Venom (2018; dir. Reuben Fleischer) embraces the spirit of
comics. It doesn’t try to raise the
level of its story above the level of its source. It’s energetic, fast, full of wit and irony,
and basic. It works. The film has an unusually long exposition
during which it introduces characters, follows the crash landing of a private
research vessel on earth, which results in the release of alien beings, and
introduces a ruthless, brilliant ,and wealthy mad scientist, Carlton Drake (Riz
Ahmed). Our main character is Eddie
Brock (Tom Hardy), a famous investigative reporter who is loud and brash and
not entirely scrupulous. He’s in a
relationship with a lawyer, Anne Weying (Michelle Williams), which comes to an
end early in the film after Eddie makes a mistake that costs him and Anne their
jobs. One intuits that the relationship
is not necessarily at an end, a point of doubt that will indubitably continue
into the sequel.
The aliens cannot survive on
earth, so they occupy the bodies of human hosts. Eddie (through a circuitous series of
misevents) is taken as the host by one of the aliens. We learn that the aliens have come to the
earth intending to feed on the inhabitants.
Eddie’s alien periodically breaks out, and he often tells his host what
to do. What begins as a terrible
calamity for Eddie gradually becomes something else. His alien grows to like Eddie and the earth,
and they reach an agreement about how to work together. (Eddie’s alien is Venom, but I really can’t
recall how this information came out). There’s a campy, humorous feel to the
film. When Eddie’s alien eats someone,
it’s always a criminal or otherwise bad person.
Noise is a prime element. The film is noisy, and the sound system in
the theatre where I saw it was turned all the way up. Speed, and a frenetic succession of events,
are also important. The film is entertaining.
What’s the message here? Well, we have another evil mogul/mad
scientist who cuts corners and doesn’t care who suffers as a result of his
research. By the end of the film, since
he too has been taken over by an alien, we know he will be Venom’s archenemy in
the sequel. Are we to think of Mark Zuckerberg, or Jeff Bezos, or Bill Gates, or
some other ambitious, power-hungry wizard of the techno world who wants to take
us over? Another message is that Marvel has conquered the American film
industry.
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