Summary

  • Fall is a gripping movie with intense cinematography and a thrilling premise that keeps audiences on the edge of their seats.
  • While the story is fictional, the tower that Becky and Hunter climb in the film is a real location, adding authenticity to the narrative.
  • The filmmakers found the perfect tower, the KXTV Tower in Walnut Grove, California, to bring the story to life and create a sense of fear and danger for the characters.

Fall tells the story of two young girls who attempt to climb an old TV tower, and while the concept may initially seem far-fetched, the film’s narrative is actually based on a real location that inspired the story. Fall follows Becky and Hunter, two best friends who are attempting to overcome their fears and take control of their own lives by pushing the limits of what they can do. After climbing 2,000 feet to the top of an abandoned TV tower, the women find themselves stuck with no way of contacting the world below them.

Fall made a huge splash on Netflix thanks to its intense cinematography and vertigo-inducing premise, which led to Fall 2 entering development. In Fall, Becky and Hunter are stranded 2000 feet above the ground with limited supplies to keep them alive and no signal to contact their families or call for help. It’s a simple premise, but Fall makes the terrifying prospect incredibly nailbiting to watch. Most aspects of the Fall story were fabricated for narrative value, but the real truth behind this location does raise some fascinating creative possibilities.

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Fall Is Not Based On A True Story

The Vertigo-Inducing Horror Is Realistic, But Not Real

Luckily, Fall is entirely a piece of fiction that isn’t based a specific true story. Even from Fall’s first trailer it was clear that the movie was an exaggerated tale. There’s no known incident that inspired filmmakers Scott Mann and Jonathan Frank to write Fall, but the core themes and ideas of the film are still grounded in reality. They both claim that “the inception of the height idea came about when we were shooting Final Score at a stadium in the UK.” (via Radio Times).

The idea of heights and falling was clearly important throughout the process of writing and directing Fall, toying with one of humanity’s most common and universal fears. Although Fall wasn’t a huge commercial hit, it still gathered many fans thanks to its consistently frightening premise. The writing duo also explained how they were “filming at height, and off camera, we got into this interesting conversation about height and the fear of falling and how that's inside of all of us, really, and how that can be a great device for a movie.

The B67 TV Tower Is Actually Real

Fall Used A Real Location For Its Fictional Story

KXTV TV Tower in California

While there isn't a specific Fall true story, the tower Becky and Hunter climb is real. When searching for the right location for their film, Fall’s team came across the KXTV Tower in Walnut Grove, California. Standing at 2,049 feet tall, the tower is reportedly the seventh-tallest manmade structure ever to have been built (via National World), and it made a perfect substitute for the film’s fictional tower.

The structure really brings Fall to life, and it’s one of many reasons why celebrities, such as Stephen King, have praised Fall’s use of horror. There may never have been any real-life incidents at the location, but Mann still saw it as “the perfect kind of character to be at the center”. The director also shared:

“[We] scoured all around California, and it was during COVID, so we'd just drive and drive and drive to these random remote locations, to try and get access. A lot of them had kind of radio masts and things at the top of these mountains and you're just finding the right kind of top of a mountain with the right cliff and the right sunlight positioning.

While it can’t have been easy to find the right structure to center this story around, the KXTV Tower definitely has the history and the scale to make the audience truly fear for the protagonists’ lives in Fall.

Fall 2022 Movie Poster
Fall
PG-13
Thriller
Director
Scott Mann
Cast
Virginia Gardner , Jeffrey Dean Morgan , Grace Caroline Currey , Mason Gooding
Runtime
107 minutes
Writers
Jonathan Frank , Scott Mann