
‘Fallout’ series review: A roaring rampage of post-apocalyptic carnage
The Hindu
Experience the thrilling post-apocalyptic world of Fallout, a cinematic wonderland filled with alliances, secrets, and adrenalin-charged thrills.
Here is another wonderful videogame adaptation that rocks from the word go. Like 2023’s The Last of Us, Fallout (based on Bethesda Softworks’ role-playing video game franchise) too is set in a post-apocalyptic world. Here too a young woman has to make her way through dangerous places helped by friends and hindered by foes.
Like the feature-film length first episode of The Last of Us, the Jonathan Nolan-directed first episode of Fallout, titled ‘The End’, clocks at 74 minutes and introduces the main players in this world of stark, dust-streaked vistas reminiscent of Nolan’s science fiction western series, Westworld.
We open in Los Angeles in 2077, where famous Hollywood cowboy star Cooper Howard (Walton Goggins) is performing, with his daughter at a child’s birthday party (a man must do what he can to pay the alimony). The world seems stuck in a time warp, with boxy televisions, women in flared skirts straight out of Mad Men, and the paranoia of a nuclear attack and “Reds under the bed” — thanks to the Modern Prometheus.
As the violently coloured cake is being cut and passed around, there is a nuclear attack and the world goes to hell. The scene moves 219 years ahead where people live in underground bunkers called Vaults. Lucy (Ella Purnell) from Vault 33 is cleared to marry a man from Vault 32. The wedding day goes horribly wrong with many dead, dismembered people, a result of raiders from the surface led by Lee Moldaver (Sarita Choudhury).
Lucy’s father, Hank (Kyle MacLachlan) is captured and Lucy decides to go up top to get her father back. On the surface, the Brotherhood of Steel uses “pre-war technology to find prewar tech, to convince people not to use prewar tech.” Maximus (Aaron Moten), a squire, gets a chance to serve the irascible Knight Titus (Michael Rapaport) on an important mission — to find Dr. Siggi Wilzig (Michael Emerson) who is travelling with a dog.
Cooper, after the nuclear holocaust, has become a gunslinger and a ghoul. It turns out that everyone is interested in Wilzig — Maximus, the Ghoul and Lucy who hopes to trade the doctor for her father.
Alliances are formed and broken, and truths and lies uncovered, as Lucy, Maximus and the Ghoul journey into the heart of darkness. Lucy’s brother, Norm (Moisés Arias), and her cousin, Chet (Dave Register) find that all is not roses, champagne, sweetness and light in the vaults, as there are some pretty dark secrets in there too.