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.
 
jesus, you weren't kidding. we really have reached the point where literally no attractive women are allowed to be in new media
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Gena was beautiful in the 80/90s but the wall had it's way, not to mention she's 100% not right for Moxxie.
Edit to add; if we're picking old broads for these parts anyway Elvira would play the fuck out of her.
 
Literally Hollywood is retarded

It's a fun game with compelling characters and a license to go nuts, hire some new faces that suit the characters, hire Kevin smith to direct it, use the rest of the budget for good cgi in things like throwing guns that explode for them to reload in your hand, excessive gore etc
Vaguely string a plot together

Literally how did they get this so wrong, this isn't supposed to be marvel, it's clerks in space with lots of guns and the gore dialled up to 200

If you MUST have a name, hire Sydney sweeney as moxxi, goth her up and push those badoinkadoinks up till they go to work on the coomer dollar, even if you have to dub her lines

Literally moxxi is there to be tiddies with a tinge of sarcasm
 
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Wasted potential. This could have been mad max in space, or national treasure in space, or loads of other stuff. The costumes look on point and the casting isn't bad. Vidya game movies generally have terrible casting, so this aint bad.

It's a shame it was killed in the writing room and the corpse pissed on by the director.
 
Who expected this to succeed. To make a working video game movie, it needs to stand on its own as a movie first. Otherwise, its gonna suck! And that is the clear case here.
Why make a movie based on a video game? The point of the video game is interacting with it. All you're doing with a movie is WATCHING.
 
The point of the video game is interacting with it. All you're doing with a movie is WATCHING.
some games are cutscene heavy or have enough going for it to be a passable film. i would 100% be willing to watch a movie based on the Mafia series if they get a Scarface or Godfather treatment or heck a throwaway summer blockbuster movie based on Perfect Dark that takes itself just seriously enough to keep it together but still able to play off the jokes.
 
some games are cutscene heavy or have enough going for it to be a passable film. i would 100% be willing to watch a movie based on the Mafia series if they get a Scarface or Godfather treatment or heck a throwaway summer blockbuster movie based on Perfect Dark that takes itself just seriously enough to keep it together but still able to play off the jokes.
The fun of Borderlands comes with the loot. You cannot get that from a movie. Actually, let me backtrack, Tales from the Borderlands was well recieved.
 
The fun of Borderlands comes with the loot. You cannot get that from a movie. Actually, let me backtrack, Tales from the Borderlands was well recieved.
some games and genres just don't translate well to passive entertainment like movies, for sure. or would require a lot of work to fit the format.
 
Now we can agree on something. Sounds like people have an issue with older women playing a role from a video game.
No problem with my fellow olds playing parts but the casting has to be right. I'll take Sofia Vergara in a The Nanny reboot.. What am I saying, I'd take Fran in that reboot.. What am I saying, I'd take Fran.
 
God, please let this send movies based on video games back to cultural irrelevance where investors are hard to find for good. I don't care if Sonic/Mario/some other horseshit were good, the fact that they made money has allowed for so many more horrors like the Halo show. Hollywood writers should not be given any kind of quarter to be lazy fucks, we've been stuck with endless reboots, adaptations, or just gay/racialized bullshit for far too long. I want these hacks to actually be forced to write something original, so they can swiftly get the axe because it turns out they actually suck.
 
Why make a movie based on a video game? The point of the video game is interacting with it. All you're doing with a movie is WATCHING.
MGS 3 pokes fun of that decades ago. "Someday they might make movies where you can control the characters themselves."

Also, quick cash-in. Just like games based off of movies in general.
 
Everything about “Borderlands” is appalling: the acting, writing, direction, design. As the characters trudge through the sand on their hunt for the mysterious Vault,
When I tried the first borderlands it felt like playing a fallout 3 wannabe mixed with Diablo loot shit that was shittier in every way compared to both those games so that description sounds about right.
 
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