There's the obvious, significant issue that he doesn't exist as part of the MCU where our current Spider-man/Peter Parker exists. Currently there's a very complicated agreement around that character looming over Marvel (and Tom Holland) but I wouldn't be surprised if Disney outright buys the character given how successful he's been.
So in a world where Sony's last Spider-man film was The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (which I enjoyed more than most), there's now Venom -- stuck and unable to mention the character at all, but still representing one of the web-swinger's most iconic villains.
Even for someone as well-versed in all of this understanding as myself, it still confuses me and I'm unsure of where they'll go with it in the future but hey, I'm not the creative director at Sony, am I?
Along the path to creation, Venom earned some good will with fans by announcing Tom Hardy as the titular character, Eddie Brock, and all but promising a violent, horror-esque R-rated flick.
Then they released the first trailer WAY too soon and it all began to fall apart. That first trailer was one of the most forgettable I've ever seen and many people couldn't garner any excitement for it until Venom was actually revealed. Shortly around then, it was announced the film would be PG-13 and despite the character looking great, the wind was out of their sails again.
Unfortunately for us all, and for whatever non-Spider-man-Spider-universe Sony was trying to create, the film is just as troubled as its path to release.
For starters, this feels like a film that exists in a vacuum of time, specifically one before the MCU was created. Some people like to s**t on the MCU, but it's films like Venom that should remind them of what many superhero films were like before. It feels decidedly early 2000s which plays oddly (and almost nostalgically). A good reason for this is the story, courtesy of no fewer than 5 writers, where it feels nonsensical and nearly non-existent. We don't even meet our true villain, Riot, until there's only about 20 minutes left. It's an origin story of sorts, but it begins to paint a clear picture that there are distinct parts of the film that are its best, and others that are flat-out worthless.
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So that's what Bane looked like without the mask... |
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CGI ripped straight from 2002! |
If you're this far into the review, you may surprised to learn that I actually didn't hate Venom. Shockingly, it somehow almost trips into being entertaining pretty consistently, especially once Venom+Brock find one another. It's far funnier than I would have imagined and those moments represent probably the only "good" parts of the script. The interaction between a fully-dedicated Tom Hardy and Venom are weird, odd, but oddly endearing too. Hardy was the only perfect casting choice here and I fear that without him, Venom would have been an utter disaster. He's got some great comedic timing and just the right amount of "fish out of water" behavior to make this situation work. Him in full-Venom mode also looks great and the voice of Venom himself booms loudly in theater speakers, equal parts menacing and funny when it needs to be. Pair all that "good" stuff with an out-of-place pretty darn good original score and theme and you've got all the elements to save a movie from utter disaster.
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Cant lie -- this is pretty awesome |
CONS
- Nonsense, useless story created by at least 5 people
- Poor casting choices outside of Hardy
- Bad/terrible CGI for everything other than Venom
- Boring and cliched climax
- Mostly forgettable action -- often poorly filmed too
- R-rating would have helped
- Surprisingly pretty consistently funny
- Tom Hardy was a perfect casting choice
- Venom and Brock's "chemistry" and banter is fun and deserves to be explored further (in the MCU? *fingers crossed)
- Venom looks and sounds great
- A couple cool action bits. Literally. Two.
- Better-than-expected original score
Rath's Review Score | 6/10
Thanks for sharing your take on the movie. Well written.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Appreciate the read!
DeleteGood review. I enjoyed this way more than I thought I would and can't understand why it's been so slated. Hardy is great value, the bike chase was ace and Venom is funny. Sure, it's a little rough around the edges and amateur compared to the MCU but at least it felt a little different, retro even.
ReplyDeleteThanks! I was surprised by how much I liked the Hardy/Venom dynamic, but that was about it. To be fair, that takes up a significant portion of the film too.
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