It's not the worst videogame movie ever, but it's definitely going to come up in the conversation.
So that's bad, yeah, but just how bad is it? With help from Google and The Numbers' movie comparison feature, I can tell you this: It's really bad.
I present to you...
An Incomplete List of Shitty Videogame Movies That Made More Money Than Borderlands
(in no particular order)
Warcraft ($439 million)
Max Payne ($88 million)
Doom ($59 million)
Street Fighter ($99 million)
Assassin's Creed ($241 million)
Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time ($336 million)
Hitman ($99 million)
Mortal Kombat (but Mortal Kombat is actually good) ($122 million)
Need for Speed ($194 million)
Five Nights at Freddy's ($297 million)
Uncharted ($401 million)
One big-budget, big(ish)-cast Hollywood film Borderlands managed to beat, which I bring up only because I paid good money to see it in theaters and I'm still sore about the whole thing, is Wing Commander, an utterly execrable celluloid waste of time and effort that bumbled to $11.5 million globally. Frankly I'm surprised it did that well.
Calling it now. Next Borderlands game is going to have some referential jokes about this train wreck that are meant to be funny self-deprecation but will actually be transparent attempts as covering up how much Randy Pritchford is malding about this.
I'm honestly surprised we aren't seeing more public meltdown from him. Can only imagine what's happening behind closed doors.
Was he heavily involved in the film's production? I'm not very familiar with how this movie was made, but a lot of the stuff I've heard about it gives me the sense that his style didn't influence it very much (weird casting, lame jokes, etc.)