Close Menu
  • Support Us
  • Newsletter
  • News
  • Features
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Video Games
      • Previews
      • PC
      • PS5
      • Xbox Series X/S
      • Nintendo Switch
      • Xbox One
      • PS4
      • Tabletop
    • Film
    • TV
    • Anime
    • Comics
      • BOOM! Studios
      • Dark Horse Comics
      • DC Comics
      • IDW Publishing
      • Image Comics
      • Indie Comics
      • Marvel Comics
      • Oni-Lion Forge
      • Valiant Comics
      • Vault Comics
  • Podcast
  • More
    • Event Coverage
    • BWT Recommends
    • RSS Feeds
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Support Us
But Why Tho?
RSS Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
Trending:
  • Features
    The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart

    The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

    05/11/2025
    Mafia: The Old Country promotional still

    Everything We Know About ‘Mafia: The Old Country’

    05/08/2025
    Sunderfolk Phone Players

    10 ‘Sunderfolk’ Tips To Help You And Your Party Thrive

    05/02/2025
    Bob in Thunderbolts But Why Tho

    ‘Thunderbolts*’ Visualizes Depression As Only A Superhero Movie Can

    05/02/2025
    Games to Play After Expedition 33

    5 Games to Play After Beating ‘Clair Obscur: Expedition 33’

    05/01/2025
  • Star Wars
  • K-Dramas
  • Netflix
  • Blood of Zeus
  • MCU
But Why Tho?
Home » Film » REVIEW: ‘Borderlands’ Makes You Loathe the Video Game That Spawned It

REVIEW: ‘Borderlands’ Makes You Loathe the Video Game That Spawned It

Prabhjot BainsBy Prabhjot Bains08/08/20244 Mins ReadUpdated:08/08/2024
Borderlands 2024 But Why Tho 1
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

Eli Roth’s Borderlands is a throwback in all the worst ways. On the heels of projects like The Last of Us and Fallout, the hit-or-mostly-miss director catapults us back to the mid-to-late 2000s, an era where video game adaptations like Doom and Alone in The Dark sorely misunderstood what made their source materials so rich and deserving of Hollywood treatment. Yet, Roths’s approach to Borderlands takes it a step further than the likes of Uwe Boll, with each of its one hundred excruciating minutes forcing gamers and non-gamers alike to be actively disinterested in the video game it hails from.

With its glowing, synthetic colour palette and cast of oddballs and outlaws, Borderlands desperately wants audiences to believe it has a personality. But none of it rises above a thin coat of paint. One that’s easily scratched off to reveal a cast of characters duller than the weightless explosions and chases they take part in. From urine-spraying monsters to secret superpowers, Roth smears everything across the screen to elicit a response that never comes. In the process, he also crushes any inkling of originality his adaptation might have had.

Get BWT in your inbox!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and get the latest and greated in entertainment coverage.
Click Here

Get BWT in your inbox!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and get the latest and greated in entertainment coverage.
Click Here

Borderlands follows Lillith (Cate Blanchett), a bounty hunter who’s tasked with finding teenager Tina (Ariana Greenblatt), the daughter of the universe’s most powerful man, Atlas (Edgar Ramírez). As part of the gig, Lilith is forced to return to her home planet of Pandora, a barren wasteland full of crazies and mercenaries looking for an ancient alien vault. She soon forms an unexpected alliance with Roland (Kevin Hart), a former soldier for Atlas, the obsessed Dr. Tannis (Jamie Lee Curtis), the monosyllabic Krieg (Florian Munteanu), the wisecracking robot Claptrap (Jack Black), and the explosive Tina herself, whose alien bloodline is key to unlocking the coveted vault.

The screenplay, co-penned by Roth and Joe Crombie, takes a page out of every team-centric adventure film but thoroughly lacks the type of varied and eclectic identities they’re built upon. Roth gives us caricatures in place of characters, overdone archetypes that remain so fixed in time they undergo zero change by the time the credits mercifully roll—unless it’s a forced on them during an undercooked, third-act epiphany.

From a shoehorned chosen one, to a boring hulking brute, to a grating comic presence, Roth runs the gamut of stock characters, giving us a group of heroes that feel just as interesting and developed as the nameless henchmen they gun down.  Borderlands attempts to ape contemporaries like The Guardians of the Galaxy but wholly lacks the human touch to render it the least bit relatable or engaging.

Borderlands (2024)

As a result, Roth unintentionally becomes the rare filmmaker to accurately reflect the video game experience on the silver screen, by capturing what it feels like to select the bland, default model on the character creation screen. It’s an effect heightened by the sheer lack of chemistry between its ensemble, who, instead of playing off each other, glibly react to one another’s mannerisms.

It’s why much of Borderlands feels like glorified cosplay, where capable performers like Blanchett and Curtis, merely take position and feign emotion to get a nice group picture. Hart especially feels unattuned to the needs of an action star, labouring to separate himself from the countless icons from which his performance is shoddily carved.

Borderlands also struggles to function as a serviceable action experience. Gunshots lack impact, and explosions pack the devastation of a heavy punch. Many of Roth’s set pieces resolve themselves, often as an inconsequential sacrifice or a head-scratching pivot into superhero territory. Borderlands is full of never set up or even paid-off moments, indicative of an experience that can’t wait to get it over with.

Some sequences do threaten to engage but are quickly undone by comedy that aspires for the lowest-hanging fruit. Borderlands takes all of three minutes to make a joke about Hart’s short stature and doesn’t evolve past overused quips like “Take it easy on the merchandise.”  Borderlands humour is eye-rolling at its best and irritating at its worst, primed to dumbfound audiences with how out-of-touch and dated each gag feels.

Borderlands constantly traps audiences between apathy and agony, either wearing us down with its lifeless, tropey cast of characters or frustrating us with its potential greatness. There exists an alternate version of Borderlands, that puts its promising sci-fi sandbox to use with far more original characters. But it’s unfortunate that the story Roth chooses to tell, results in an all-new low for the video game adaptation. At least Uwe Boll’s films gave us something to snicker at, Borderlands makes us loathe the video game that spawned it.

Borderlands Releases in Theatres on August 9, 2024.

Borderlands (2024)
  • 2/10
    Rating - 2/10
2/10

TL;DR

Borderlands constantly traps audiences between apathy and agony, either wearing us down with its lifeless, tropey cast of characters or frustrating us with its potential greatness.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
Previous ArticleREVIEW: ‘The Influencer’ Struggles From The Jump
Next Article Skybound Games and 11 bit studios To Release Frostpunk 2 PC Special Edition
Prabhjot Bains
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram

Prabhjot Bains is a Toronto-based film writer and critic who has structured his love of the medium around three indisputable truths- the 1970s were the best decade for American cinema, Tom Cruise is the greatest sprinter of all time, and you better not talk about fight club. His first and only love is cinema and he will jump at the chance to argue why his movie opinion is much better than yours. His film interests are diverse, as his love of Hollywood is only matched by his affinity for international cinema. You can reach Prabhjot on Instagram and Twitter @prabhjotbains96. Prabhjot's work can also be found at Exclaim! Tilt Magazine and The Hollywood Handle.

Related Posts

Josh Hartnett in Fight or Flight movie promotional still
9.5

REVIEW: ‘Fight or Flight’ Is The Single-Location Actioner You Need

05/06/2025
Jeanne Goursaud as Sarah in Netflix Original Film The Exterritorial
7.0

REVIEW: ‘Exterritorial’ Is A Netflix Action Movie Worth Watching

05/03/2025
Seohyun, Ma Dong-seok, and David Lee in Holy Night Demon Hunters
6.0

REVIEW: ‘Holy Night Demon Hunters’ Holds Nothing Back

05/02/2025
Oscar in The Rose of Versailles (2025)
3.5

REVIEW: ‘The Rose of Versailles’ Fails To Harness Its Potential

05/01/2025
The cast of the Thunderbolts
5.5

REVIEW: ‘Thunderbolts*’ Fosters A Half-Hearted Identity

04/29/2025
Spreadsheet Champions
8.0

HOT DOCS 2025: ‘Spreadsheet Champions’ Excels In Heart

04/28/2025
TRENDING POSTS
The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough keyart Features

The First Descendant Season 3 Looks Like A Gamechanger

By Kate Sánchez05/11/2025

At PAX East 2025, NEXON previewed the groundbreaking mega-update for The First Descendant Season 3: Breakthrough.

Razer Joro product image
9.0
Product Review

PRODUCT REVIEW: The Portable Razer Joro Is A Travel Gamechanger

By Kate Sánchez05/08/2025Updated:05/08/2025

Reliable and uncompromising in its gaming features on the go, the portable Razer Joro is a travel gamechanger.

The Devil's Plan Season 2 key art
4.5
TV

REVIEW: ‘The Devil’s Plan’ Season 2 Is Off To A Rough Start

By Charles Hartford05/07/2025Updated:05/07/2025

The Devil’s Plan Season 2 challenges its contestants to outsmart and outmaneuver each other. Unfortunately, it does so in pace grinding ways

Together (2025) still from Sundance
8.0
Film

REVIEW: Have a Grossly Good Time ‘Together’

By Kate Sánchez01/27/2025Updated:05/05/2025

Dave Franco and Alison Brie’s Together (2025) is disgustingly funny, genuinely ugly, and just a good time at the movies.

But Why Tho?
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest RSS YouTube Twitch
  • CONTACT US
  • ABOUT US
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Review Score Guide
Sometimes we include links to online retail stores. If you click on one and make a purchase we may receive a small contribution.
Written Content is Copyright © 2025 But Why Tho? A Geek Community

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

But Why Tho Logo

Support Us!

We're able to keep making content thanks to readers like YOU!
Support independent media today with
Click Here