“Venom” the last dance.Review. !!

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“Venom” the last dance.
Review.

DirectorKelly Marcel
WritersKelly Marcel, Tom Hardy

StarsTom Hardy, Juno Temple, Alanna Ubach, Stephen Graham, Rhys Ifans

‘Venom: The Last Dance’ Review: A Long and Winding Tongue

Playing both Eddie Brock and the alien parasite who possesses him, Tom Hardy

gives another roiling one-man-band of a performance in this third

installment of the franchise.
A dark creature sticks out his very large tongue.

A scene from “Venom: The Last Dance.”Credit…Columbia Pictures/Sony Pictures

By Amy Nicholson
Action, Adventure,
With the 2018 film “Venom,” Tom Hardy locked himself

into a three-picture deal, giving his time, talents and torso to this saga about a

man named Eddie Brock possessed by a fanged, body-snatching alien

parasite named Venom who pops in and out of his skin like a hyper-violent prairie dog. The overly plotted

“Venom: The Last Dance,” written and directed by Kelly Marcel, concludes the trilogy by hammering home

all that Eddie has sacrificed to merge with this impulsive, smack-talking

goo blob. In the first movie, Eddie was an ambitious San Francisco investigative

journalist with a fiancée played by Michelle Williams; here, he’s a filthy drifter on a Mexican bender who’s lost

his career, his woman and his reputation. Forced to go on the lam to flee a murder accusation, Eddie makes a running joke out of the fact

that he can’t even hang on to a pair of shoes.
In glimpses, this is a drama

about a drunk who finds himself unbearably lonely despite being conjoined

with a garrulous monster. Hardy voices both reedy Eddie and gravelly Venom and his roiling

one-man-band of a performance continues to be the only reason to keep up with the films. Highlights here include the herky-jerky

chaos Eddie/Venom causes as he mixes a Michelada while grooving to “Tequila,” and the moment when he’s suctioned to the fuselage of

an airplane like a Garfield plushie and sighs, “It is so unpleasantly cold.” Eddie and Venom even detour to

Las Vegas, the capital city of self-destruction, and dub themselves Thelma and Louise.
But these mild pleasures are overwhelmed by a barrage of underdeveloped

supporting characters — Chiwetel Ejiofor as a general, Juno Temple and Clark Backo as Area 51 scientists, a hippy family headed by Rhys Ifans — plus

a nifty spidery nasty who gobbles its victims like a scuttling wood chipper and, when sliced up, stitches its

long limbs back together. There’s also a barely introduced major villain named Knull (Andy Serkis, the director of 2021’s

“Venom: Let There Be Carnage”) who seems to exist only so that the studio can bridge this finale to

some other future comic book flick.
Honestly, I’d rather watch Eddie and Venom dicker

over pizza toppings than team up for something as banal as saving the planet. Yet, this film prefers the

latter and the bombastic battle scenes that come with it. Marcel, making her directorial debut, claws

toward a strong emotional climax that’s undercut by a post-credits sequence which implies that

everything our heroes just endured didn’t matter at all. The mechanics of the

Marvel Machine must keep on cranking.
The film fills time with sequences set to Queen’s “Don’t Stop Me Now,” David

Bowie’s “Space Oddity” and Abba’s “Dancing Queen,” plus a winkingly sentimental montage of Eddie and Venom

that unspools over a Maroon 5 ballad. These spliced-together bits from all three films salute the dopey screwball comedy

the franchise hit in its best moments — and, even more

so, feel like a toast to the end of Hardy’s contractual agreement. great action

adventure symbiotic with moments that are sweet funny unconditional and movie…

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