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Borderlands (film)

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Borderlands
A group of eccentric people characters pose next to stacks of cases in front of a colorful background.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEli Roth
Screenplay by
  • Eli Roth
  • Joe Crombie
Story byEli Roth
Based onBorderlands
by Gearbox Software
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyRogier Stoffers
Edited by
Music bySteve Jablonsky
Production
companies
Distributed byLionsgate Films (under Summit Entertainment)
Release dates
  • August 6, 2024 (2024-08-06) (TCL Chinese Theatre)
  • August 9, 2024 (2024-08-09) (United States)
Running time
101 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$110–120 million
Box office$33 million[2][3]

Borderlands is a 2024 American science fiction action comedy film co-written and directed by Eli Roth, based on the video game series developed by Gearbox Software. It stars Cate Blanchett as Lillith, an outlaw who forms an alliance with a team of misfits to find the missing daughter of the most powerful man in the universe.[4] The ensemble cast also features Kevin Hart, Jack Black, Edgar Ramirez, Ariana Greenblatt, Florian Munteanu, Gina Gershon, and Jamie Lee Curtis.

The film was announced in August 2015, with Lionsgate Films developing it with Ari and Avi Arad producing, and Leigh Whannell in talks to direct. By February 2020, Erik Feig had joined as a producer and Roth was attached to direct from a screenplay by Craig Mazin. Casting took place from May 2020 to April 2021, with Blanchett cast first and others the following year. Principal photography began in April 2021 in Budapest, Hungary, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and wrapped in June. Two weeks of reshoots took place in early 2023, directed by Tim Miller due to Roth's commitments to Thanksgiving. That June, Mazin removed his name from the project and was replaced by Joe Crombie.

Borderlands premiered at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles on August 6, 2024, and was released in the United States by Lionsgate on August 9. The film received negative reviews from critics and became a box-office bomb, grossing $33 million worldwide against a production budget of $110–120 million.

Plot

[edit]

On the planet of Pandora, Roland, a mercenary soldier apparently gone rogue, kidnaps teenager Tiny Tina with the help of Krieg, a "Psycho" who was institutionalized in the same facility.

Meanwhile, on another planet, bounty hunter Lilith is contacted by Atlas, a powerful corporate magnate. He convinces her to rescue Tina, his daughter. Lilith returns to Pandora, her home planet, for the first time since she was a child. With the help of Claptrap, a robot that was mysteriously programmed to wait for her on Pandora, she locates Tina.

After realizing that Atlas wants his daughter back against her will, Lilith teams up with Roland and Krieg when they are attacked by the Crimson Lance, the private army of Atlas. Lilith is informed that Tina was genetically engineered with biological material from the Eridians, the ancient race that once inhabited Pandora, and that Atlas believes only she can open the Vault where the secrets of the lost civilization's advanced technology are kept.

With the help of Lilith's estranged foster mother, Dr. Patricia Tannis, they locate the key to open the Vault in an underground maze occupied by a tribe of Psychos. They manage to take the key to the surface. Lilith destroys the device Atlas entrusted her with to signal when she had rescued Tina, and he immediately communicates with her via robotic drone, explaining that he still wants the girl. Tina overhears the end of the conversation and assumes Lilith has betrayed her. She throws a grenade at Lilith, leaving her unconscious. When Lilith recovers, Claptrap unknowingly plays a holographic message for her, recorded by her mother.

The next day, without Lilith and Claptrap, the team find the Vault only to realize Atlas is waiting for them, and they fight off his men. However, Tina is unable to open the Vault. Lilith appears and explains that she is the one who can do it, being an Eridian known as the Firehawk. Atlas threatens to kill Tina if Lilith does not open the Vault. She obeys but, with Tina's help, traps Atlas inside, where a creature drags him away. The group celebrates their survival.

Cast

[edit]

Additionally, Penn Jillette was going to have a cameo in the film as a preacher overseeing a wedding, after voicing Pain in the video game Borderlands 3 (2019);[16] however, this scene was not included in the final version of the film.[17] Scenes with Cheyenne Jackson as Wainwright Jakobs and Charles Babalola as Alistair Hammerlock were also cut.[18]

Production

[edit]
Writer and director Eli Roth (left). Tim Miller (right) took over directing duties during reshoots.

In 2011, Gearbox Software CEO Randy Pitchford had his first conversation about a possible film adaptation of Borderlands with producers Avi and Ari Arad of Arad Productions.[19] Pitchford was convinced that a film adaption would work after the release of Tales from the Borderlands.[20] He later planned on starting a Borderlands cinematic universe.[21] In May 2015, Leigh Whannell was in talks with Lionsgate to write and direct an adaptation of the video game series.[22] The film was officially announced in August 2015; however, Whannell's involvement was left omitted.[23]

Eli Roth stated that his French bulldog pooping gave him inspiration while pitching the film. "I have to look away because she gets really shy. But one day I filmed her. She had that shy look on her face and I was like, 'That's Claptrap.'" A scene of Claptrap pooping was included in the final film.[24]

Aaron Berg was tapped to pen an R-rated take on the material in April 2016.[25] By June 2018, Oren Uziel assumed scripting duties from Berg.[26][27] On February 20, 2020, Lionsgate announced that Roth was attached to direct the film from a screenplay written by Craig Mazin, with Erik Feig joining as producer through his production company Picturestart.[28][29] By April 2021, Mazin's script had been rewritten by Juel Taylor and Tony Rettenmaier; and again by Roth.[30] A plot synopsis was released in April.[31]

Cate Blanchett was cast as Lilith in May 2020.[5][32] Speaking of her decision to join the project, Blanchett said: "The gun-slinging stuff was so much fun. I got really absorbed in that whole world. I think there also may have been a little Covid madness—I was spending a lot of time in the garden, using the chainsaw a little too freely. My husband said, 'This film could save your life'."[33] Kevin Hart trained with United States Navy SEALs prior to auditioning for the role of Roland.[34] The rest of the ensemble cast was announced between January and April 2021.[6][11] Roth stated that he wanted to include cosplayers in the film as extras and kill them off.[35]

Filming began on April 1, 2021, in Budapest, Hungary, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and wrapped on June 22.[36][37][38] On June 4, 2021, first-look images of the cast were released, with black-and-white images obscuring all but the cast's silhouettes.[39] In January 2023, it was announced the film would be going through two weeks of reshoots directed by Tim Miller, due to Roth's commitments to Thanksgiving.[40] Zak Olkewicz wrote new pages for Miller.[41] In June 2023, Mazin removed his name from the project, replaced by Joe Crombie; Mazin has denied reports that Crombie was his pseudonym.[42] Additional literary material was credited to Berg, Uziel, Taylor, Rettenmaier, Olkewicz, Chris Bremner, and Sam Levinson.[43] Steve Jablonsky composed the film's score after replacing Nathan Barr.[44][45]

Jimmy O'Dee, the stunt coordinator for the film, stated that scenes depicting heads being blown up and feet being cut off were cut to maintain a PG-13 rating.[46]

Release

[edit]

Theatrical

[edit]

Borderlands was initially planned to be released in 2022.[47][48] It premiered at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles on August 6, 2024.[49] It was theatrically released in the United States by Lionsgate Films on August 9, 2024.[50] The film cost $110–120 million to produce, and Lionsgate spent $30 million on print and advertising. International presales reportedly covered 60% of production costs.[51] Sales of Borderlands 3 on Steam rose after the film's release and the concurrent player amount doubled from around 6,000 to a peak of 12,231.[52]

Home media

[edit]

On August 18, 2024, Lionsgate Home Entertainment announced that Borderlands would be released on Digital HD and platforms on August 30, 2024.[53]

Reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

As of October 3, 2024, Borderlands has grossed $15.5 million in the United States and Canada, and $17.5 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $33 million.[2][3] Following its opening weekend, Deadline Hollywood reported the film would likely lose the studio $20–30 million.[54]

In the United States and Canada, Borderlands was released alongside It Ends with Us and Cuckoo, and was projected to gross $8–16 million from 3,125 theaters in its opening weekend.[51][55][56] The film made $4 million on its first day, including an estimated $1.32 million from Thursday previews.[54] It ended up debuting with $8.6 million, finishing in fourth.[57] It made $2.4 million in its second weekend.[58]

Strauss Zelnick, CEO of Take Two Interactive and the parent company of Gearbox, said in November 2024, "Even though the film was disappointing, it actually benefited our catalogue sales" in terms of the video game series, but also stated they will remain selective about future video game film adaptions.[59]

Critical response

[edit]

Borderlands received negative reviews.[60][61][62] On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 10% of 162 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 3.3/10. The website's consensus reads: "Glitching out in every department, Borderlands is balderdash."[63] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 26 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[64] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "D+" on an A+ to F scale, while those surveyed by PostTrak gave it a 46% positive score, with 31% saying they would definitely recommend it.[54]

The Guardian called the film "janky" and a "juvenile and derivative adaptation"[65] while Variety found it was a "generic gaming adaptation that deprives audiences of the most valuable ingredient of its source: surprise."[66] The Independent said it was a "total disaster"[67] while Rolling Stone wondered if Borderlands was the worst video game movie ever.[68] The Evening Standard suggested it was the worst film of the year.[69] PC Gamer compared Borderlands to numerous other video game movie adaptations: "You might have heard the claim that this is a righting of the scale, … [to] remind us that good adaptations are the exception, not the rule. We needed a new Super Mario Bros. (1993). We didn't get one. Borderlands cannot hold a candle to Super Mario Bros. It is not interestingly bad. ... It has no cheesy, thwarted ambition to redeem it. It never becomes more than a waste of a hundred minutes."[70]

Blanchett's performance was praised by Tim Grierson, of Screen Daily, who contrasted it with the rest of the ensemble cast: "Not many in the starry ensemble shine. Vivid character actors like Gina Gershon and Jamie Lee Curtis ... are trapped in stale genre types. Even the potentially intriguing change-of-pace performances—such as Hart in a far more sombre turn than we expect from the explosive comedian—flatline."[71] Among the more positive reviews, MovieWeb wrote, "Roth displays his cinematic prowess with solid combat scenes. Munteanu's Krieg is a beast and a half, twisting baddies into human pretzels with unabashed glee. The violence is brutal but not graphically disturbing ... It's stunning to see a Roth film without even a hint of blood. The producers made a business calculation to avoid the R-rating and allow children who also enjoy the games to see the film. Die-hard Roth fans expecting his trademark gruesome torture should sit this one out."[72]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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