Tag: westworld

  • 10 Things We Learned at the ‘Fallout’ Press Conference

    Prime Video has unveiled the first trailer for ‘Fallout,’ the long-awaited series based on the iconic post-apocalyptic video game franchise that first began publishing back in 1997, yielding four games in the main narrative and more than half a dozen spinoffs since then.

    In the games, nuclear war has rendered the United States (and the world at large) into what’s called the Wasteland, with pockets of survivors living underground in highly protected shelters known as Vaults. The games are set further and further in the future each time out, with inhabitants of the Vaults venturing out into the Wasteland on various missions and encountering dangerous creatures (such as the artificially created bioweapons known as Deathclaws), mutants, and irradiated humans.

    ‘Fallout,’ the streaming series, takes much of this premise and the popular ‘Fallout 3’ game – which is set 200 years after the war – as its starting point. Ella Purnell stars as Lucy, a character created for the show, who ventures outside her Vault and learns the hellish nature of life on the surface. Along the way she meets Maximus (Aaron Moten), a member of the militaristic technology cult The Brotherhood of Steel, and The Ghoul (Walton Goggins), a mysterious figure with a connection to the past and the Vaults.

    Aaron Moten, Ella Purnell, Todd Howard, and Walter Goggin from 'Fallout' attend The Game Awards 2023 at the Peacock Theater on December 7, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    (L to R) Aaron Moten, Ella Purnell, Todd Howard, and Walter Goggin from ‘Fallout’ attend The Game Awards 2023 at the Peacock Theater on December 7, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Scott Kirkland/PictureGroup.

    After years of rumored films and false starts, ‘Fallout’ comes to streaming thanks to husband-and-wife team Jonathan (Jonah) Nolan and Lisa Joy, whose previous sci-fi series was HBO’s ‘Westworld.’ Joining Nolan and Joy as executive producers and showrunners are Geneva Robertson-Dworet (‘Captain Marvel’), Graham Wagner (‘Portlandia’) and Todd Howard of Bethesda Game Studios, along with James Altman for Bethesda Softworks.

    In conjunction with the arrival of the trailer, Prime Video held a virtual press conference featuring Nolan (who directed the first three episodes), Robertson-Dworet, Wagner, and Howard, along with Purnell, Moten, and surprise remote guest Walton Goggins.

    Here are 10 things we learned at that press conference, edited for clarity and length.

    1) Jonathan Nolan Is A Huge Fan of the Games

    Jonathan Nolan and Ella Purnell on the set of 'Fallout.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Nolan and Ella Purnell on the set of ‘Fallout.’ Credit: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Jonathan Nolan says that his obsession with ‘Fallout’ was so intense that, ironically enough, he spent more time early in his career playing the game than looking for writing opportunities.

    Jonathan Nolan: I think it started, for me, with ‘Fallout 3,’ which devoured about a year of my life. You know, I was an aspiring young writer at that point. It almost derailed my entire career. It’s so ludicrously playable and fun. I mean, seriously, the games were just incredible. It’s such a rare thing and such an unbelievable thing — and I’ve gotten to do it twice in my career — to take something that you love and get a chance to play in that universe, to create your own version, I guess, of that universe. The first go-round for me was Batman (Nolan co-wrote ‘The Dark Knight’ and ‘The Dark Knight Rises’ with his brother, Christopher Nolan), and this time with ‘Fallout,’ a series of games that I absolutely loved. About five years ago, Todd and I went and had lunch together — it was a bit of a fanning-out moment for me — and just started talking about the possibilities of how you could take this incredible universe… we came out of lunch with a handshake deal that we’re going to try to make this work.

    2) The Series Tells A Whole New Story

    Ella Purnell as Lucy in 'Fallout.'
    Ella Purnell as Lucy in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Graham Wagner says that the show is a continuation of the mythology from the games but also a new story, not an adaptation of the existing games.

    Graham Wagner: It’s set in the world of ‘Fallout,’ but it’s a new story that comes, sort of, after the events we’ve seen. So the show is really built on 25 years of creativity and thinking and building. We sort of thought the best thing to do is to continue that [rather than] retread it. Because that’s sort of what has worked with ‘Fallout’ over the years. It’s traded hands, it’s changed, it’s been altered, and it’s a living thing. We kind of felt like we ought to take a swing at trying to build a new piece on top of all of that.

    3) What Canada Has to Do With A Post-Apocalyptic Wasteland

    Actors Walton Goggins, Ella Purnell, Co-Showrunner Geneva Robertson-Dworet, and Actor Aaron Moten attends 'Fallout' Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    (L to R) Actors Walton Goggins, Ella Purnell, Co-Showrunner Geneva Robertson-Dworet, and Actor Aaron Moten attends ‘Fallout’ Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Prime Video.

    According to Geneva Robertson-Dworet, a big factor in the appeal of adapting ‘Fallout’ was the underlying themes of the story.

    Geneva Robertson-Dworet: The themes of ‘Fallout’ are also what really drove us to want to adapt this with Jonah, and we were really especially drawn to the social commentary inherent to the idea of these Vaults. Graham is a citizen of Canada. I’m a dual citizen of the US and New Zealand, and we often talk about how those countries are sort of celebrated as these wonderful, peaceful utopias…But what would it mean if those countries were to open their borders and let everyone in, and everyone could have a better life? Well, they would change, right? We saw the Vaults as basically a mirror to that. This idea that, like, ‘What if we create a Vault that is very peaceful and wonderful?’ But what does it mean that not everyone gets to live there, and people suffer on the surface?

    4) Why It Took Years to Bring ‘Fallout’ to the Screen

    Power Suit and Aaron Moten as Maximus in 'Fallout.'
    (L to R) Power Suit and Aaron Moten as Maximus in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Todd Howard of Bethesda Game Studios says that the company was very deliberate in allowing ‘Fallout’ to be adapted to another medium.

    Todd Howard: People would approach us over, I would say, a 10-year period after ‘Fallout 3’ came out, from 2009 on, to adapt ‘Fallout’ to film or television. We took a very cautious approach, and Jonah was somebody [who] I was such a fan of the movies he did and the TV he was doing, and I actually had someone reach out. And when I first talked to Jonah, I mean, honestly, it was like someone I had known for a long time: [he] obviously played the games a ton, and his approach, right from the get-go, was in sync with what I was thinking.

    5) Why Ella Purnell and Aaron Moten Were Thrilled to Be Part of ‘Fallout’

    Actor Ella Purnell attends 'Fallout' Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    Actor Ella Purnell attends ‘Fallout’ Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Prime Video.

    British actor Ella Purnell and ‘Emancipation’ star Aaron Moten described what made their characters so exciting to play.

    Ella Purnell: Lucy is a Vault Dweller, and what excited me about playing her was that she is so innocent and naive and obviously very privileged as well. It was exciting for me to start in that place. She’s essentially a newborn baby. She hasn’t had any real-life experiences. All she knows is what she was taught and what she’s read in books that she has in the Vault. It’s limited. Then you put her in the Wasteland, and what happens? What happens with that? That’s a really exciting place for me to start in.

    Actor Aaron Moten attends 'Fallout' Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    Actor Aaron Moten attends ‘Fallout’ Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Prime Video.

    Aaron Moten: I play Maximus. He’s part of the Brotherhood of Steel. I guess what excited me was a little bit of what Ella’s talking about — that starting place, and where you go from there. [He’s] a person who’s lived in the Wasteland for his entire life, and he has to have a certain type of moral ambiguity that is forced upon him, living in the world that he lives in. Where do you go from there? How do you hold onto what is your unique, pure self, how does that change, and how do you discover what it is that you want?

    Related Article: Walton Goggins, Kyle MacLachlan and More Feature in the First Images from the ‘Fallout’ TV Adaptation

    6) Who is The Ghoul?

    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in 'Fallout.'
    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Not able to participate in the press conference, acclaimed actor Walton Goggins (‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’) beamed in with a pre-recorded message about his character. Alive since before the war and once known as Cooper Howard, he’s now a mutated bounty hunter called The Ghoul.

    Walton Goggins: The Ghoul is, in some ways, the poet Virgil in ‘Dante’s Inferno.’ He’s the guide, if you will, through this irradiated hellscape where we find ourselves in this post-apocalyptic world. He is a bounty hunter, an iconic bounty hunter. He is pragmatic, he is ruthless, he has his own set of moral codes, and he has a wicked sense of humor — much like me [laughs]. No, he’s a very, very, very complicated guy, and to understand him, you have to understand the person that he was before the war. He had a name. His name was Cooper Howard, and he was a vastly different person than the ghoul that you’ve seen so far. Over the course of the show, through his experience back in the world before the nuclear fallout, you will understand how the world was, and he is the bridge between both these worlds.

    7) The Level of Detail in ‘Fallout’ Is Off The Charts

    Brotherhood of Steel and Vertibirds in 'Fallout.'
    Brotherhood of Steel and Vertibirds in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Both executive producer Todd Howard and star Ella Purnell emphasize that there is an incredible amount of detail and world-building in the show, with Purnell adding that most of the show was done practically instead of digitally, as per the wishes of Jonathan Nolan.

    Todd Howard: The authenticity they brought to it [is] obsessive. We like to say when we make the games that we obsess over every pixel. And Jonah and crew, they obsessed over every pixel [laughs] of every frame, just to make it authentic. The other thing, watching that trailer, the trick with ‘Fallout’ is it has so many different tones. It goes between the serious, the dramatic, and the action, and some humor and nostalgic music and dramatic music…it weaves those different things together in a very unique blend that only ‘Fallout’ can bring, and they’ve done just an awesome job.

    Ella Purnell as Lucy in 'Fallout.'
    Ella Purnell as Lucy in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Ella Purnell: This was so much fun, working on this show. Every shoot is hard, not every shoot is fun, and this one was just so fun for an actor. No two days were the same. Every prop, every costume, every location, every set was just bonkers. One of the joys of working with Jonah is he loves to do everything, as much as he can, for real. So you’re not working with that much green screen or dudes in green leotards. You get to really work with practicals, and you don’t have to imagine so much. It’s real and you can really do it.

    8) The Most Challenging Thing To Get Right

    Power Armor Suits in 'Fallout.'
    Power Armor Suits in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Two completely different aspects of ‘Fallout’ – the physical protective suits known as power armor, worn by the Brotherhood of Steel, and the more elusive overall vibe of the show – are the two elements that Jonathan Nolan cites as difficult to pin down.

    Jonathan Nolan: We talked a lot about the power armor. The tone was a big thing. I think the tone was maybe the most challenging and the most intimidating thing for me. But working with Geneva and Graham, you knew that we were going to be in a really good place with that incredibly ambitious story. On a technical level, the scope of the world and the power armor in particular was one of those things where you go, ‘Oh, how on earth are we going to do that?’ But we got there.

    9) What Sets ‘Fallout’ Apart From a Million Other Shows

    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in 'Fallout.'
    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    There are tons of shows out there now on many different platforms competing for our eyes, and quite a number of them are actually set in post-apocalyptic landscapes. But ‘Fallout,’ says its creators, is different.

    Geneva Robertson-Dworet: It’s not just the incredible tone, which is, as people have talked about, this unbelievable blend of action and comedy and just weirdness. But I think it’s these incredibly prescient themes, factionalism being maybe the most obvious. When you play the game ‘Fallout,’ you go from settlement to settlement or from faction to faction. That was something we were really excited to manifest with our heroes.

    (L to R) Ella Purnell as Lucy and Kyle MacLachlan as Overseer Hank in 'Fallout.'
    (L to R) Ella Purnell as Lucy and Kyle MacLachlan as Overseer Hank in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Jonathan Nolan: I think you also have a moment that we’re in right now in which the world seems to be ever more frightening and dour. So [this is] an opportunity for us to work on a show that gets to look that in the eye, right, and we get to talk about the end of the world, but to do it with a sense of humor. I think, honestly, there’s a thread of optimism woven into the show as well, that I think for us, you know, is a bit of expiation to be able to work on this every day.

    10) Pleasing ‘Fallout’ Fans is Not the First Priority

    Actors Aaron Moten, Ella Purnell, and Walton Goggins speak onstage during 'Fallout' Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    (L to R) Actors Aaron Moten, Ella Purnell, and Walton Goggins speak onstage during ‘Fallout’ Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Prime Video.

    Video game adaptations are notoriously hard to get right – the filmmakers often try (and fail) to walk a tightrope between servicing the fans of the game and attracting new viewers who couldn’t care less about the game. Jonathan Nolan doesn’t think that’s the right approach.

    Jonathan Nolan: I don’t think you really can set out to please the fans of anything, or please anyone other than yourself. I think you have to come into this trying to make the show that you want to make, and trusting that as fans of the game, we would find the pieces that were essential to us about the games and try to do the best version of those that we can. I think it’s kind of a fool’s errand to try to figure out how to make people happy in that way. You’ve got to make yourself happy. And I’ve made myself very happy with the show.

    Actors Walton Goggins, Ella Purnell, and Aaron Moten attend with 'Fallout' Cast and Creators at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    (L to R) Actors Walton Goggins, Ella Purnell, and Aaron Moten attend with ‘Fallout’ Cast and Creators at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Prime Video.

    What is the Plot of ‘Fallout’?

    The show depicts the aftermath of an apocalyptic nuclear exchange in an alternate history where advances in nuclear technology after WWII led to the emergence of a retrofuturistic society and a subsequent resource war. The survivors took refuge in fallout bunkers known as Vaults, built to preserve humanity in the event of nuclear annihilation. Two centuries later, a young woman (Ella Purnell), a descendant of the original “Vault Dwellers” from one of many Vaults, leaves behind the only life she has ever known to venture out into the dangerously hostile and savage Wasteland of a devastated Los Angeles.

    Who is in the Cast of ‘Fallout’?

     

    Actors Aaron Moten, Ella Purnell, and Walton Goggins speak onstage during 'Fallout' Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    (L to R) Actors Aaron Moten, Ella Purnell, and Walton Goggins speak onstage during ‘Fallout’ Cast and Creators Presentation at The Game Awards at Peacock Theater on December 07, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Anna Webber/Getty Images for Prime Video.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Fallout’:

    Buy Jonathan Nolan Movies on Amazon

     

  • ‘Fallout’ TV Adaptation Launches First Trailer

    Preview:

    • Following the first images, the ‘Fallout’ trailer is online.
    • The series is set in a post-apocalyptic world of brutality and chaos.
    • Prime Video launches the show in April.

    Prime Video is hoping that its ambitious adaptation of the ‘Fallout’ series of video games will be drawn into the current success trend of games turned into movies and shows.

    And with ‘Westworld’ duo Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy in charge, hopes are high for this one.

    The first trailer has arrived, promising plenty of post-apocalyptic action and some fun new characters to meet.

    Related Article: Walton Goggins, Kyle MacLachlan and More Feature in the First Images from the ‘Fallout’ TV Adaptation

    What’s the story of ‘Fallout’?

    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in 'Fallout.'
    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Adapted from the massively popular video game ‘Fallout’ is the story of haves and have-nots in a world in which there’s almost nothing left to have.

    Two-hundred years after the apocalypse, the gentle denizens of luxury fallout shelters are forced to return to the irradiated hellscape their ancestors left behind—and are shocked to discover an incredibly complex, gleefully weird, and highly violent universe waiting for them.

    Who’s who in ‘Fallout’?

    Ella Purnell as Lucy in 'Fallout.'
    Ella Purnell as Lucy in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    While this first look offers glimpses at iconic ‘Fallout’ elements such as the Vaults, airborne carriers the Vertibirds and Power Suits, it’s also focused on some of the characters, including:

    Ella Purnell as Lucy, an optimistic Vault Dweller with an all-American, can-do spirit. Her peaceful and idealistic nature is tested when people harm her loved ones.

    Aaron Moten as Maximus, A young soldier who hides his tragic past as he serves in a militaristic faction called Brotherhood of Steel. He believes in the nobility of the Brotherhood’s mission to bring law and order to the Wasteland — and will do anything to further their goals.

    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul. The Ghoul survives the Wasteland as a bounty hunter. He is pragmatic, ruthless, and hides a mysterious past.

    Kyle MacLachlan as Hank, the Overseer of Vault 33 and Lucy’s father. He is eager to change the world for the better.

    Jonathan Nolan on the differences between the game and the show

    Jonathan Nolan and Ella Purnell on the set of 'Fallout.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Nolan and Ella Purnell on the set of ‘Fallout.’ Credit: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Here’s what Nolan said during a roundtable interview at CCXP in Brazil:

    ’It’s a very different mode of storytelling. One of the things I’m most excited about is telling an ensemble story and coming at it from these three perspectives. It was, to me, kind a brilliant hack for how you present that role-playing game mechanic of the games, which is you, as that vault dweller, can be anyone. They can look like anyone and can make any choices they want, which is not a luxury you can afford the audience when you’re telling them a linear story. So, having three perspectives, having Ella’s character and Aaron’s character and Walton’s characters occupy these very different corners of the fallout universe gave us a chance to encompass some of the ambition of the games, not just in terms of world building, but in terms of morality and in terms of the gray area. We talked a lot about ‘The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly,’ which is one of my very favorite films, and so that was a great touchstone for us as we sort of embarked on the journey.”

    When will ‘Fallout’ be on our TV screens?

    Prime Video has announced that ‘Fallout’ will launch on April 12 next year.

    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in 'Fallout.'
    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Fallout’:

    Buy Jonathan Nolan Movies on Amazon

     

  • First Images from the ‘Fallout’ TV Series

    Ella Purnell as Lucy in 'Fallout.'
    Ella Purnell as Lucy in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Preview:

    • The first images from the ‘Fallout’ TV adaptation have dropped.
    • It’s set in a post-apocalyptic world.
    • The show will hit Prime Video in April.

    There seems to be no end to the current trend for video game adaptations, which makes sense given the success of recent titles such as ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’ and ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s’ have shown.

    Now here come Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy with a small screen version of popular title ‘Fallout’. Nolan and Joy are running the show alongside Geneva Robertson-Dworet and Graham Wagner, and Nolan directs the first three episodes.

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s’

    What’s the story of ‘Fallout’?

    Ella Purnell as Lucy in 'Fallout.'
    Ella Purnell as Lucy in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Adapted from the massively popular video game ‘Fallout’ is the story of haves and have-nots in a world in which there’s almost nothing left to have.

    Two-hundred years after the apocalypse, the gentle denizens of luxury fallout shelters are forced to return to the irradiated hellscape their ancestors left behind—and are shocked to discover an incredibly complex, gleefully weird, and highly violent universe waiting for them.

    Who’s who in ‘Fallout’?

    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in 'Fallout.'
    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    While this first look offers glimpses at iconic ‘Fallout’ elements such as the Vaults, airborne carriers the Vertibirds and Power Suits, it’s also focused on some of the characters, including:

    Ella Purnell as Lucy, an optimistic Vault Dweller with an all-American, can-do spirit. Her peaceful and idealistic nature is tested when people harm her loved ones.

    Aaron Moten as Maximus, A young soldier who hides his tragic past as he serves in a militaristic faction called Brotherhood of Steel. He believes in the nobility of the Brotherhood’s mission to bring law and order to the Wasteland — and will do anything to further their goals.

    Power Suit and Aaron Moten as Maximus in 'Fallout.'
    (L to R) Power Suit and Aaron Moten as Maximus in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul. The Ghoul survives the Wasteland as a bounty hunter. He is pragmatic, ruthless, and hides a mysterious past.

    Kyle MacLachlan as Hank, the Overseer of Vault 33 and Lucy’s father. He is eager to change the world for the better.

    (L to R) Ella Purnell as Lucy and Kyle MacLachlan as Overseer Hank in 'Fallout.'
    (L to R) Ella Purnell as Lucy and Kyle MacLachlan as Overseer Hank in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Can you enjoy ‘Fallout’ the show if you’ve never played the game?

    Power Armor Suits in 'Fallout.'
    Power Armor Suits in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    There have been various incarnations of ‘Fallout’ across different platforms and formats, but if you’re a total newbie, will you still understand the show? Bethesda Game Studios (which currently producers the game) director and series executive producer Todd Howard said you can in a podcast interview last year:

    “It’s not retelling a game story. It’s basically an area of the map. Let’s tell a story here that fits in the world that we have built, doesn’t break any of the rules, can reference things in the games, but isn’t a retelling of the games. [It] exists in the same world but is its own unique thing, so it adds to it. While also, people who haven’t played the games, who can’t experience how crazy cool ‘Fallout’ is, can watch the series.”

    When will ‘Fallout’ be on our TV screens?

    Prime Video has announced that ‘Fallout’ will launch on April 12th next year.

    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in 'Fallout.'
    Walton Goggins as The Ghoul in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.
    Brotherhood of Steel and Vertibirds in 'Fallout.'
    Brotherhood of Steel and Vertibirds in ‘Fallout.’ Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.
    Jonathan Nolan and Ella Purnell on the set of 'Fallout.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Nolan and Ella Purnell on the set of ‘Fallout.’ Credit: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video. Copyright: © AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Fallout’:

    Buy Jonathan Nolan Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Westworld’ Cancelled After Four Seasons

    (L to R) Evan Rachel Wood and James Marsden in HBO's 'Westworld.'
    (L to R) Evan Rachel Wood and James Marsden in HBO’s ‘Westworld.’

    ‘Westworld’, which for four seasons has been delighting (and more often confounding) viewers with its complex, twisty storytelling and changing characters since it debuted in 2016, has been cancelled at HBO.

    Based on the 1973 film by Michael Crichton (who would go on to employ a similar idea of attractions causing trouble in his novel ‘Jurassic Park‘), ‘Westworld’ –– initially, at least –– told the story of a sprawling Western-themed park where humans could interact with complicated artificial people. And by interact, it usually meant either sleep with or kill.

    As the show went on, the canvas expanded to include different zones within the park with their own themes and the futuristic world outside of it, as the “hosts” –– the park’s creations –– broke out of their programming (and their restrictions) and began to plot a takeover of the human sphere.

    The show was created by Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, with J.J. Abrams among its executive producers via his Bad Robot company. The cast included Evan Rachel Wood, Thandiwe Newton, Ed Harris, Jeffrey Wright, Tessa Thompson, Luke Hemsworth, Aaron Paul, Angela Sarafyan and James Marsden.

    An initial success –– its premiere drew the channel’s highest viewership since the debut of “True Detective” in 2014, it was initially buzzy, but its appeal began to wane slightly in later years, most notably after a big break in episodes due to the pandemic.

    Anthony Hopkins as Dr. Robert Ford in HBO's 'Westworld.'
    Anthony Hopkins as Dr. Robert Ford in HBO’s ‘Westworld.’

    Though HBO offered no official reason for the cancellation, there is already talk that it’s a combination of declining ratings (even without need of advertising revenue), with a precipitous drop between Seasons 3 and 4, and the hefty price tag for the show.

    An effects heavy head-scratcher, it featured expansive visuals of futuristic cities, a big cast and lots of artificial beings to bring to life.

    It’s no secret that HBO parent company Warner Bros. Discovery has been on a cost-cutting run of late, and while it still has big productions upcoming (such as ‘The Last of Us’), it has clearly decided that ‘Westworld’ was no longer worth producing.

    “Over the past four seasons, Lisa and Jonah have taken viewers on a mind-bending odyssey, raising the bar at every step,” HBO said in a statement. “We are tremendously grateful to them, along with their immensely talented cast, producers and crew, and all of our partners at Kilter Films, Bad Robot and Warner Bros. Television. It’s been a thrill to join them on this journey.”

    “Making ‘Westworld’ has been one of the highlights of our careers,” Nolan and Joy have remarked. “We are deeply grateful to our extraordinary cast and crew for creating these indelible characters and brilliant worlds. We’ve been privileged to tell these stories about the future of consciousness –– both human and beyond –– in the brief window of time before our AI overlords forbid us from doing so.”

    No shade there, then. Nolan and Joy, meanwhile are still at work on visions of the future –– they have a deal at Amazon, where they’re currently producing ‘The Peripheral’ and developing other projects.

    Ed Harris as The Man in Black in HBO's 'Westworld.'
    Ed Harris as The Man in Black in HBO’s ‘Westworld.’
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  • Ariana DeBose Starring in ‘House of Spoils’

    Ariana DeBose accepts the Oscar
    Ariana DeBose accepts the Oscar® for Actress in a Supporting Role during the live ABC telecast of the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022. Photo credit: Blaine Ohigashi / A.M.P.A.S.

    It’s been a good year so far for ‘West Side Story’ breakout Ariana DeBose. She’s truly put her stamp on the movie world, securing a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her role in Steven Spielberg’s musical.

    She’ll also be seen this year among the sprawling ensemble cast for Matthew Vaughn’s spy thriller ‘Argylle’, will lead space pic ‘ISS’ and secured a role as Calypso in Sony’s Marvel movie ‘Kraven the Hunter.’

    On TV, DeBose has been part of the cast of Apple TV’s musical comedy series ‘Schmigadoon!’ and will return for Season 2, along with a role in HBO’s ‘Westworld’.

    And she’s adding a psychological thriller to her to-do list, which will see her dabbling in culinary terror from the Blumhouse team, under its deal with Amazon.

    ‘House of Spoils’, sounding for all the world like a discount food warehouse store, follows an ambitious chef (DeBose) who opens her first restaurant — a farm-to-table affair on a remote estate — where she battles kitchen chaos, a dubious investor, crushing self-doubts… and the powerful spirit of the estate’s previous owner who threatens to sabotage her at every turn!

    Sounds like she needs Gordon Ramsay to show up and shout at people.

    Ariana DeBose hand to face
    Ariana DeBose at the 5th Annual Hollywood Critics Association Awards.

    Bridget Savage Cole and Danielle Krudy, whose previous movie, ‘Blow the Man Down’ – about two sisters desperately trying to cover up a gruesome with run-in with a dangerous man – was picked up by Amazon just before the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival, wrote the script and will direct, starting this fall.

    “Since ‘Blow the Man Down’, we have been huge fans of Bridget and Danielle’s unique filmmaking voice and knew we needed to be a part of whatever they wanted to do next,” says Amazon head of movies Julie Rapaport. “Pairing their thrilling script with Ariana’s incredible talent is a dream come true, and we could not be more excited to bring this story to the screen and to our customers around the world.”

    “We’re excited to see Ariana’s fresh, bold and spirited energy that won her an Oscar in a role that is completely different,” comments president of Blumhouse Chris McCumber. “And with the gifted filmmaking team of Bridget and Danielle, the talent in front of and behind the camera is exceptional.”

    Culinary thrillers seem to be a thing right now, what with ‘The Menu’ on its way in November starring Ralph Fiennes, Anya Taylor-Joy and Nicholas Hoult and featuring a chef with a killer idea for a trendy restaurant (you can watch the latest trailer for that one here).

    As for ‘House of Spoils,’ it’ll arrive on Prime Video globally at some point next year.

    Ariana DeBose in ‘West Side Story’
    Ariana DeBose in ‘West Side Story’

     

  • Ariana DeBose Joins ‘Westworld’ Season 4

    Westworld Season 4 teaser
    HBO

    Ariana DeBose continues to enjoy a successful time in her career. She recently won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her performance in last year’s ‘West Side Story’ and has several big movies on the horizon.

    She’s increasingly in demand as an actress, and one job that slipped past the news radars (not shocking given the tight net of security the show’s team tends to wrap around every element of it), is that she’ll be a recurring guest star on the fourth season of ‘Westworld’.

    The HBO sci-fi drama, which has weathered the typical pandemic delays (Season 3 aired in 2020), is back on our screens next month and will now include DeBose in a role that… well, the producers aren’t saying.

    ‘Westworld’, created by Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, adapts Michael Crichton’s 1973 tale of technological terror and – in its earlier seasons, at least – was primarily set in an advanced theme park where guests can experience realistic worlds such as old west, shogun-era Japan, World War II and more.

    It’s brutal and bloody (assuming that’s the experience you want) and the artificial beings, or “hosts” who populate the park are seen as disposable playthings. But something is happening with them – especially Dolores Abernathy (Evan Rachel Wood), who is starting to break out of her routines and figure out her world.

    That spurs a revolution for the AI characters, and soon Dolores are more are out in the human world of the future, fighting for their freedom and plotting the overthrow of their “masters”.

    The show has evolved its story as the seasons have elapsed, at the end of the third run of episodes, Thandiwe Newton’s powerful host Maeve and Aaron Paul’s human Caleb defeating Serac (Vincent Cassel) while Ed Harris’ Man in Black appeared to have been killed by his robotic alter-ego, controlled by Tessa Thompson’s Chalores (an amalgam of the characters Charlotte Hale, originated by Thompson and Dolores).

    ‘Westworld’s cast also includes the likes of Jeffrey Wright and Aurora Perrineau.

    A new teaser for the show is now online, set to Lou Reed’s ‘Perfect Day’, used, as seems to be traditional, in ironic sense, since a lot of bad things happen here. It depicts a dystopian version of New York City, smoke-emitting contraptions, people waltzing in the streets and flies. A lot of flies…

    zO0EIM38

    It certainly appears to be going better for the hosts than most of the humans, who are in some trouble here. But what of the coming apocalypse as threatened by the previous season? No sign, but this is ‘Westworld’, and we’ll have to wait and see what other surprises are lurking in wait later in the season.

    At least we won’t have to wait too long now – with eight episodes this year, ‘Westworld’ Season 4 launches on HBO Max on Sunday, 26th June.

  • Angela Sarafyan Talks ‘King Knight’

    Angela Sarafyan in 'King Knight'
    Angela Sarafyan in ‘King Knight’

    Opening in select theaters, on digital, and On Demand February 17th  is the new dark-comedy ‘King Knight,’ which was written and directed by Richard Bates Jr. (Tone-Deaf).

    The movie stars Matthew Gray Gubler (‘(500) Days of Summer’) as Thorn, the leader of a coven of witches, along with his wife, Willow (Angela Sarafyan). But, when Willow discovers that Thorn was popular in high school, and not the antisocial teenager he claimed to be, the coven votes him out. Now, in order to earn back the trust back of his wife and his coven, Thorn must attend his high school reunion and face his greatest fear … his mother (Barbara Crampton).

    Actress Angela Sarafyan has been working in Hollywood for over 20 years and has appeared on such popular TV shows as ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer,’ ‘The Shield,’ and ’24.’ She has also appeared in movies like ‘Paranoia’ with Harrison Ford and Gary Oldman, ‘The Promise’ with Oscar Isaac and Christian Bale, and ‘The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2.’ But Sarafyan is probably best known for her work as Clementine Pennyfather on HBO’s hit series ‘Westworld.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Angela Sarafyan about her work on ‘King Knight.’ The actress discussed her new film, her character, and working with Matthew Gray Gubler, as well as her experience working on ‘Westworld.’

    (L to R) Matthew Gray Gubler and Angela Sarafyan in 'King Knight'
    (L to R) Matthew Gray Gubler and Angela Sarafyan in ‘King Knight’

    Moviefone: To begin with, what was it about the screenplay that really grabbed you and made you want to be a part of this project?

    Angela Sarafyan: When I read the script, I thought it had humor that I hadn’t really read on a page before. I love the ideas in the story. So being an outcast in ways, trying to be true to yourself and to have a lot of humor about it, and to have great lessons with humor. So, that tone really was attractive and then I saw Ricky’s other films and spoke to him and thought this would be a really wonderful adventure to go on. I love Matthew. Matthew and I have worked together in the past. So, I thought this is so good.

    MF: What can you tell us about your character Willow, and how you prepared and approached playing this role?

    AS: I had one rehearsal with Ricky and Matthew and we were trying to find who Willow and Thorn were together. So, with a few readings of it, I could sense, oh, this is where her voice is. This is how she works. She’s like the wind. She’s like that soft, warm wind in the spring. Everything happens with ease and love and there’s something funny about that. So, we were finding that that relationship really was about supporting each other and supporting their coven until a lie comes out. Then it’s a betrayal of the greatest level. So, it’s really actually poignant because betrayal of yourself is a betrayal of others. So, you kind of see that through the film.

    This was a really quick turnaround. I was actually in the midst of shooting season three of ‘Westworld’ and in a fitting and got an email with this script. My brother happened to be there. He read the script and then I read it. It was only a matter of four or five days before I was on set. So, I started to build the character as we were filming almost. I trusted Ricky a lot and Matthew, and they really knew what was working. So, it just happened very simply and easily. I don’t usually do that. I like to have some time to prep a role.

    MF: Can you talk about the relationship between Thorn and Willow, and working on that with Matthew Gray Gubler?

    AS: I think they have true love. I think they’re like the same kind of soul. They found each other, and they really were supposed to be outcasts in Willow’s mind, but that wasn’t the case. I think also Willow grows at the end of this because it’s not about being one thing. You can be the jock and be prom king and still connect with the outcast. I, myself was a loner in school. I was hanging out in the library and didn’t have boyfriends and never kissed a guy, none of that happened for me in high school. So, I relate so much to Willow in that sense.

    But with Matthew, it was just very easy. Like we have great chemistry I think. Maybe I shouldn’t say that, but I think we did. I think it was just so easy. Everything happened, just flowed and I think it was like finding the humor in the scenes by playing it straight.

    (L to R) Angela Sarafyan and Matthew Gray Gubler in 'King Knight'
    (L to R) Angela Sarafyan and Matthew Gray Gubler in ‘King Knight’

    MF: Can you talk about the betrayal that both Willow and the coven feel when they discover Thorn’s secret?

    AS: Well, it’s based on an illusion of who I think he is. So, when you meet someone, you have these ideas about who they are and who they’re going to be, or who they once were. She’s built an entire relationship based on, “we’re the same.” And it turns out he was the complete opposite. So, that in itself is betrayal. I take it very seriously because I want to know who I’m going to be in a relationship with and lying is not a good thing. But at the end of the film, you realize that we don’t have to judge where we come from, it’s who we are today with each other, and that’s all that matters.

    MF: Can you talk about working with director Richard Bates Jr. and what it was like watching him execute his vision for this project?

    AS: He’s such a wonderful director. He’s got great energy. He’s positive. He doesn’t stress out about anything. He’s really encouraging, and he gets the best out of his actors. He knows how to direct with very few words to get you where he wants you. I loved working with him. He’s a clear visionary. He knows what he wants, and he writes it and films it. So, I loved working with him. I think there was a scene where he was like, “All right, everybody, this is a drama. This is Sophie’s choice or something like that.” And I was like, I’m already there, bro. You got to play the truth of the scene.

    MF: Finally, what has the experience of being a part of a series like ‘Westworld’ been like for you both personally and professionally?

    AS: I think it was seven years ago when we started, when we filmed the pilot. I have changed from the person I was to the person I am today. I think Clementine as well has, if you watch all the seasons. The way the character developed also inspired me and corresponded with where I was in my life. I love working with everyone on that set. We’ve become a family. Jonah (Nolan) and Lisa (Joy) and our crew, everyone does their best work. I feel grateful, very grateful that I could be a part of that story, a part of that crew and that we continue to make them.

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  • New ‘Westworld’ Trailer Unveils a Whole New World … Or Is It the Same?

    New ‘Westworld’ Trailer Unveils a Whole New World … Or Is It the Same?

    HBO

    “I thought your world would be so different from mine,” says Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) in a new trailer for “Westworld” Season 3.

    “There isn’t any difference at all is there?”

    The HBO drama unveiled the trailer at San Diego Comic-Con, where cast and crew teased tidbits about the upcoming third season.

    Set in the immediate aftermath of the android host rebellion in the theme park, the story picks up with Dolores emerging into the outside world bearing the pearls housing the consciousness of several androids with her.

    “Breaking Bad” Emmy winner Aaron Paul joins the cast as a construction worker in near-future Los Angeles with a robot co-worker named George. He runs into Dolores and forms a connection with her.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=64CYajemh6E&feature=youtu.be

    “Some people were born into privilege and some are born into poverty,” Paul said during the panel discussion. “Caleb was born into a complicated thing …. He’s just trying to survive in the world and sometimes he has to do bad things.”

    The trailer includes glimpses of Jeffrey Wright as Bernard, Tessa Thompson as Charlotte (or likely, Dolores in Charlotte’s body), and Thandie Newton’s Maeve in a World War II setting. Which means: Nazi robots are coming.

    “This is season is a little less of a guessing game and more of an experience with the hosts finally getting to meet their makers,” co-showrunner Jonathan Nolan recently said.

    “Westworld” Season 3 is set to premiere on HBO sometime in 2020.

    For all of our San Diego Comic Con coverage, please click here!

  • ‘Westworld’ Season 3 Will Be ‘Less of a Guessing Game’

    ‘Westworld’ Season 3 Will Be ‘Less of a Guessing Game’

    HBO

    “Westworld” is getting a bit of a software and hardware reboot for Season 3.

    Not only will the HBO drama’s third season feature new locations and new cast members, it will be less mysterious and opaque, with fewer twists.

    ““This is season is a little less of a guessing game and more of an experience with the hosts finally getting to meet their makers,” co-showrunner Jonathan Nolan told Entertainment Weekly.

    At the end of Season 2, Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) escaped the park and took the chips housing the consciousness of several androids with her.

    Co-showrunner Lisa Joy revealed that there won’t be a time jump this season. It picks up right after the massacre in the park, after Dolores’ escape. But she’ll experience some major “culture shock” as she navigates the real world.

    After all they went through to get out of the park, Dolores finally got what she wanted, so we wanted to see how she interacts with the world and what her plan is. That’s a part of the story we were excited to tell,” Joy said.

    Dolores will run into a new character, played by “Breaking Bad” Emmy winner Aaron Paul, who plays a construction worker in Los Angeles named Caleb. He was first introduced in the teaser trailer released in May.

    “Aaron’s character will challenge Dolores’ notions about the nature of humanity,” Nolan explained. “He’s the type of person who doesn’t get to go to Westworld.”

    But while the action has moved out of the park, it’s still taking place in “the West.”

    “Part of the story plays out in the Western United States, and that’s a thematic through-line in the show — the American West as a setting and an ethos. The idea of the West as a wild place, where just over the next hill or horizon there are no rules,” Nolan said.

    “On that thematic level, Dolores emerges to figure out what happened to the real West. And the answer is: We paved the thing over, and civilization eventually caught up with all those people who were running away from it.”

  • ‘Westworld’ Season 3 Teaser Trailer Looks Like a Completely Different Show

    ‘Westworld’ Season 3 Teaser Trailer Looks Like a Completely Different Show

    HBO

    We’re not in “Westworld” anymore.

    HBO debuted a teaser trailer for Season 3 of the sci-fi drama during the series finale of “Game of Thrones,” perhaps to atone for the loss. And “Westworld” looks like a completely different show than what it was in the first two seasons.

    The teaser centers on new cast member Aaron Paul, who moves through the futuristic world outside of the robot-populated theme park. We also get a glimpse of newcomer Lena Waithe, as well as a familiar face seen by Paul at the end of the trailer: Evan Rachel Wood.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deSUQ7mZfWk&feature=youtu.be

    The teaser hints at the darkness lying beneath the gleaming technology that powers the “real world.”

    “They said they would make a better world — smooth away the rough edges,” Paul says. “But that was a lie. I guess the rough edges are the only thing I’m hanging onto.”

    “Westworld” Season 3 premieres in 2020.