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A brutal rebellion on a train full of the last humans, a 'zomromcom' in which the dead start shuffling around London and a contemporary reimagining of an HG Wells classic... there's so much for fans of post-apocalyptic fiction and sci-fi to get stuck into right now.

We've selected the 25 dramas and films that it really would be the end of the world to miss - sifting through thousands of options so you don't have to.

Looking for a new series or film to stream On Demand?

Read on to find out the shows worth investing your precious last days on earth in...

Fallout
Explosive video game adaptation from the creators of the Westworld TV series

Year: 2024

Certificate: 15

Watch now on Prime Video



Video game adaptations used to have a bad name - does anyone remember Bob Hoskins playing the Italian plumber Mario in 1993's Super Mario Bros film? It's probably best that you don't. 

Those days are now long gone though, especially after HBO's The Last Of Us upped the dramatic ante in 2023 and won eight Emmy Awards for its trouble. Fallout looks set to continue that trend, coming as it does from Westworld creators Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, a producing duo with great expertise in serving TV audiences big and complex worlds.

And Fallout is certainly that - the games are set in a sprawling, post-apocalyptic wasteland centuries after a nuclear war has devastated the planet's surface. Underneath that wasteland are The Vaults, in which cheery survivors have been living lives of order and relative luxury while those above scrabbled for scraps. 

That culture clash is at the centre of the series, following Lucy (Yellowjackets' Ella Purnell) as she leaves the safety of The Vaults for the chaos above. 'Practically every person I've met up here has tried to kill me,' she despairs in her opening week. There's a lot of comedy in that clash and we meet a lot of eccentric characters as it unfolds, too, especially Justified's Walton Goggins as a roaming bounty hunter. 

Fallout is primarily an epic action game though, and this ambitious and visually impressive series keeps that very much in mind. It should certainly please those in search of a little popcorn entertainment and, even if it doesn't quite reach the dramatic heights of The Last Of Us, it's also a rich evocation of an exciting world. (Eight episodes) 



Snowpiercer
Jennifer Connelly is superb in this post-apocalyptic series set on a train

Year: 2020-2022

Certificate: 18

Watch now on Netflix



The movie Snowpiercer follows a brutal rebellion on a train full of the last humans from a frozen Earth. This TV series version starts off looking like it's telling the same tale in slow motion, but then chooses a different track and throws in a murder mystery for good measure. Jennifer Connelly plays Melanie Cavill, the authoritative voice of the train, who serves the will of the even more mysterious Mr Wilford. She is our guide to the richly realised world of a very long locomotive that is strictly divided by class. It's worth watching if you like a strong female star. 

There's a lot to like in the world-building that Snowpiercer does, but it's Connelly's subtly shifting performance as the enigmatic Melanie that really holds your attention throughout season one. As the show progresses, the action moves off the train, dubbed Big Alice, to take in more of what is left of the freezing world outside. (Three series)



The Walking Dead
Zombie apocalypse horror that became a global hit

Year: 2010-2022

Certificate: 18

Watch now on Disney+

Launched in 2010 on the US cable channel AMC - the original home of Mad Men - this post-apocalyptic drama became a TV phenomenon, running for 11 series and spawning numerous spin-offs. The Walking Dead explores the stories of survivors in the wake of a zombie apocalypse, and evokes that same sense of wonder at a world in suspension that you see in movies such as 28 Days Later and I Am Legend. The writer and director is Frank Darabont (The Shawshank Redemption), and the story is derived from a series of comic books. This Life's Andrew Lincoln the main star, playing a heroic cop - and with an American accent that doesn't make you cringe - who awakes from a coma to find the world overrun by zombies; fellow Brit Lennie James plays one of the survivors he finds.

Be warned though, it's strong stuff and very scary at times, although more for the tension it creates than the gore - although there is that too. The zombies are, of course, horrific - yet the series doesn't revel in that, and there's a heartbreaking poignancy to survivors coming face to face with hopelessly changed former friends and family. The Walking Dead has scale, depth and ambition, plus a great mystery at its heart - one to watch, if you have the stomach and nerves for it. (11 series)

 



The Last Of Us
HBO's epic, post-apocalyptic drama about a father-daughter bond

Year: 2022

Certificate: 15

Watch now on Sky

Watch now on NOW

It sounded like the last thing any of us needed - another post-apocalyptic drama about zombies, and one adapted from a video game, at that - but HBO's The Last Of Us was a stunning surprise. It was grisly, yes, and full of desperate characters; but, unlike the relentlessly depressing Walking Dead, proved to be a show about hope, with two very likeable characters at its centre. 

Pedro Pascal (The Mandalorian) plays grieving father-figure Joel, who shepherds teenager Ellie, who is immune to the zombie-causing fungus, on a journey across the US. Ellie is played by rising Brit Bella Ramsey (Game Of Thrones), in a star-making performance that takes on real punch as the show evolves, venturing across a ruined world that's realised with scale and detail. If you're unsure if it's for you, give it until part three - that's when the tone really becomes clear. (Nine episodes) 







The Road
Father and son journey through a savage post-apocalyptic America

Year: 2009

Certificate: 15



This adaptation of acclaimed American author Cormac McCarthy's 2006 novel is a stark yet powerful story of survival set in the smoking embers of a post-apocalyptic Earth.

Viggo Mortensen is the man, Kodi Smit-McPhee is the boy. We never learn their names, and nor do we learn how the world came to be a wasteland yielding nothing but starvation and horror for its scattered survivors. The only warmth of tone and colour comes in flashback to memories of the boy's mother, who is no longer with them.

Constantly on the move, man and boy hide from nomadic bands of cannibals, distrustful of anyone they meet. Survival is fear and caution, but the boy yearns for more. This is a world where everything we currently hold dear, even our names, are of no meaning or use. What does matter, though, is a father's love for his son, and the boy's innocence and hope.

The Road doesn't flinch from showing the violence of a future where civilisation has completely broken down. But it does also show how humanity is a spark within us all, one that is easily extinguished, but also one that can be nurtured. (111 minutes)



Finch
Life-affirming take on the post-apocalypse genre starring Tom Hanks

Year: 2021

Certificate: 12

Watch now on Apple TV+



This post-apocalyptic movie stars Tom Hanks as one of the last surviving members of the human race. It takes a far lighter, more optimistic approach than most films of the genre with their obvious need for doom, gloom and 온라인슬롯 the fight for survival.

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