http://linkjaunt.com/iio a Venom movie without Spider-Man is a unique challenge. But many of Venom's issues have nothing to do with Spidey's absence.http://linkjaunt.com/ibk
For
example: Early in Venom, the Symbiote that will later be revealed as
Riot escapes the Life Foundation's custody and infects a woman in a
marketplace in Malaysia, with the explicit goal of reaching San
Francisco. The movie's main story then begins: Eddie Brock makes some
poor decisions, loses his job and his fiancé (Michelle Williams' Anne
Weying), and hits rock bottom. Cue a six month time jump--and our friend
Riot, still inhabiting the old woman from the marketplace, has finally
made it--to the airport?
What was Riot doing for the six
months between then and now? Did it go on a killing spree across
Malaysia? Was it dormant or hibernating--something the movie never gives
any hint that Symbiotes might be capable of? Was it biding its time
pretending to be someone's grandma? That blatant plot hole has nothing
to do with Venom's general 1990s cheesiness as a character, or the
considerable challenge of trying to make a Venom movie without a single
reference to Spider-Man. It's just good, old fashioned, avoidable
sloppiness.
Don't get me wrong: The lack of Spider-Man
does cause problems. Specifically, the entire premise--that Venom
chooses to stick around on Earth, attach itself permanently to Eddie
Brock, and betray its entire species--doesn't really work in this movie.
In the books, Venom's obsession with Spider-Man gives it common purpose
with Eddie, and cutting Spidey out of the equation necessitates
something take his place as their end goal. The movie tries to get
around that by clumsily painting Eddie and Venom as Breakfast Club style
lovable "losers" (actual, direct quote: "On my planet, I am kind of a
loser, like you"). It's nonsensical, implausible, under-explained, and
tonally weird; that line is easily the movie's biggest laugh, but not in
a good way.
Venom
is surprisingly funny, mostly in the verbal abuse the Symbiote whispers
directly into Eddie's brain, usually after Tom Hardy's character does
something Venom considers cowardly or embarrassing. When Eddie holds his
hands up in surrender to law enforcement, Venom laments that he's
"making us look bad;" when Eddie opts to take the elevator rather than
jumping from a skyscraper, Venom calls him a "pussy." These moments are
deliberately played for laughs, and they land well enough. The bigger
problem is why an alien parasite from space talks like a frat bro, or,
extrapolating further, why it needs eyes and teeth if its main form is a
shapeless, pulsing black goo. These essential curiosities of Venom as a
character are never so much as acknowledged, much less explained.
On
the plus side, Venom and the other Symbiotes look pretty good in this
movie. The CG work is somewhat inconsistent, and it definitely goes
through ups and downs when it comes to raw fidelity. But unlike in his
other live action incarnations (looking at you, Spider-Man 3), Venom
actually looks like Venom here. The alien comes off as both lithe and
powerful; it leaps around gracefully, but its hulking form also exudes
menace and strength. The visual effect of Venom's vicious visage
wrapping itself over Eddie's head is creatively executed, and
Symbiote-on-Symbiote fight scenes play out in unexpected ways, with
human hosts and alien parasites struggling to remain linked while trying
to rip and tear their opponents apart.
Hardy is as
baffling in this role as the movie's trailers have suggested he'd be. As
a New York transplant living in San Francisco, he's doing something
like a caricature of an NYC cab driver's accent, mixed with frequent
slurred mutterings--and that's before he encounters the Symbiote and his
behavior becomes understandably erratic. Besides Hardy's strange
performance, Brock himself is not a likeable or relatable character. He
thoughtlessly uses his fiancé in a half-baked gotcha journalism scheme
that gets them both fired, and it literally never occurs to him to so
much as apologize to her, until Venom for some unknowable reason nudges
him in the right direction later in the film. Brock lacks the depth of
character to carry this movie, and Hardy lacks the charm to make up for
the character's shallowness.

Michelle
Williams does just fine as Anne, although her attachment to Eddie is
really inexplicable, as the two have zero chemistry. Even weirder is the
willingness of her new doctor boyfriend (Reid Scott) to administer
Eddie multiple MRI screenings, even after Eddie interrupts their fancy
lunch date by climbing into a lobster tank (the Symbiote affects him in
some truly strange ways).
Riz Ahmed does a great job as
the megalomaniacal head of the Life Foundation, totally selling his
character's belief that humans will have to mutate themselves using
alien parasites if we want to survive climate change. That said, it's a
pretty thin motivation, and Dr. Carlton Drake is an utterly one note
villain. To be honest, the only character who actually experiences any
kind of growth or change is the scientist played by comedian and actress
Jenny Slate, who is terrific in this movie--and, unfortunately,
underused.

Venom
has all the ingredients of a decent superhero movie--10 or 15 years
ago. With spotty CGI, poorly drawn characters, tonal inconsistency
including forced "edginess" and awkward humor, sidelined female
characters, and even cringeworthy licensed musical cues, it feels like a
relic from the distant, pre-Marvel Cinematic Universe past. That may in
part be attributed to the fact that it's been in production in one form
or another since at least 2008.
But its problems go way past simply being "old school," and ultimately,
Venom lacks the charm, clarity, and ambition superhero fans have come
to expect.
| The Good | The Bad |
|---|---|
| Surprisingly funny | Inconsistent CGI quality |
| Venom looks like Venom | Unlikeable, shallow characters |
| Some creative action and visual effects | Tom Hardy's strange performance |
| Better than Venom portrayal in Spider-Man 3 | Multiple plot holes |
| Venom makes little sense as a character |

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