Opinion ‘Borderlands’ review: Cate Blanchett video game disaster is the worst movie of the year - Have we reached terminal GoySlop?

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‘Borderlands’ review: Cate Blanchett video game disaster is the worst movie of the year​

By
Johnny Oleksinski
Published Aug. 8, 2024, 3:47 p.m. ET

Sometimes when a job doesn’t work out, the former employee will omit that short-lived work experience from her resume.

For Cate Blanchett, that erasable gig is the unspeakably terrible new movie “Borderlands.”

If I was the two-time Oscar winner, I’d hire a crack team to work around the clock to scrub all mention of it from the Internet. The film is that embarrassing.

Unfortunately, for the time being, the star of “Tár” and “Blue Jasmine” is stuck as the lead of the worst movie of the year — a grueling, 102-minute endurance test that’s as lifeless as the video game it’s based on.

And Blanchett is not entirely free from blame either. She reads the lines, such as they are, like a TSA agent at the crack of dawn.

The actress has no palpable connection to her ragtag, barely-alive ensemble, including Jamie Lee Curtis (another Oscar winner), Kevin Hart (an almost Oscar host) and funnyman Jack Black.

Not Blanchett’s fault, but she also dons an ugly bright red wig that might have been inspired by Dairy Queen soft-serve.
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Everything about “Borderlands” is appalling: the acting, writing, direction, design. As the characters trudge through the sand on their hunt for the mysterious Vault, the desperate audience scours the screen for anything to enjoy — or, at the very least, understand. Our search proves fruitless.

A check-cashing Blanchett plays Lilith, a no-nonsense bounty hunter who’s tasked with recovering the lost daughter of Atlas (Edgar Ramírez) on the planet Pandora.

“I’m not a babysitter,” barks Lilith, as off-putting as her movie.

Whereas the Pandora of James Cameron’s “Avatar” took hundreds of millions of dollars to bring to dazzling life, my casual estimate of director Eli Roth’s “Borderlands” budget is about a buck fifty.
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Lilith finds the bunny-eared girl named Tiny Tina (Ariana Greenblatt, who I bet misses her “Barbie” press tour right about now), who says, “Miss Lilith, can you grab my badonkadonk?”

A stupid joke, she’s referring to a toy rabbit.

Tiny Tina, crying-baby-on-an-airplane annoying, could be the key to opening the Vault, which contains a vague weapon … I think.

To unearth the lost sort-of treasure, the pair join with Roland (Hart), Dr. Tannis (Curtis), a scientist, a “psycho” named Krieg (Florian Munteanu) and Claptrap the irksome robot (Black), who’s in a competition with Tiny Tina to cause the most movie ticket refunds.

They drive through the desert shooting people like a middling “Mad Max,” only their basic, color-saturated vehicles are more “Thomas the Tank Engine.”
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Most of the cast is dressed in the cartoon-punk style of Margot Robbie’s Harley Quinn, but occasionally you’ll spot a nonchalant extra wearing a plain T-shirt.

What happens in the middle of the movie? Who’s to say?

There are some routine fight sequences and it is revealed that one of the heroes is a clone. Truth be told, I never could figure out what was going on beyond the MacGuffin of seeking the Vault.

The dialogue is cluttered with migraine-triggering video game jargon, and the movie makes no effort to stand on its own, like “Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves” so ably did last year.

There’s hardly any character development or dramatic peaks and valleys in “Borderlands” to hold the viewer’s interest, even for such a brief runtime. And the action is subpar. All we get is Oscar winners debasing themselves.
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For instance, when the group discovers the actual, physical key to the Vault, Curtis slowly turns her head, eyes wide, mouth agape, in a recognizably Spielbergian manner. But the scene is shot so poorly — without any style — that the actress looks ridiculous.

Some comic relief is provided, though.

When a person was vaporized during the climactic battle, I laughed.
 
Actually:

Gina Gershon is 62. Jamie Lee Curtis is 65. Cate Blanchette is 55.

I actually WANT older representation in media. But, as @CHARizard said, it's the writing and source material that is the main issue, not the actresses themselves.
Honestly I think Cate would've been in the correct age range for Moxie, as its heavily implied in the games that she's in her late '40s at the youngest.
 
It's just bizarre. Borderlands was always kind of niche, it was never a big franchise. The casting is retarded, having actors with a median age of 75 also doesn't help.

Lol even the studio knows it's a piece of shit.
Casting Kevin Hart as Roland was the most blatant miscasting of all, its just that you get blinded by the old for all the females before you notice that Roland is like 2ft shorter than he's supposed to be.
 
It's just bizarre. Borderlands was always kind of niche, it was never a big franchise. The casting is retarded, having actors with a median age of 75 also doesn't help.
the casting choice is the most bizarre part to me. who thought it was a good idea to cast grandmas to play characters in a game loved by millennials and zoomers?

you dont have name recognition draw for the audience who likes the games(what zoomer is going, 'ooh, i want to see the new cate blanchett movie'?) if you wanted the zoomies to you'd cast someone like zendaya or some of the older stranger things kids.

and they certainly dont fit the part, the characters need to be played by younger actors.when i played the game, i never got grandma vibes from lilith.

Honestly I think Cate would've been in the correct age range for Moxie, as its heavily implied in the games that she's in her late '40s at the youngest.
correct age, but incorrect body.
 
This movie probably rules. The writer thought Avatar was great, so you can safely reverse his opinion. If anything, bad reviews are a sign of quality nowadays.
nah, i hate the writer just as you do, but i skimmed through a pirate of the movie and it does look terrible.
 
From what I've seen in the reviews the movie does a number of things that critics hate, but mostly the bit that seems to have offended many of them is the movie treating the premise seriously.

So I'm expecting it's a passable movie that annoys the critics that can't act like it's an ironically enjoyable movie the way they can with Marvel movies that regularly try poking fun at their own premise. Since honestly complaints about stuff like a wig? It's just a silly style choice.
 
We're gonna see a lot more of this as boomer Hollywood stars refuse to admit that they cannot, in fact, live forever.
If we're gonna reference video games for the foreseeable future: boomers are like the gods from Dark Souls. They're going to extreme lengths to maintain a golden age that is no longer the status quo, and everyone else has to suffer the consequences.
 
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