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  1. Let's Fall Out: With Quinton Aaron, Brad Johnson, Carmen Gloria Pérez, Amy Castle. Let's Fallout is Sci-Fi Dramedy about surviving in a post apocalyptic world with a bunch of crazy and idiosyncratic vault dwellers.

    • Comedy, Drama, Sci-Fi
    • 2017-04
  2. Mar 7, 2024 · The live-action Fallout TV show is set to premiere on Amazon Prime Video in 2024 and has garnered positive reactions from fans. The show's release date is strategically set for April 11, 2024, potentially capitalizing on a lack of new content due to strikes in the industry.

  3. Let's Fall Out (TV Series 2017– ) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  4. Let's Fall Out (TV Series 2017– ) - Movies, TV, Celebs, and more... Menu. Movies. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box ...

    • "We kind of told ourselves, this is Fallout 5."
    • Fallout TV Series - First Look Images
    • Every IGN Fallout Review
    • IGN Recommends

    By Adam Bankhurst

    Updated: Dec 4, 2023 4:20 pm

    Posted: Dec 4, 2023 4:00 pm

    Prime Video's Fallout TV series finally recieved its first trailer at CCXP and it gave us our best look yet at the adaptation of the beloved video game franchise from Bethesda. To learn more, IGN was part of a roundtable with many of the people involved in the show and they shared so much more about what fans can expect when the series premieres on April 12, 2024.

    So, grab your favorite Nuka-Cola and get ready to read all about Fallout from executive producer and director Jonathan Nolan, executive producer and co-showunner Graham Wagner, and series stars Ella Purnell, Aaron Moten, and Walton Goggins.

    Alongside so many other topics, this crew touched upon honoring the video games, if there will be a nod to Bethesda's beloved bugs and glitches, how they view this series as their 'Fallout 5,' how they are planning the future of the series, what Todd Howard's involvment was, and so much more.

    This is a question for all the three of you because I want all of your impressions, but it's about Lucy. Lucy seems to me like an optimistic character, like she's outgoing, she's happy, she's innocent. Is this impression right? And if so, what can you tell me about this character in a post-apocalyptic world?

    Ella Purnell: Yeah, I think that impression is accurate. I think that she reflects the vault's ideals. That's where she grew up. She's known nothing other than living in a vault under the surface. She is very optimistic and positive, don't get me wrong. She's got grit and she's courageous and she worked hard, but she's definitely very optimistic, very naive, innocent, and all of those things that you said. The journey for me when playing Lucy was about how much that changes when she comes up to the surface and interacts with the characters and experiences the chaos that is the wasteland.

    Aaron Moten: She answered it so perfectly.

    Jonathan Nolan: No problem with that.

    On that note I was going to ask you, because you guys are both survivors that are very different. So if you could tell me in which way you managed to survive and to evolve during the show?

    Aaron Moten: Well, there's some similarities too. I think Maximus as well has involved himself in a unit, in a military unit known as the Brotherhood of Steel, but I think he just gravitated towards feeling more powerful amongst the group as opposed to on his own. And I think it's a real challenge for him as a character to feel like he is all that he should be when it is just him on his own. But I think that vault life has to be somewhat similar to that in that you are a unit continuing to keep a vault running as well as training for the ultimate mission to come up to the service and save the world.

    Why do you think it is so important to tell a story like Fallout right now these days?

    Walton Goggins: Well, first and foremost, I think that we are on the precipice of a golden age of game adaptations. Why do you tell any story at any given time? It's entertaining. It is, again, subversive. I mean, it explores the difference between the haves and the have-nots in a post-apocalyptic kind of retro-futuristic landscape. We're not the only show to explore those themes, but those themes are as prominent now as they've ever been, really. It's not the first time that it's happened, but we're certainly living in those times. But I think to answer your question, for me, this is fiction. The end of the world hasn't happened, but in some ways it's nice to live out those fantasies in a safe place. And for me, it was always about the story. I don't question the timing of anything. I don't know that anyone has ever questioned a time of anything that they've made unless it's been a reaction to something. More often than not, great art meets a moment in time, culturally, sometimes it's kismet, right? Sometimes it's by mistake. Sometimes the stars just align in that way. And I think-

    Graham Wagner: Yeah, to speak to that, we started developing the show three years ago, before COVID. Suddenly, Geneva and I are writing this show, we're living as vault-dwellers, and it became topical. It's not why we wanted to do the show, but it became like, well shit, this just became relevant in a different way.

    The game has been around since 1997. It pulled from a lot of sources like A Boy and His Dog and Mad Max and A Canticle for Lebowitz. These are themes that have been sort of churning around for a long time for a reason, it turns out. They just keep popping up. So yeah, it's part of the reason why Fallout kind of just, aside from the show, just keeps going and keeps kind of getting second winds, third winds, and now it's going to, I think keep going after this.

    If Shane from the Shield, Boyd from Justified, Baby Billy from the Gemstones and The Ghoul from Fallout all sat down at a table for dinner, who would be the first one taken out and who would be the one to survive?

    Walton Goggins: Fuck. Baby Billy because he would immediately get on everyone's nerves and the last person, the person that would never be taken out, and the only person that would walk away from that table, is The Ghoul. Having just watched it really, and this isn't about me, this isn't a commentary on my performance, it's just this character that these people wrote. It's one of the coolest things I've ever participated in, and in the story and in my mind, he's a legend. I mean, he is a very, very, very complicated guy, but in this story, his reputation precedes itself and he's about as dangerous as, certainly more dangerous than anyone I've ever played. But I would hate that he would kill Baby Billy. Get all of his sermons on the phone or something.

  5. Apr 2, 2024 · Based on Bethesda Softworks’s long-running video game series of the same name, Prime Video’s new show about life 200 years after the end of the world has assembled a murderer’s row of talent both...

  6. Dec 4, 2023 · For the uninitiated, the "Fallout" games take place hundreds of years after a nuclear apocalypse destroys a United States that resembles the cute and corny futuristic ideal of the mid-20th...