Whose transformation do you like best?
Synopsis
Eddie and Venom are on the run, pursued from both worlds. As circumstances worsen, they are forced to make a heartbreaking decision that could mean the end of their symbiotic partnership. Check out some of our favorite superheroes in full gear and incognito. Before Kelly Marcel was hired to direct the third film, Andy Serkis, the director of Venom 2 (2021), expressed interest in directing another Venom film. He felt there was more to explore with Venom in future films before the character meets Spider-Man in a future MCU/SSU crossover film, including further exploration of the Ravencroft Institute and other potential villains held there.
my home found us
A shot of Las Vegas shows the Sphere, a structure that will be completed and open in 2023. In the film, however, Eddie mentions that he and Venom have been together for a year. The first Venom movie is set in 2018, so this movie is set in 2019, 4 years before the Sphere was supposed to exist. Venom: Eddie… Seen on The 7PM Project: October 25, 2024 Episode (2024).
To call this movie bad would be putting it kindly
If movie disasters had a mascot, this one would be right at the front of the line waving its tattered flag of mediocrity. Tom Hardy’s final outing as Eddie Brock/Venom isn’t just a disappointment—it’s an insult to any audience. This is an incoherent, convoluted, and utterly joyless mess that somehow manages to live up to even the lowest of expectations. The premise of Eddie and Venom from both worlds being “on the run” promised at least a little thrilling action. Instead, we get a chaotic, poorly written nightmare of disjointed scenes and absurd plot holes big enough to swallow up the entire Marvel Universe.
There’s no rhyme or reason to the events that unfold
The narrative, if you can call it that, stumbles along with the grace of a drunk man stumbling in the dark. It’s as if the writers cobbled together every half-baked idea they could think of and hoped no one would notice how little sense it all made. The so-called “devastating choice” Eddie and Venom face feels less like the climax of their journey and more like a cheap, hollow ploy to tug on the audience’s emotions. But even that attempt fails because by then the viewer is too exhausted from the 90 minutes of pointless blather to care.Eddie Brock, once a complex and conflicted antihero from the comics, is reduced to a pathetic shell of his former self, stumbling and mumbling through the film as if he just wants to get it over with.The supporting characters are even worse – if that’s possible. Whoever thought it would be a good idea to use cardboard cutouts of supporting characters nobody cares about clearly has no idea what made the earlier films work (barely).They serve no purpose other than to waste screen time and remind us that someone actually put that blather on paper.It wouldn’t be a Venom movie without over-the-top CGI battles, would it?
It’s not exciting, it’s not entertaining, it’s just plain ugly
Well, unfortunately, the action scenes here are so poorly executed and so short due to cost that even those who came just for the mindless entertainment will go home disappointed. The special effects are a headache-inducing haze of dark, indistinguishable shapes crashing into each other, with no sense of tension or creativity whatsoever. The final fight scene feels like an incomprehensible swirl of chaos designed to distract us from the fact that nothing of significance is happening. At its core, it tries to sell itself as a dramatic, emotional farewell to Eddie and Venom’s bond, but it doesn’t even come close. Any attempt to create emotional depth is drowned out by the film’s clumsy pacing and complete lack of character development.