To say I was disappointed after seeing the first Venom movie in 2018 would be an understatement. As a kid who had spent Saturday mornings watching Spider-Man: The Animated Series in slight fear of the symbiote character, I was expecting to witness something far more disturbing than what Sony had to offer.
And why shouldn’t I? Everything about the character reeks of horror: a murderous, parasitic alien that relies on a biological host for survival, feeds off that person’s body as well as human brains and has a gnarly set of teeth to put Pennywise to shame? Venom is savage! He bites off people’s heads!
Even in Tom Hardy’s antihero iteration – one inspired by the ‘Lethal Protector’ comic storylines rather than his long history of villainy as Peter Parker’s nemesis – he still makes some morally questionable choices that lead to extremely bloody and violent circumstances even if they are in the service of good.
But, alas, thanks to the 12A rating and Hardy’s odd couple interpretation of the Eddie Brock-Symbiote dichotomy, that film never felt as sinister or bloody as it could have truly been.
Now with Venom: Let There Be Carnage, Hardy, who has now earned a ‘story by’ credit with screenwriter Kelly Marcel, has doubled down on this light, comedic sensibility even with its serial killer antagonist Cletus Kasady raising the stakes and the body count.
Woody Harrelson oozes deranged swagger as this psychopathic antagonist who, after getting his own symbiote and joining up with childhood sweetheart Shriek (Naomie Harris), goes on a rampage to dish out, well, carnage.