![]() ![]() Early on, the movie plays like a wacky mix of Ratatouille and The Silence Of The Lambs, with Woody Harrelson filling the Hannibal Lecter role as serial killer Cletus Kasady. Eddie’s conversations with his goopy buddy have an antagonistic charge, and the symbiote gains a more playful personality thanks to the clever implementation of Venom’s powers in Eddie’s personal and professional life. Serkis’ involvement allows the CGI Venom to take a true costar role alongside Hardy. Joining Hardy on this more comedic effort is director Andy Serkis, the pioneer of performance-capture acting known for his work as Gollum in The Lord Of The Rings and Caesar in the recent Planet Of The Apes films. Though it suffers from some of the first movie’s problems - mainly a shallow villain and underwhelming action - Hardy’s ownership of Let There Be Carnage has had a clear impact, with the movie recapturing the electric character dynamic from the original, and getting to the off-kilter odd couple stuff far earlier. Hardy also co-wrote the story with screenwriter Kelly Marcel ( Fifty Shades of Grey), allowing the movie to lean into the strengths of a grizzled heavy who happens to be a great physical comedian. Tom Hardy once again plays down-and-out reporter Eddie Brock and voices the alien that makes Eddie’s life hell. Venom: Let There Be Carnage is at its best when it gets away from superheroics and leans into romantic comedy and body horror, highlighting the complications of living with a partner who hungers for human flesh. Now, in the sequel, the pair have to learn to live with each other without racking up a body count. 2018’s Venom saw a selfish, opportunistic jerk terrorized by an alien that takes over his mind and body. ![]() ![]() Over the years, the character has undergone transformation after transformation on the page, from alien-powered supersoldier to space knight to cosmic god, distancing him from his roots as the big black-and-white Spidey with sharp teeth and a spit-slinging tongue.īut nothing has taken Venom as far from his roots as the current movie version, which sidesteps Spider-Man entirely and uses the symbiote/host dynamic as a source of humor. Venom became popular because he was the dark version of Spider-Man, and shifting him from villain to vigilante dulled his attitude and appeal in the late ’90s. Yes, the Marvel Comics symbiote is an alien goo that bestows its human host with superpowers, but its least interesting mode is as a lethal protector. Venom doesn’t thrive in the superhero genre. ![]()
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