelly Connolly [Trailer]

The critics (mostly) hated Amazon's new action series, but Citadel was never made for critics. It was made for people who want to turn their brain off and take in an easily digestible story that's padded with some preetty cool fight scenes. Game of Thrones' Richard Madden and Quantico's Priyanka Chopra Jones star as spies for an organization that has no allegiance to any country, but they have a rocky reunion eight years after their memories are erased and an old enemy threatens the world with nuclear war. See? Mindless. I enjoyed it because I went in just looking for eye candy. And the sub-40-minute episodes don't hurt, either. -Tim Surette [Trailer]  0852c4b9a8

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