Amazon's Fallout adaptation is set to release later this month, and in preparation the cast and crew have started sharing titbits about its production and their work on the series.
Fallout executive producer Jonathan Nolan — who co-wrote many of his brother Christopher Nolan's films, such as The Dark Knight and Interstellar — said his love for the games began with Fallout 3. In fact, he had such a good time playing, he claimed this is the reason he didn't write any films for two years.
«I didn't know much about it and I was in the mood for a distraction,» Nolan recalled. «I think Chris had tasked me with writing The Dark Knight Rises and so if that movie was slightly delayed, it was probably in part because of Fallout 3.»
Fallout The World Of Featurette Prime Video Fallout — The World Of Featurette | Prime Video.Nolan said he was constantly left surprised by the Fallout video game series, something that is less and less common these days. «It's dark, violent, but it's also satirical and in some places almost goofy. It's all these amazing things in one. It's a really ambitious game, and I've never really experienced anything quite like it.»
Nolan also shared more on the difficulties of adapting an open-world video game, compared to the likes of a book. «Usually when you're adapting something, like a novel, you're adding to it,» Nolan said. «You lose some things, but you're largely adding light, picture, persona and humanity. With a video game, you're taking things away, like the audience's sense of freedom. The whole premise of a game like Fallout, it's open world and you can go any direction you want.»
Image credit: AmazonThe producer noted this is something viewers can't do when watching a television show, so the biggest challenge the showrunners faced was still conveying the «freedom» of a game. Amazon's Fallout team did this by allowing the show's story to be told through the eyes of its three main characters: the young and naive Vault dweller Lucy (played by
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