Where Premium Products and Unbeatable Prices Come Together for You!

Borderlands Still Got to Thrive from Its Bad Movie

It wasn’t that long ago that the Borderlands movie came out in theaters and did uh, Not Great in theaters before coming to VOD three weeks later. Critics and audiences more than tore into it, and Lionsgate wanted to pretend it basically didn’t happen. But it apparently wasn’t that much of a bust, because the games’ publisher Take-Two got to laugh all the way to the bank.

This week, studios in both the games and film industries have been posting their financials for the second quarter of the fiscal year, and both Lionsgate and Take-Two—which acquired Borderlands developer Gearbox in March—discussed the poorly received movie, which made $33 million worldwide and cost $120 million to make over about five years, a director change, and alleged rewrites. Lionsgate was pretty direct in calling the whole thing a complete mess: “Everything that can go wrong did go wrong,” said CEO Jon Feltheimer. “It sat on the shelf for too long during the pandemic, and reshoots and rising interest rates took it outside the safety zone of our usual strict financial models. The success of our financial models doesn’t take the place of also getting the creative right.”

Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick also dunked on it during his company’s earnings call, politely referring to it as “disappointing.” But while it “wasn’t material” to Take-Two’s results, he said the movie got people to buy more Borderlands games, all of which are on current-gen hardware. Game adaptations often lead to renewed interest in the source material and more sales, so Zelnick considers this “a sign that making a movie or a television show based on our very high quality IP can drive catalogue sales, and that can be a good thing.” If it helps put eyes on the series ahead of Borderlands 4 next year, he can’t be too mad about it.

Or maybe he can. The experience of making the Borderlands movie burned Take-Two enough to reaffirm that it should be selective in what it lets get adapted. Its BioShock franchise is theoretically getting a movie in a few years, and Zelnick said the company “has licensed other titles, and we will continue selectively to do so. But [note the] ever so subtle word, ‘selectively.’”

[via Deadline and VGC]

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

Trending Products

0
Add to compare
- 11%
Thermaltake V250 Motherboard Sync ARGB ATX Mid-Tower Chassis with 3 120mm 5V Addressable RGB Fan + 1 Black 120mm Rear Fan Pre-Installed CA-1Q5-00M1WN-00

Thermaltake V250 Motherboard Sync ARGB ATX Mid-Tower Chassis with 3 120mm 5V Addressable RGB Fan + 1 Black 120mm Rear Fan Pre-Installed CA-1Q5-00M1WN-00

Original price was: $89.99.Current price is: $79.99.
0
Add to compare
- 20%
Dell KM3322W Keyboard and Mouse

Dell KM3322W Keyboard and Mouse

Original price was: $24.99.Current price is: $19.99.
0
Add to compare
- 20%
Sceptre Curved 24-inch Gaming Monitor 1080p R1500 98% sRGB HDMI x2 VGA Build-in Speakers, VESA Wall Mount Machine Black (C248W-1920RN Series)

Sceptre Curved 24-inch Gaming Monitor 1080p R1500 98% sRGB HDMI x2 VGA Build-in Speakers, VESA Wall Mount Machine Black (C248W-1920RN Series)

Original price was: $99.97.Current price is: $79.97.
0
Add to compare
- 19%
Lenovo V14 Gen 3 Enterprise Laptop computer, 14″ FHD Show, i7-1255U, 24GB RAM, 1TB SSD, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth, HDMI, RJ-45, Webcam, Home windows 11 Professional, Black

Lenovo V14 Gen 3 Enterprise Laptop computer, 14″ FHD Show, i7-1255U, 24GB RAM, 1TB SSD, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth, HDMI, RJ-45, Webcam, Home windows 11 Professional, Black

Original price was: $739.00.Current price is: $599.00.
.

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

Leave a reply

VeronVentureGroups
Logo
Register New Account
Compare items
  • Total (0)
Compare
0
Shopping cart