Showing posts with label Samara Weaving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Samara Weaving. Show all posts

Borderline (2025) Review: A Dark Comedy That Forgets to Be Funny

Borderline 

Directed by: Jimmy Warden

Written by: Jimmy Warden

Starring: Ray Nicholson, Samara Weaving, Eric Dane

Release Date: March 14, 2025

Rating: ★★☆☆☆ (2/5)


Borderline (2025), starring Samara Weaving, Ray Nicholson, and Eric Dane, is marketed as a dark comedy but delivers a confused, tensionless thriller with no real laughs and a flat narrative.




Jimmy Warden’s Borderline wants desperately to be a stylish, dark comedy, but what unfolds is a disjointed mix of limp suspense and failed humor. Despite a cast packed with talent—Samara Weaving, Ray Nicholson, and Eric Dane—the movie feels lazy, incoherent, and tonally confused.

A Stalker Comedy Without Comedy

Eric Dane plays Bell, a hapless bodyguard assigned to protect Sofia (Weaving), a famous pop star. Bell’s incompetence is on full display in the opening sequence, where he confronts Duerson (Nicholson), a deeply disturbed fan who has been stalking Sofia long enough that Bell and Duerson are almost friendly. Rather than calling the police when Duerson shows up at Sofia’s door late at night, Bell tries to parent him out of the situation.

Things spiral quickly. Duerson stabs Bell and enters Sofia’s mansion, gleefully playing around as wacky music attempts (and fails) to signal humor. While Bell bleeds out on the porch, Duerson calls 911 on himself—an event we’re told about rather than shown. Six months later, Bell returns to work, scarred and shaken, but Sofia’s excitement over his return doesn’t last. Duerson, now escaped from a mental facility with his eccentric accomplice Penny (Alba Baptista), is plotting to kidnap and marry Sofia, whether she likes it or not.

A Hero Without Heroics

Rather than growing into a redemption arc, Bell continues to make foolish decisions that derail the story. He’s tricked into leaving Sofia unprotected, kidnapped alongside his sister and daughter, and survives only through dumb luck rather than skill. Dane plays Bell with a baffling lack of emotion, making the character feel like an afterthought in his own story.

Nicholson, meanwhile, tries to inject humor into Duerson, portraying him as an offbeat, unpredictable stalker. Unfortunately, the script and direction don’t give him the support he needs, and his comedic energy clashes with the flat, grounded tone of the rest of the film.

Flat Direction, Wasted Talent

Borderline feels like it’s aiming for an absurd, heightened world where danger and humor coexist. Instead, Warden’s direction plays everything straight, draining scenes of tension and atmosphere. The editing feels arbitrary, the score is forgettable, and the supposed comedic beats land with a thud.

Even Samara Weaving, usually a vibrant and captivating presence (Ready or Not, Azrael), looks confused here. One scene has her reluctantly singing a Celine Dion duet with Penny, the unhinged French accomplice. The moment briefly sparks to life before the film retreats to its dull kidnapping plot.

A Lazy 90s Setting

Adding to the confusion is the film’s late-90s setting, which serves no real purpose other than to avoid explaining why no one can call the police. Instead of feeling like a stylish period piece, it feels like a shortcut to sidestep narrative logic. That laziness extends to nearly every aspect of the film, from its limp visual style to its underdeveloped characters.

Final Thoughts

Borderline has all the ingredients of a cult dark comedy—a talented cast, a deranged stalker premise, and a director with genre experience (Warden co-wrote Cocaine Bear). But the execution is so flat and lifeless that the movie never finds its tone. It’s neither suspenseful enough to work as a thriller nor funny enough to justify its absurdity. What’s left is a frustrating, forgettable misfire.

Movie Review Chevalier

Chevalier (2023) 

Directed by Stephen Williams 

Written by Stefani Robinson 

Starring Kelvin Harrison Jr., Samara Weaving, Lucy Boynton, Martin Csokas 

Release Date April 21st, 2023 

Published June 13th, 2023 

To talk about why Chevalier doesn't work, I need to talk about the ending. Now, since this movie is based on the true story of Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, his French title, I don't think this is a spoiler alert situation. Besides that, the fate of the main character is not part of the ending of the movie, that's handled with some clumsy text that ties up the life of the Chevalier de Saint-Georges in a tidy bow and explains why he went unrecognized and little known for so many years. Thus, I don't consider this a spoiler. But, if you disagree, you have now been warned. 

The ending of Chevalier, starring Kelvin Harrison Jr. as Joseph Bologne, famed composer and former friend and confidante of Queen Marie Antoinette, is set at a concert performance. Bologne is set to perform a piece that has a title intended to support the French Revolution, the bloody battle that will bring down Joseph's former friend, Marie Antoinette, played by Lucy Boynton. After being warned by the Queen that she will destroy him, take away his title, and ruin him professionally, Bologne wastes no time being conflicted, he immediately takes the stage and begins to perform this fiery piece of music. 

The Queen responds with unsurprising disdain, she sends her top General, a bullying Aristocrat named Montalamare (Martin Csokas) into to the concert to arrest and or execute the Chevalier. The crowd intervenes to save their favorite composer who briefly stops the show to confront the General. Then, Bologne waves his hand, indicating for his symphony to continue playing. But, after doing this, the Chevalier leaves. Walking out of the concert, the Chevalier passes by the fleeing Queen with a defiant glare and then, in slow motion, he walks off and text takes care of the rest of his life. 

That slow motion walk is a very silly moment. Contextually, Bologne has just started his concert. He has a large and excited crowd that came to see him perform. Yes, he is almost murdered by the General, I'm sure that was hard for him, and reason enough to leave and end the show. But, he appears to be unfazed by this near-death experience. He's perfectly calm and cool as he walks out of his just begun concert performance. The Chevalier then smirks his way past the fleeing Marie Antoinette, and segues into a slow motion walk to the camera. 



But, question, where the hell is he supposed to be going? The concert just started. Where is he going? I imagine that the filmmakers were thinking 'and then he walks into history' or some such nonsense. The self-congratulatory tone of this sequence comes off as very, very silly. The character just seems like an oddball who will have to sheepishly walk his way back to the theater to finish the concert, perhaps. Or, he's just going home to, I don't know, take a nap? He's going to a bar to get drunk while others finish his concert or spill into the street to yell obscenities at the Queen. 

Regardless of wherever this film version of Bologne's life is headed, the movie has rendered him as a joke. By trying so desperately to craft an 'iconic' ending, they've managed to make their star and his character seem very silly. It appears that they had no idea how to end the movie and just thought a Baywatch slow-mo to camera walk was the only way to get out of having to portray the actual French Revolution, which Bologne fought in against the crown and ended up leading the first all black battalion of the French Army. 

We only know that because star Kelvin Harrison Jr. is forced to stand in front of the camera in freeze frame as onscreen text informs us of why the Chevalier fell into obscurity. Don't get me wrong, I appreciate the Cliff's Notes, I was glad the movie was over, but it doesn't make the silliness of the ending of this otherwise tepid and forgettable biopic any easier to take. I will also grant that a slow-mo walk to camera is an entertaining choice, if not a good one. It marked the first time in the nearly 2 hours of Chevalier that I had an emotional reaction to the film, if not the emotion the movie was seeking. Derisive snorting laughter was, I'm assuming, not the filmmakers intent. 



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