Box office ,
Predator: Badlands has grossed $91.1 million in the United States and Canada, and $93.5 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $184.6 million. The film made $15.6 million on its first day (including $4.8 million from Wednesday and Thursday box office previews), rising estimates to $36–38 million, a record for the
Predator franchise. It would end up debuting to $40 million at the domestic box office in its opening weekend, overtaking the previous franchise record held by
Alien vs. Predator, which made $38 million in 2004. The film collected an additional $40 million from international markets, for a worldwide total debut of $80 million. Liz Shannon Miller of
Consequence gave the film an "A-," stating that "
Badlands flips the approach and finds something fresh and wonderful and bold as a result — as if
James Cameron had made
Terminator 2 entirely from the
T-800's point of view." Tim Robey of the
Daily Telegraph gave the film 4 out of 5 stars, praising
Badlands' ability to "humanise a film in which not a single human features." Not all reviews were positive however, with
Hindustan Times reviewer Abhimanyu Mathur referring to the movie as a "bland"
spin-off that "nobody asked for." Whilst supportive of the choice to focus on the runt of a litter, Mathur described Dek as a "whiny teenager," rather than as an "underdog," awarding
Badlands 2 stars. Luca Fontana of
Galaxus and Manohla Dargis of
The New York Times also acknowledged Dek's reversed role as the prey, with the Kalisk instead becoming the underdog. writer Geoffrey Crété described
Badlands as a big leap from Trachtenberg's previous work in the franchise, describing the planet Genna as a "savage world," that is complemented by "high-quality visual effects." Crété criticized the characterization however, describing them as remaining "the same puppets serving the same eternal stories of identity quest and blended families." Giving the film 2 stars out of 5, Peter Bradshaw of
The Guardian similarly criticized the characterization of Dek, putting his humanization down to "the service of narrative development," concluding that "it ceases to be the Predator." Elle Fanning was described as a "sprightly breath of fresh air, winsomely cutting through the grit-and-honor stolidity of the Predator mindset" by Richard Lawson of
The Hollywood Reporter, going on to say that her character "steers the film away from impossible bleakness." Dustin Rowles, reviewing for
Pajiba, also praised Fanning's performance, referring to her as "the glue holding it all together," remarking on her performance as humorous, intelligent and including "jaw-dropping action scenes involving her detached legs." Matthew Turner of
Nerdly gave special mention to
Badlands screenwriter Patrick Aison for making Dek sympathetic to the audience before Thia's first appearance. Meredith Loftus of
Offscreen Central gave
Badlands a B+ rating, stating that "the only aspect that will get any attention this awards season is the visual effects."
ScreenCrush writer Matt Singer commended the design of Dek, remarking that "it looks so convincing that the viewer simply accepts it as a living, flesh-and-blood creature." David Crow, reviewing for
Den of Geek, credited the performance of Schuster-Koloamatangi for being able to act despite heavy
CGI and
prosthetics, remarking that Dek "looks unconvincingly alien, but there is a more human tactile performance in those eyes," making a comparison to prior
Predator franchise entries.
IGN writer Clint Gage scored
Badlands 8 out of 10, complimenting the creature design, comparing them to those seen in
Avatar and describing Genna as an "alien death planet populated with ravenous flora and fauna."
Variety Magazine writer Peter Debruge compared the plot of
Badlands to a live-action version of the poem "
Jabberwocky" by author
Lewis Carroll, naming
Badlands the strongest entry in the
Predator franchise since
the original. Alan Ng writing for
Film Threat enjoyed the action sequences but criticized the story "for lacking deeper meaning."
Accolades ==Comic book==