Jamaica Gleaner

Sufficient ‘Venom’ to enjoy despite flaws

- Damian Levy/Gleaner Writer

ELEVEN YEARS ago, there was a frustratin­gly terribly movie called Spider-Man 3. Its tyranny showed the world one of the most beloved villains of all time, a hulking, vicious being fuelled purely by hatred, as portrayed by the guy from That ’70s Show, Christophe­r Grace. Needless to say, it was a portrayal that left fans hungry – nay, starved, for a more substantia­l meal. Fast-forward to

2018, and the character is taking top billing. Played by Oscarnomin­ated actor Tom Hardy and helmed by Zombieland director

Ruben Fleischer, it seemed the character was on a fast track to finally getting the treatment he deserves.

You might be surprised. You might even be astonished, flabbergas­ted to hear that, despite the veritable cavalcade of negative word coming out about this film, I actually enjoyed it. Not in an ironic way, or with a ‘so bad it’s good’ energy. I thought Venom was a solid, engaging – yet flawed – superhero movie. I don’t understand it, either.

Perhaps it’s because Venom is so simple. It’s about a man who, through every fault of his own, becomes a downtrodde­n loser. The glimpse at his perfect life that gets blown up by his own self-destructiv­e tendencies is enough to make you feel for him when it all goes away. Seeing a character like that thrust into a tale of adventure with his new superpower­ed alien best friend, gave me everything I could have ever wanted.

At the centre of everything is Tom Hardy’s performanc­e as Eddie Brock. He’s a little more than unhinged before coming under Venom’s influence, and the character more than goes off the rails when the two become one. Think back to Nicholas Cage in Ghost Rider and you get a sense of what you’re in for. The two make for the most entertaini­ng buddy cop pairing since Upgrade, a film with a startlingl­y similar premise and main actor lookalike.

The rest of the movie has a painfully bad villain, serious pacing issues, and a third act that devolves into messier visual effects than Sunday night on the sci-fi channel. It also has some eerily Gothic sequences, like Venom lurking in the dark, snarling hungrily at his prey, and Michelle Williams as an interestin­g romantic love interest, a role that so often feels like a waste of screen space. As Eddie Brock says about Venom himself, his power isn’t completely terrible – and neither is the movie.

Rating: Half-Price

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Academy Award nominee Tom Hardy plays an investigat­ive journalist who becomes the host of an alien symbiote that gives him superhuman abilities and a horrific alter ego, Venom.
CONTRIBUTE­D Academy Award nominee Tom Hardy plays an investigat­ive journalist who becomes the host of an alien symbiote that gives him superhuman abilities and a horrific alter ego, Venom.
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