This review may contain spoilers!
Venom: The Last Dance is the third instalment in the Venom trilogy and our most intergalactic, multiversal spanning threat yet. When Knull, God of the Symbiotes, seeks an escape from his dimensional prison, he sends his symbiote hunters, the Xenophage, to find the key to his release. Unfortunately for Eddie and Venom, their unique bond has created a Codex within them - the exact artefact needed to release Knull.
What really worked for this film is how action sequences often upped the moments of tension. The soldiers of Area 55 (yes, that's a thing) have weapons that finally make humanity a threat to symbiotes. Alongside this, the Xenophage are terrifying and more powerful than any threat in a Venom film thus far; pair them with a big symbiote versus Xenophage battle in the final act, and you have some high points of action conflict.
Stephen Graham, who played Detective Mulligan/Toxin, wasn't my favourite in Let There Be Carnage but got to explore something entirely fascinating here; Graham's take on a man inflicted with and haunted by a symbiote is great and his exposition delivery as Toxin is surprisingly gripping.
However, the best performance came from Tom Hardy, who played Eddie Brock. Hardy is a phenomenal character actor who has often sat within gritty, tough and sometimes entirely mad roles. He has a long history of being able to lead a film and carry it forward as a protagonist. I wouldn't call his time as Eddie one of his most memorable characters, but he has certainly led this series of films very well. This time around, we pick up right where we left Venom and Eddie after Let There Be Carnage and Spider-Man: No Way Home. Eddie seems extremely disoriented, confused, and like he is frantically trying to pull together some semblance of normalcy into his new life as a wanted felon. Hardy's Eddie is so strange because his psyche after being paired with Venom seems so shattered, he is simultaneously beaten and worn down while also weirdly fixated on very menial things at odd moments. I found his great reluctance at letting Venom go quite sweet, and his farewell at the end was an impactful delivery. His work at voicing Venom was also quite wild and unpredictable. Yet there was a tenderness there, a strong bond with his host that comes from a place of wanting to protect that connection. Tom Hardy saw this role through consistently over three average and below films, which is commendable in its own right.
There is this real lack of direction, planning and purpose when it comes to the Sony Marvel films that makes them increasingly frustrating to watch. Bad enough I have had to sit through such features as Morbius and Madame Web, but the fact they took their flagship Spider-Man spinoff in Venom and completely fumbled it is a disappointment. This film is a major swing in difference from the last two; in which the first was an origin story and the second was a poor introduction to Carnage, one of the more famous symbiotes Venom has faced off against. This film opens with Knull, a being who created the symbiotes, holds multiversal powers and exists outside the known universe in a dimensional prison crafted by the symbiotes. Knull sends these creatures designed to hunt symbiotes, but specifically a symbiote that has saved its host from death. Apparently this exact, very specific act creates a key called a Codex which will free Knull. Before you spend too long wondering why the symbiotes would make themselves the weakness to the prison of their greatest enemy, I'd encourage you to consider how colossal this plot has ballooned into by introducing Knull. It has suddenly become exposition heavy, there are a lot more very specific factors around symbiotes that are being introduced quite late in the trilogy and the whole film drops Knull on us which feels far bigger than Venom has really been up until this point. In fact, the entire film feels like promotional material for Knull, teasing a big bad I hope Sony doesn't explore because they really did a poor job of introducing us to him here. More than this, the film is this really sluggish road trip movie for two thirds of it; in which Eddie and Venom stumble through a symbiote horse ride, an Area 51 enthusiast family and an abysmal Las Vegas sequence. Let us not forget Area 51, oh I mean 55, in which there is now apparently an American military group designed specifically for hunting and collecting symbiotes. If they feel like a dull, last minute idea - I think that might be intentional. Area 55 is even led by a scientist with a weird backstory in which her twin brother gets killed by a lightning strike; and it gets brought up, a lot. The whole film shrugs towards a predictable final death scene with a bunch of newly decked out symbiotes who look like they might be out of a Power Rangers film on acid.
This is the worst looking Venom yet, every shot seems to be hinged around a special effect, otherwise we're pushing the most simple to achieve mid-shots I've seen in a blockbuster all year. The budget is quite stretched in this one and it shows. Venom appears a lot less, giving us his weird floating head look instead, the army of symbiotes aren't as interesting as Carnage or Riot have been in the past. The effects also don't look good in motion very well, Tom Hardy looks outside of the effect a lot, which makes the final fight a pretty ugly affair. The whole film builds to a Knull face reveal halfway through the credits, which looked half-rendered. The score for the film was barely present, a constant problem with the Venom films. I also found the soundtrack to be a real whacky assembly of tracks; bouncing from songs that barely had anything to do with the scene to songs that didn't even make the scene funnier.
Chiwetel Ejiofor, who played Strickland, jumped from the Marvel universe smack bang into one of the worst roles of his career; Ejiofor gives such a generic take on a military leader that it winds up falling quite flat. Juno Temple, who played Dr. Teddy Paine, is one of my least favourite characters and performances of the film; her light bubbly persona and backstory fixation are in such odd contrast to the rest of the film. Rhys Ifans, who played Martin, is an incredible waste of Ifans talents and acting ability; Ifans toyed with this nonsense role but failed to really breathe any meaning into this alien obsessed man. Peggy Lu, who played Mrs. Chen, was a nice side character in the other films, but it's just too over the top in this; the whole Las Vegas dance number is quite a weak point in the script. Clark Backo, who played Sadie, is a very forgettable presence for almost the whole film; her push into being a symbiote hero at the end doesn't ever really feel earned. Alanna Ubach, Hala Finley and Dash McCloud, who played Nova, Echo and Leaf respectively, might be the worst family ensemble in a major release film I've seen this year; no one seems too into it and there are no performances that really command a scene. Andy Serkis, who played Knull, might be the worst introduction to what could have been an interesting villain; the character spends more time monologuing exposition than actually being menacing. Reads more Serkis playing Snoke than the King in Black.
Not only the worst Venom film yet, but currently one of my least favourite superhero films of the 2020s. I would give Venom: The Last Dance a 2/10.