TV/Streaming
The End of the World is Going to be Weird on Prime Video’s Quirky, Clever Adaptation of Fallout
Fallout has finally become a TV series, and it's just as twisted as fans hoped it would be.
Brian Tallerico, the Managing Editor of RogerEbert.com, has covered television, film, video games, Blu-ray/DVD, interviews, and entertainment news for two decades online, on radio, and in print.
In addition, he is a TV writer for Vulture.com, a contributor at The Playlist, and freelancer for multiple outlets, including The New York Times, Rolling Stone, and GQ. He also serves as President of the Chicago Film Critics Association, co-produces the Chicago Critics Film Festival every May, and is a regular guest on radio stations and podcasts.
You can follow him on Twitter @Brian_Tallerico. Read his answers to our Movie Love Questionnaire here.
Loading...
Fallout has finally become a TV series, and it's just as twisted as fans hoped it would be.
Andrew Scott steps into the shoes of Tom Ripley for this Steven Zaillian Netflix mini-series, and offers a new, accomplished take on the classic Patricia Highsmith character.
The latest on Blu-ray and streaming includes The Book of Clarence, The Iron Claw, Wonka, The Color Purple, and Criterion editions of Saint Omer and To Die For.
Giancarlo Esposito is back on AMC with a new crime drama that doesn't give one of the best actors of his generation an adequate platform.
A video game review of the newest Sony exclusive.
Homicide: New York is the latest project from the Dick Wolf content machine, but it lets down the survivors of these headline-grabbing cases, as well as the officers who solved them.
On three trippy sci-fi movies from SXSW, including a standout with Ayo Edebiri.
On three SXSW bio-docs on Roberto Clemente, Cheech & Chong, and The Black Keys.
Three more docs from SXSW, including an insane true crime story.
On four SXSW premieres, including one of the standouts of the fest.