Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Borderlands

“Zero percent! You don’t see that very often!” 

That’s Claptrap (Jack Black), the robot in Borderlands, after being asked to calculate the odds of surviving an encounter with some Psychos in the Caustic Caverns beneath Pandora. 

Coincidentally, “zero percent” was Borderlands score on Rotten Tomatoes when I checked it last weekend.

I only get preview screenings on very rare occasions these days. (Is it something I said? Knowing me, it probably was.) I usually don’t read any other critics before I watch a film for review. Like most pros, I have a love-hate relationship with Rotten Tomatoes. On the one hand, a congregator for reviews seems like a good idea. On the other hand, the site has reduced many people’s relationship with cinema culture and film criticism to a single statistical number, derived through means that sound scientific on the surface but are in fact quite dicey. On the third hand, they did invite me to contribute my reviews and remind me when I forget. So at least someone is paying attention to me! 

This week, I was trying to decide between It Ends With Us, based on a romance novel by Colleen Hoover, the bestselling author of the decade, and Borderlands, based on a video game series I was vaguely familiar with. Word on the socials was that Borderlands was an epic stinker, so I glanced at the RT score. Zero percent is, like the robot says, not something you see very often. It’s Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever and Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2 territory. Now, my choice was clear. 

An RT goose egg doesn’t scare me. I saw Highlander II: The Quickening in the theater. Voluntarily. I had to see what was so bad about Borderlands. Maybe director Eli Roth would turn the aesthetic corner and create a film so bad it’s good! As a frequent flyer at Black Lodge Shitfest, I appreciate a good trainwreck. For me, the last so-bad-its-good pic — what the SubGenius community calls badfilm — was Gods of Egypt. It’s got everything: Geoffrey Rush phoning it in as the sun god Ra! Chadwick Boseman solving the riddle of the sphinx! Tiny Courtney Eaton! I can’t look away. 

Gods of Egypt got 14 percent “good” reviews on Rotten Tomatoes. Checking RT as I write this, after opening weekend, Borderlands has soared to 8 percent. The positive notices come mostly from sources that aren’t exactly cinematic tastemakers — like Polygon, who praise anything related to video games.

So how bad is Borderlands? I regret to inform you, it is a very bad film, but not badfilm. Borderlands the game is a first-person shooter released in 2009. Even the original was excessively derivative. Pandora, the planet on which the action takes place, shares a name with the homeworld of Avatar’s Na’vi, but it looks like Mad Max’s post-apocalyptic Australia. More accurately, it looks like Fallout, the classic video game from 1988 whose developers were among the first people to adapt George Miller’s outback junkyard aesthetic. It’s also the second film I’ve seen this year to rip off Miller’s Furiosa, the first being Deadpool & Wolverine. (Seriously, if you haven’t seen it, give Furiosa a chance.) 

The star of the show is Cate Blanchett as Lilith, one of four playable characters from the original Borderlands. Blanchett is cursed with a stiff red hairdo that, for badfilm aficionados, will bring up memories of Frances McDormand’s fright wig in Æon Flux. Lilith is a space bounty hunter who’s “getting too old for this shit.” When she’s offered a very impressive sum by Atlas (Édgar Ramírez) to rescue his daughter Tiny Tina (Ariana Greenblatt) from rogue trooper Roland (Kevin Hart), who has taken her to Pandora, she responds by killing the messenger. Literally. 

After hooking up with Claptrap, the mandatory R2-D2 figure, Lilith finds Tiny Tina, who has befriended another playable character, Krieg (Florian Munteanu). He is a renegade Psycho, the oh-so creatively named legion of canon fodder every first-person shooter needs. After evading Atlas’ goon squad, they end up at, what else, a crazy frontier bar owned by Mad Moxxi (Gina Gershon). There, they meet Dr. Tannis (Jamie Lee Curtis, feathering her 401(k)), an archeologist who knows the way to the Vault, the lost alien treasure repository that is Pandora’s only tourist attraction. (Get it? Pandora’s Box? It wasn’t funny in 2009, either.) 

Borderlands’ vibes feel as mercenary as the characters. Blanchett, who may be physically incapable of giving a bad performance, hits her marks and sneers. Hart and Curtis seem to be devoted to expending as little energy as possible. Ramírez delivers not one but two slow claps. Greenblatt’s screen presence is like nails on a chalkboard. Badfilm legend Gershon, of Cocktail and Showgirls fame, brings the same vacuous energy here. 

Borderlands channels all of the worst tics from the two decades of mediocre blockbuster cinema. It’s got that flat Marvel lighting; characters who appear just to check a box on some Reddit filmbro’s wish list, then disappear without a trace; hyper-violent yet listless action sequences; an off-putting sadistic streak; and the kind of quippy dialogue that would cause Joss Whedon to yell at an entire writer’s room. (Credited writer Joe Crombie is a pseudonym. At least eight other writers reportedly worked on the script, but none of them would put their name on it.) Everything about Borderlands reminded me of, and made me wish I was watching, another, better movie. 

Anyway, I hear It Ends With Us is okay. 

Borderlands
Now playing
Multiple locations

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing in Memphis: Cuckoo for Borderlands

It’s August, traditionally the tail end of the summer blockbuster season. But there’s still plenty of choices for your big screen viewing pleasure.

Cuckoo

Gretchen (Hunter Schafer), an American teenager, moves to the German Alps to live with her divorced Dad (Jan Bluthardt). But things are not all as they seem in the picaresque mountain town. Her father’s wealthy boss Herr Koing (Dan Stevens) has some plans that seem … unnatural. This psychological horror by German director Tilman Singer is giving off heavy Midsomer vibes.  

It Ends With Us

Gossip Girl’s Blake Lively stars in this adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s popular romance novel of the same name. Lily (Lively) has just opened her own floral shop in Boston when she has to return to her Maine hometown to eulogize her abusive father. She finds herself with a choice between an emotionally distant neurosurgeon boyfriend (Justin Baldoni) and an old flame (Brandon Sklenar). 

Borderlands 

The first person shooter hit from 2009 gets a film adaptation. The great Cate Blanchett stars as Lilith, an adventurer who descends to the planet Pandora (no relation to the Avatar homeworld) in search of a rumored vault full of alien treasure. To help her navigate the savage planet, she bring along her robot Claptrap (Jack Black), the mercenary Roland (Kevin Hart), demolitionist Tiny Tina (Ariana Greenblatt) and more familiar characters from the game. 

Lawrence of Arabia

If you loved Dune: Part Two earlier this year, now you can see the inspiration for Denis Villaneuve’s sweeping desert landscapes. David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia is one of the great masterpieces of cinema, and was actually one source of inspiration for Frank Herbert’s original novel. On Sunday Aug. 11 and Monday Aug. 12 at the Paradiso, there’s a special Fathom screening of the film, which starred Peter O’Toole as British intelligence officer T.E. Lawrence who tried to rally Arab resistance against the Ottoman Turks during the First World War. If you’ve wondered why things in the Middle East have been so screwed up for so long, this film will give you a little bit of insight. Lawrence was, depending on who you ask, either the guy whose arrogance started the still-roiling conflicts or the guy who saw the future and tried to head it off. Both points of view are aired in Lean’s immortal epic, and O’Toole’s legendary performance hints that maybe they’re both right. Unlike some films, this is one you’re going to want to watch on the biggest screen available. But don’t take my word for it, ask Steven Spielberg.

Breakin’

Breakdancing is making its debut as an Olympic sport this weekend, so it’s appropriate that Crosstown Arts is screening the first film focused on the dance phenomenon. Breakin’ is about as 1984 as you can get. Helmed by exploitation director Joel Siberg, who tried to recapture the dance magic a few years later with Lambada, it’s got a paper thin plot, but memorable characters and no shortage of great dance moves. Check out this scene, featuring a very young Ice-T.

Breakin’ screens on Thursday, August 15 at Crosstown Theatre.