
A solid enough send off for this 'Venom' trilogy.
'Venom: The Last Dance' is decently amusing and produces enough entertainment with its plot. I didn't personally find it overly funny, though the person a few seats across from me had an absolute bla...

The other two at the very least were enjoyable. This one, not so much.
The villian is forced, the movie feels so chopped up, there's no threat because the creatures and Eddie both just heal each other. It had bad dialogue for some scenes, and a weird sub plot about s...

Perhaps this was just one sequel too many as the story here is really rather thin, but there's still enough chemistry between "Eddie" (Tom Hardy) and his eponymous symbion to raise a smile or two. This time it's not just the pursuing human population that's a problem fo...

Okay, here’s the deal with Venom: The Last Dance. It’s like ordering your favorite burger and realizing halfway through they forgot the sauce. Tom Hardy? Still killing it as Eddie and Venom—his back-and-forth with himself is weirdly entertaining and even a little emot...
Venom: The Last Dance expands on the chaotic relationship between Eddie Brock and his symbiote Venom with more depth, tension, and humor, while also introducing a menacing new adversary in the form of the Xenophages. But yet, this cartonish way ended while making its la...
I like all the Venom movies. The humour works. Fun to watch Hardy play a puppet.
Would have been a 10 without that blast door thing. Still a blast. No deductions for runtime.
I'm typically not a fan of the Marvel universe films. I find them over stated, not especially intelligent and oftentimes, quite repetitive.
"Venom" is the rare exception to this rule. For starters there's Tom Hardy, who is, by any measure, an excellent actor. Second...