Indivisible, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:the action role-playing video game, which was developed by 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Lab Zero Games and published by 505 Games, is being adapted for television with Inside Out’s Meg LeFauve and Rob The Mob’s Jonathan Fernandez.
Released in late 🦄2019, the game features Ajna, a rebellious tomboy whose life is thrown into chaos when a warlord named Ravannavar burns her village and kills her father. The event brings forth her powers and sends her on a mission to avenge her father’s death. Throughout her journey, she builds up an army and gains new abilities to navigate different environments and defeat her enemies.
LeFauve and Fernandez, who will be writing and executive producing the adaptation with DJ2 Entertainment, whose credits include the 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Sonic the Hedgehog film꧅, and Legenda🐟ry Television, are veterans of the industry.
LeFauve headed Jodie Foster’s film company, which was nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay for Pixar’s Inside Out. She also developed the stories for The Good Dinosaur, Captain Marvel and Onward. She is also writing and producing Netflix’s My Father’s Dragon, an animated adventure film, based on the children's novel of the same name by Ruth Stiles Gannett,ไ which features runaway Elmer Elevator searching for a dragon on Wild Island.
Fernandez, who wrote Rob The Mob starring Michael Pitt, Nina Arianda and Andy Garcia, has written for Star Trek: Enterprise and was the executive producer of the hit Kurt Russell film Breakdown. Indivisible will air on NBC Universal’s streaming service, Peacock. The game is available for 🅷PC, PS4, and Xbox One. It is also available through Xbox G♚ame Pass.
Amazon Prime Video is also developing a series based on the hit Fallout video game franchise. The project is being headed by Westworld co-creators/executive producers Jonathan No🔥l🃏an and Lisa Joy as part of their deal with Amazon Studios. The role-playing game series, which debuted in 1997, has been expanded over eight games in the past two decades. The story stretches from the 1940s to a post-nuclear apocalypse in the 2100s and 2200s.
Source: