Venom: Let There Be Carnage (Sony Pictures)
“We should be out there, protecting the city. Lethally.”
Originally posted 9/30/21.
Venom: Let There Be Carnage is a 2021 Sony Pictures release in association with Marvel Studios. It’s directed by the acclaimed actor Andy Serkis, off a screenplay by Kelly Marcel who wrote the story with Tom Hardy. Let There Be Carnage is a sequel to the surprise hit, Venom, which was the 7th highest-grossing movie of 2018. Tom Hardy returns as the gadfly journalist, Eddie Brock, alongside Michelle Williams as Brock’s ex, attorney Anne Weying and her fiancé, Dr. Dan Lewis, again played by Reid Scott. Joining them is Woody Harrelson as the psychotic serial killer Cletus Kassidy and Naomie Harris, who plays the mutant, Francis Barrison, also known as Shriek.
The character of Venom has a long and convoluted backstory that started with a
talent competition held by Marvel Comics in the early eighties. A sleek, new
Spider-Man redesign was submitted by Randy Schueller, and Marvel snatched it
up. Writer Jim Shooter and artist Mike Zeck introduced the new costume during Marvel Comics Secret Wars in 1984, and
the idea that the costume was a sentient, symbiotic organism came later, baked
in by artist Ron Frenz and writer Tom DeFalco. Once Peter Parker became aware
that his costume was alive and manipulating him, he rejected it. He was able to
remove the costume with the assistance of the pealing bells of the church tower
where his attempt was made because one of the symbiote’s vulnerabilities is to
extremely loud noises. The symbiotic suit fled the scene, forcefully bonding
itself with reporter Eddie Brock, who had just been fired. He blamed Spider-Man
for his job loss and the symbiote, suffused with rage over Parker’s repudiation,
felt a kindred spirit. Eddie was created by writer David Michelinie and artist
Todd McFarlane, who also designed his alter-ego, Venom. After toying with
Parker for several years, Venom makes his first full appearance in Amazing Spider-Man #300, in 1988. Anne
Weying was created by Michelinie and artist Mark Bagley, as was Cletus Kassidy
and Venom’s insane offspring, Carnage who debuted in 1991’s Amazing Spider-Man #345. The character
of Shriek was crafted by DeFalco and artist Ron Lim.
Although exposing and bringing down the corrupt Life Foundation has rejuvenated
his career in journalism and made him famous, at the opening of the film, Eddy
Brock’s (Hardy) personal life is in shambles. He’s the rope in an emotional tug
of war between his alien symbiote, Venom and his ex, Anne (Williams), whom he
still has strong feelings for. After Anne announces that she and Dr. Dan
(Scott) plan to wed, a crushed Eddie just wants to do his job and get on with
his life. Venom, on the other hand, has galvanized his love of Earth and (some
of the) earthlings after spending so much time bonded inside Weying and Brock.
He wants to be out there, on the streets, eating the bad guys and protecting
the neighborhood. Lethally. Eddie,
however, is trying to keep the notion that he’s hosting an alien super-being
within him under wraps. He needs Venom to abide by a few simple guidelines,
like “no eating people”, and “chicken and chocolate are your friends”. This
causes friction within their symbiotic relationship, and their bickering often
has a David-and-Maddie vibe from the ’80’s TV series, Moonlighting.
Cletus Kassidy (Harrelson), a hitherto-remorseless, serial -killing, death-row
inmate reads of Brock’s exploits and decides that he will speak to Eddie and no
one else. While he taunts Brock, hoping to use the missing bodies of his many
victims to gain legal leverage, Venom notices a pattern in the contrived chaos
of Kassidy’s cell using Eddie’s eyes. Together, he and Eddie are able to decode
the detritus and determine the whereabouts of several more corpses. These
newly-recovered bodies cause Cletus’ execution to be made imminent. Going
silent, he wants to talk only to Brock before he is put to death, though now Kassidy
seethes with hatred, as Eddie has ruined his scheme for a reduced sentence.
Cletus argues with Brock, telling Eddie how the two are deeply alike. Brock tries
to dismiss that assertion offhand, but it gets under his skin. He and Venom
lose their cool. They get too close to the isolation cell as Venom lashes out and
Cletus bites Eddie.
Right away, Kassidy notes something odd with Brock’s blood, and he swallows the
tiny section of symbiote he’d sliced off along with the blood drawn when
gnawing on Eddie’s hand. Leaving the prison, Eddie and Venom both blame each
other for the outburst. Eddie believes, not incorrectly, that more erratic
behavior could cost his job again and leave him back on the bottom. This leads
to a big blow-up between the pair and a break-up of cosmic proportions.
Meanwhile, Kassidy’s execution is proceeding as planned until it doesn’t.
Eddie’s ingested blood has impregnated Cletus with Venom’s progeny, and he
violently transforms into a monstrous, murderous symbiote who calls himself Carnage.
The newly-bonded pair escapes after a colossal killing spree through the
prison. They then divert to the military facility at Ravencroft, where a
mysterious government organization is holding Kassidy’s childhood love, Francis
Barrison (Harris), the mutant known as Shriek.
After freeing Francis, Carnage and Kassidy both agree that there’s only
one thing to do: find Eddie and Venom, and make them pay.
Can Eddie get his shit together, patch things up with Venom and save the world
from this psychotic, symbiote serial-killer from outer-space?
Venom: Let There Be Carnage was a fun movie that sails along at a brisk 90 minute pace which keeps things busy, but leaves a sense of significant stuff lost in the editing bay. Andy Serkis’ direction is supple and smooth. His Raimi-esque camera-work often twists through the sets but his focal point is always clear and composed. Tom Hardy is really enjoying his turn as the jittery, awkward Eddie Brock, a character he has made his own. He also performs Venom’s dialogue and has invested the growling symbiote with a personality that is all Id. Michelle Williams reportedly took the role of Weying in the first film just so she could have the opportunity to work with Hardy. They have amazing chemistry and she is an extraordinary actor, even though she has so much less to do in this film. She’s playing things straight, but there’s a wink and a twinkle in her eye that’s contagious. Hardy and Williams should make a series of rom-coms. They’d make bank. Woody Harrelson more than holds up his end, though his role seems a bit old hat for him, drawing heavily from his character, Mickey, from Oliver Stone’s 1994 feature, Natural Born Killers.
The movie pauses partway through the runtime and shifts to a beautifully-animated but bone-chilling scene that delves deeply into Kassidy’s backstory and origin. It’s a move that mirrors an opening sequence that strives to humanize Cletus and give us something to sympathize with. The problem is, while this information is given to the audience, the material is never imparted into any of the main characters in a timely fashion, where it could make a difference to the plot.
The PG-13 rating hurts. The lack of blood hurts a lot. How
can you have a movie about serial-killing alien symbiote called “Carnage” that
spends the runtime biting people’s heads off and ripping them apart, but no
blood splash? There are bodies torn to shreds. Bodies dropped hundreds of feet
to unyielding concrete, no splatter. Bodies
shot, stabbed, bludgeoned, impaled, with decapitations galore. Not one instance
of arterial spurt. Altogether too neat for a purported horror film, but that’s
also part of the problem.
The movie is another tonally-disjointed hodgepodge of various genre elements
squeezing together in an awkward and not-quite-successful symbiosis. Gothic
horror segues to investigative thriller. Thriller morphs into a romantic drama
which blips into super hero antics. Screwball romance segues into sci-fi
super-people containment. Then it rolls over into a silly rave scene that
shifts to the sterility of the death chamber. Kassidy’s bust-out provides a
brutal action beat, and then we’re right back to jokes, giggles and on-the-nose
dialogue. Venom had a solo, six-issue limited series in 1993 called Venom: Lethal Protector, and the movie needs
you to know that the symobiote REALLY wants to be the protector of the
neighborhood. Lethally.
The first feature caused a bit of a stir in the LGBTQ+ community as many people
saw the relationship between Eddie and Venom to be quietly queer-coded. The
sequel leans into that notion with several “happy” homemaking scenes with the
pair as well as more on-the-nose dialogue. Venom yowls after their break-up about
how Brock is ashamed of him and how now Venom is “Out of the Eddie closet”.
It feels like many parts of this movie are missing. Major elements in the movie
spring out with no set-up. There is a mysterious government organization
dedicated to the imprisonment of super-humans; the fact that there ARE super-humans
is out of the blue. In the first film, the only supers were symbiotes from
outer-space; the fact that there are mutants in this movie. Marvel Studios has
been struggling with how to incorporate mutants in their cinematic universe for
quite some time now. This movie just
does it. Bang. Done.
Most crucially, the movie never explains why Carnage hates his father, why
Venom fears his son, who is twice as powerful as he. Why is that? The comics
have an elaborate explanation for it, one that’s been retconned a few times,
most recently with the stories of Knull, the King in Black. It’s an odd absence
of exposition. The movie just says that Carnage is red, so he’s more powerful,
just because he’s red. It’s silly. Someone should send an alert to Buckaroo
Banzai and the Hong Kong Cavaliers.
Minor criticisms aside, this was a fun, silly movie with strong performances
from the principal cast. It is a good, goofy popcorn movie for the Halloween
season. The mid-credits sequence is genre-shaking, HUGELY important and should
not be missed by ANY stretch of the imagination.
Venom: let There Be Carnage opens in
theatres Friday, October 1st.
Spider-Man was created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko from a
design by Jack Kirby.
Venom/Eddie Brock was created by David Michelinie and Todd McFarlane.
Carnage/Cletus Kassidy was created by David Michelinie and Mark Bagley.
https://fanboyfactor.com/2021/10/movie-review-venom-let-there-be-carnage-sony-pictures/
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