Summary

  • Fallout's 1950s aesthetic serves a narrative purpose by critiquing nuclear weapons and capitalism.
  • The retrofuturistic design in Fallout reflects an alternate reality where society never progressed past the 1950s.
  • The franchise uses its setting to contrast nuclear power's potential for good with nuclear weaponry's destructive nature and the ridiculous and dangerous aspects of capitalism.

The world of the world of Fallout uses it as much more than a simple stylistic choice.

Fallout's 1950s aesthetic can be seen throughout the show and games. The show's pre-war scenes display it best, in the clothes characters like Cooper and Barb wore and the style of car they drove. The technology of Fallout also feels like it's from the 1950s, given its CRT television sets and the big, bulky power armor used by the Brotherhood of Steel. Fallout's retro aesthetic actually serves a narrative purpose, though, and there are several reasons the franchise uses it so heavily.

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Fallout's '50s Theme Explained (Despite Not Being Set In That Era)

It's based on what people of the 1950s thought the future would look like

The main reason the world of Fallout looks like a continuation of the 1950s is because it's designed to fit into a retrofuturistic aesthetic. Essentially, Fallout took what people of the past imagined the future might look like and made it so those predictions came true. Much of the reason those ideas of the future were proven wrong was because the world very quickly grew beyond the 1950s. In Fallout, though, American society never progressed past the 1950s. The Cold War never ended, and there were very few technological advancements beyond improvements to existing devices, so retrofuturistic imagery became a reality.

How Fallout's Setting Takes A Satirical Approach With The 1950s Imagery

The franchise uses its setting to critique the dangers of nuclear weapons and capitalism

Fallout Vault-Tec Company 2

Fallout's retrofuturistic aesthetic also served a narrative purpose, as it was used to deliver some of the franchise's core messages. Fallout is a franchise about the dangers of nuclear weaponry and the destruction it can cause. Nuclear power was at its most popular in America in the 1950s, but that was also the decade when the nuclear arms race went into full swing and the world was the closest to a nuclear apocalypse. Fallout uses its 1950s aesthetic to contrast the potential for good in nuclear power with the potential for destruction in nuclear weaponry, as that decade saw both at their peak.

The franchise's retrofuturism also plays into its satirical elements. Fallout has quite a bit to critique about American society and capitalism, and many of those elements were at their height in the 1950s. By mocking major elements of the 1950s, like the Red Scare over the perceived rise of Communism and the decade's increase in consumerism, Fallout points out how capitalism can be both ridiculous and dangerous. Nothing showcases Fallout's critiques better than the pre-war companies like Vault-Tec who manufactured the apocalypse to increase their profit margins, which is an example of the dangers of capitalism taken to a ridiculous extreme.

The 1950s were a time when both capitalism and nuclear weaponry were very overt parts of American society. That makes it the perfect setting for the franchise, as it was much easier for Fallout to satirize such prominent parts of the decade. Fallout is often over-the-top in its satire, and its 1950s aesthetic perfectly matches the franchise's extremity.

Fallout TV Show Poster Showing Lucy, CX404, Ghoul, and Maximus in Front of an Explosion with Flying Bottle Caps

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Fallout
Release Date
April 10, 2024
Showrunner
Lisa Joy, Jonathan Nolan
Writers
Lisa Joy, Jonathan Nolan

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Set 200 years after an apocalypse, Fallout follows residents of luxury shelters as they re-enter a post-nuclear world. Confronted with a bizarre and violent landscape, the series explores the stark contrasts between their sheltered existence and the harsh realities of the outside universe.

Franchise(s)
Fallout
Seasons
1
Main Genre
Sci-Fi