Current:Home > NewsCate Blanchett talks new movie 'Borderlands': 'It's not Citizen Kane!' -Wealth Evolution Experts
Cate Blanchett talks new movie 'Borderlands': 'It's not Citizen Kane!'
View
Date:2025-04-17 19:05:33
NEW YORK – Cate Blanchett had no intention of spending lockdown with a PlayStation 5.
“It was COVID, and I was doing everything to keep my kids away from playing video games, like, ‘Let’s get outdoors!’ ” recalls the actress, who shares four children with her playwright husband Andrew Upton.
But then, director Eli Roth reached out about a new movie called “Borderlands” (in theaters Friday), a kooky space adventure based on the popular video game series. He wanted her to play Lilith, a hard-boiled bounty hunter tasked with retrieving an arms dealer’s missing daughter (Ariana Greenblatt) with the help of a misfit team of treasure seekers (played by Kevin Hart, Jack Black and Florian Munteanu).
Blanchett, 55, found the game “quite addictive,” and was drawn to its predominantly female characters and fan base. “I thought, ‘This could be really interesting,’ ” she says. “In the game, there was always a nod and a wink; a deliberate B-grade mash-up of chunky sci-fi and spaghetti Western.”
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Plus, it gave her an opportunity to work with Jamie Lee Curtis and Gina Gershon, playing Lilith’s longtime pals. “Jamie’s just exceptional. And when Gina walked on set, it was like va-va-voom, as it always is with her,” Blanchett recalls with a grin. “I mean, it’s not ‘The Grapes of Wrath.’ It’s not ‘Blade Runner.’ It’s its own strange, weird thing, and when you look at the casting, there’s a motley quality to it.
"We’re a very motley crew, in life and in art. (Laughs.) I don’t think anyone would call ‘Borderlands’ art, but it’s fun.”
Cate Blanchett slipped into 'Tár' character on 'Borderlands' movie set
“Borderlands” shot in Budapest in spring 2021, just before Blanchett traveled to Berlin to film “Tár” that summer. In the Oscar-nominated film, she portrayed the fearsome (fictional) composer Lydia Tár. Between takes of “Borderlands,” she’d practice conducting while dressed in Lilith’s flame-haired, pistol-packing getup.
Flipping between characters “was a joy,” Blanchett recalls. “During the weekend, I’d immerse myself in Mahler, go through the music, and have piano lessons. And then I’d go back to my day job, which was running, punching, kicking, jumping – it was quite schizophrenic! But it was liberating. They were energetically and intentionally so different.”
Roth remembers the whiplash: "It was wild to see her switch from wielding a flamethrower to wielding a conductor stick," he says. "But there’s a reason she’s Cate Blanchett – she can do it all."
For a small awards movie, “Tár” has had a unique pop-culture footprint since its release in 2022. Despite being a nearly three-hour drama about cancel culture and the creative process, the film continues to spawn countless online jokes and merchandise two years later. Many of the movie’s fans talk about the disgraced Lydia as if she’s a real person.
“The memes!” Blanchett says with a smile. “It’s so interesting. Who would’ve thought? I mean, I knew it was really special the minute I finished it.”
Cate Blanchett gravitates toward 'crazy, out-of-the-box' career choices
Throughout her three-decade career, the Aussie icon has constantly eschewed expectations. She has eight Oscar nominations and two wins, for her roles in “The Aviator” and “Blue Jasmine.” But she’s always taken big swings, too, playing Bob Dylan (“I’m Not There”), an elven queen (“The Lord of the Rings”), a Marvel villain (“Thor: Ragnarok”) and a wordless monkey (“Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio”). It’s why “Borderlands” shouldn’t come as a shock.
“I like those crazy, random, out-of-the-box asks,” Blanchett says, sitting by an office window in a slouchy black suit paired with “Brat” green Diadora sneakers. “They’re always the ones I find the most exciting and terrifying. It wasn’t like I said to myself, ‘Hey, let’s go find a character from a video game.’ ”
The actress likes to keep audiences guessing, with an eclectic upcoming slate that includes Alfonso Cuarón’s Apple TV miniseries “Disclaimer" (premiering Oct. 11). She'll next star in films from Guy Maddin (“Rumours”) and Steven Soderbergh (“Black Bag”), and there’s “a great lot of chicks” she’d still like to work with: Carrie Coon, Lily Gladstone and Sandra Hüller, among them.
Blanchett is flattered by fans’ continued love for the 2015 lesbian romance “Carol,” which has become an unlikely Christmas staple among many cinephiles. (“ ’Carol’ and ‘Elf,’ ” Blanchett jokes.)
And she’s delighted that young people are discovering 1999’s Euro thriller “The Talented Mr. Ripley,” after the success of last year’s “Saltburn.”
“ ’Ripley’ just wouldn’t be made now, even if the great Anthony Minghella were here,” she suggests. To get that sort of financing for an R-rated drama is almost unheard of these days: “He’d have to fight so hard to actually shoot in those locations.”
She’s always surprised when fans ask about 2007’s “Notes on a Scandal,” a juicy, scholastic potboiler co-starring Judi Dench as an obsessed colleague.
“I don’t think I realized how many people have seen it,” Blanchett says. “What’s really rewarding is when someone comes up to you, and they didn’t see your film in the cinema the first time around. But they have a screen at home that’s not in sports mode, and they bothered to watch something you made 10 or 15 years ago. It means that had a longer shelf life.
“People say, ‘Oh, that was a flop’ or ‘that was a hit.’ But sometimes the films we hold up as the greatest of all time were not financial or audience successes, yet they’ve become classics,” she says, pausing and laughing as she brings it back to the movie she's promoting.
“I’m not saying ‘Borderlands’ is a classic! It’s fun, fun, fun, but it’s not ‘Citizen Kane!’ ”
veryGood! (85)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Why this week’s mass exodus from embattled Nagorno-Karabakh reflects decades of animosity
- NBA hires former Obama counsel, Google exec Albert Sanders Jr. to head ref operations
- Menendez will address Senate colleagues about his bribery charges as calls for his resignation grow
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Sri Lankan cricketer found not guilty of rape charges in Australian court case
- Indiana state comptroller Tera Klutz will resign in November after nearly 7 years in state post
- Jesus Ayala, teen accused in Las Vegas cyclist hit-and-run, boasts he'll be 'out in 30 days'
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- With Damian Lillard trade, Bucks show Giannis Antetokounmpo NBA championship commitment
Ranking
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Bruce Springsteen postpones all 2023 concerts to treat peptic ulcer disease
- For Sanibel, the Recovery from Hurricane Ian Will Be Years in the Making
- NASCAR to return $1 million All-Star race to North Wilkesboro again in 2024
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Groups of masked teenagers loot Philadelphia stores, over 50 arrested: Police
- Cleanup of Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate after climate protest to be longer and more expensive
- M.S. Swaminathan, who helped India’s farming to grow at industrial scale, dies at 98
Recommendation
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
Police: Ghost guns and 3D printers for making them found at New York City day care
After Inter Miami loses US Open Cup, coach insists Messi will play again this season
Chiefs linebacker Willie Gay takes subtle shot at Jets quarterback Zach Wilson
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Phillies deny emotional support alligator from entering ballpark
Gilgo Beach suspect not a 'monster,' maintains his innocence: Attorney
New York AG plans to call Trump and his adult sons as witnesses in upcoming trial