Alfie Allen interpreted in a new atomic van: Look at his darkest Game of Thrones moments as Theon GreyJoy

Alfie Allen, popular like Theon Greyjoy of Game of Thrones, will soon appear in Atomic, an upcoming web series inspired by the non-fiction book Atomic Bazaar. The website, whose official trailer was launched on Thursday, August 14, is investigating the unlikely friendship between Max (Alfie Allen) and JJ (Shazad Latif), which gets caught up in a cartel’s plot to transport uranium over North Africa. This makes the pair a big decision: save themselves or dare to stop a nuclear bomb in the wrong hands. Alfie Allen’s darkest Game of Thrones moments as Theon Greyjoy earlier in an interview, Alfie Allen revealed that his role as Theon Greyjoy on Game of Thrones had a large amount on his mental health. During the eight seasons of the show, Theon went through a downward spiral as he went from the Starks’ division to tortured series and again to Theon. Alfie told Deadline that this character is still to the point of getting an Emmy nomination, gets him very late in his own head, and “there were dark, dark moments.” “It’s great to have the end of a positive note, because it was hard to open and talk about how difficult it was during the process,” he said. The actor said that he struggled personally with the darkness that his character faced, adding: “There is a lot to say about men’s mental health within Theon’s journey.” “It felt like the walls closed on some points,” he said, adding, “Gwendoline (Christie) and Kit (Harington) were the two people – all a little, but they most – who were always willing to talk to me about things.” Atomic OTT exemption: When and where to look? The first two episodes of Atomic will be launched on Sky Atlantic on Thursday, August 28, and new episodes of the five -part series will be released weekly. Atomic is not available to watch Netflix, Disney+and Prime video. Look at Atomic Trailer here: About Atomic Atomic is inspired by the non-fiction book Atomic Bazaar by Vanity Fair Journalist William Langewiesche. The book is investigating the global threat of the production of nuclear weapons and how the interests of state -sponsored core activity have achieved frightening levels.