If you walked into Venom: Let There Be Carnage expecting a dark, brooding superhero epic, you were probably lost on your way to The Batman . However, if you walked in expecting a bizarre, chaotic, and surprisingly heartfelt buddy comedy where a loser journalist makes out with a puddle of black goo—congratulations, you had the time of your life.
But it is an entertaining movie.
Eddie Brock (Tom Hardy) and Venom are broken up. Again. The symbiote wants to eat brains; Eddie wants to do laundry. It’s the domestic squabble you’d expect from a couple who has been married for fifteen years, except one of them has razor-sharp teeth. Their bickering is the heart of the movie. When Venom sulks and decides to crash a rave by jumping out of Eddie’s body to go dancing, you realize this isn't a horror film—it’s a divorce comedy. Woody Harrelson finally gets to let loose as Cletus Kasady, the red-headed serial killer with a grudge. While the first film teased him in a terrible wig, this film gives him full reign to be unhinged. His partner in crime is Carnage (the red symbiote), voiced again by Harrelson with a high-pitched, psychotic glee. venom 2
Is Carnage scary? Not really. But he is cool. The visual of the red tendrils slicing through prison walls and creating chaotic, jagged weapons is a massive upgrade from the gray mud fight of the first movie. If you walked into Venom: Let There Be