Rating summary
| Movie |  | 2.5 |
| Video |  | 4.5 |
| Audio |  | 5.0 |
| Extras |  | 2.5 |
| Overall |  | 4.0 |
Venom: The Last Dance Blu-ray Movie Review
Reviewed by Kenneth Brown January 17, 2025
Venom: The Last Dance opens with a promise it never fulfills: the promise of Knull, one of the most powerful, frightening new villains to grace
Marvel Comicdom in recent memory. Imprisoned for millennia, he only needs to gain access to the Codex, a MacGuffin Venom and Eddie conveniently
share, and which only Venom and Eddie can provide to the imprisoned deity/creator of the symbiotes. Of course, his freedom would spell the end of
life in the universe, so Eddie and Venom's quote-unquote Last Dance literally involves saving the entire universe. The rules of cinema dictate
the MacGuffin will be briefly captured by the Big Bad in Act Three, only to have our wayward antiheroes eke out a win. But no such luck. Knull is a
tease
and nothing more, and while that may come as a spoiler to a scant few, it needs to be known because the movie is ten times more disappointing if
you aren't prepared going in. Knull is little more than Thanos was in the original Avengers, except he's teased in the opening minutes rather
than the mid-credits scene after all is said and done (though he gets a starring role there too). The rest of the film is standard Venom: lots of
symbiotes fighting an alien beastie, vying for 2024's FX that Best Resembles a PS4 Cut Scene award.

One, two Knull is coming for you... three, four better lock your door... so believe the symbiotes of their once and future god-king Knull (fully CG and
voiced by Andy Serkis), a vicious villain determined to portal his minions throughout the universe to find the Codex, the only thing capable of
breaking his chains and freeing him. One such minion makes its way to Earth, where it quickly and oh so conveniently stumbles across Venom and
Eddie. But as luck would have it, the dull-witted monstrosity can only spot the Codex when Eddie and Venom (Tom Hardy) are fully merged,
meaning the pair go on the lam, using their powers as little as possible. Alas, they run into convenience store owner Mrs. Chen (Peggy Lu) at a
casino in Las Vegas, and Venom can't resist dancing with his best bud. (Possibly the literal
Last Dance of the title.) As is obvious from the
first step and shuffle, all hell breaks loose, spilling into Area 51, which sits atop an even more secret facility -- something-something 55 -- where a
group of Imperium soldiers and scientists are holding and studying multiple symbiotes that have been recovered on Earth. For simplicity's sake,
none of the other symbiotes carry the Codex, making Venom the lone target.
Eddie and Venom not only have to continually escape the lightning quick Xenophage tracking their position (and eventually its friends) -- deep
breath for super long sentence -- they have to contend with an overeager military general (an uncharacteristically ham-fisted Chiwetel Ejiofor), a
sweet but haunted scientist named Dr. Teddy Paine (Juno Temple) who finds the symbiotes "lovely," a researcher (Clark Backo) who seems to dream
of bonding with a symbiote herself, the decidedly not-dead, symbiote-infested Detective Patrick Mulligan (Stephen Graham) from
Let There Be
Carnage and, naturally, a bunch of symbiotes that might be friendlier than they appear. Whew. Exhale. Oh! Good ol' Eddie and Venom also
have to protect a hapless family of hippies they've befriended, led by parents Martin and Nova Moon (Rhys Ifans and Alanna Ubach).
What's a rogue symbiote to do? Apparently bad comedy, dropping tired one-liners, cheap puns and plenty of dead-on-arrival jokes until the
climactic showdown grants the movie some actual momentum. There are a few genuinely funny bits and even a few dramatic beats that might
generate a solid man-tear in a better movie, but by and large, this is point A to point B Big Dumb Fun, minus much of the fun that might be had if
The Last Dance didn't feel so much like it was rehashing the previous films and cribbing the likes of
The Eternals. (Which wouldn't
be my pick of MCU movie to swipe from.) Add to that plenty of plot confusion and aimless acceleration -- Why doesn't Detective Mulligan also have
a Codex? He died didn't he? Am I supposed to care about Dr. Teddy losing her brother in childhood? Or see some real significance in her lightning
strike
injury? And why are all the symbiotes suddenly so helpful and happy to save humans? Since when is their appetites second to their heroism? And
why oh why am I watching a flick about an imprisoned Knull instead of seeing him crash to Earth and wreak hellish havoc until Venom and Eddie
can put him back in his box? -- not to mention strangely choppy editing that makes it feel as if a half-hour of scenes have been ripped, beating and
bleeding, out of
The Last Dance's chest.
Venom: The Last Dance at least stands taller than
Let There Be Carnage and handily bests every other Sony
Spiderman
alt-universe titles, especially the likes of
Morbius,
Madame Web and, dropping low as one of the worst movies of 2024,
Kraven
the Hunter, the three of which comprise a shiver-inducing trilogy of
Spidey-verse misfires if there ever was one. And there is
something mildly entertaining to watching reluctant Eddie share his mind palace with Venom, who may as well be a five-year-old kid in a candy
store. Which brings me unfortunately to my problem with Hardy's performance and Eddie's character in all the
Venom films. Rather than
slowly evolve into a true symbiotic antihero, Eddie is always lurching and lurking, trying but failing to oppose Venom's will. Imagine if
The Last
Dance introduced a near fully realized Venom, a la
Upgrade, and found Eddie getting high on his own symbiote supply? Now imagine
he started to like it, love it, grow addicted to the power... think how much better just that single change would make
The Last Dance. And it
would be dominoes too, altering the course of Eddie's character arc and making for a far more complex take on the fan-favorite Big Guy in Black.
Ah well. The Xenophage is at least crazy cool, with one of the best kill mechanics I've seen from an on-screen alien in a long time. It never got old
watching it dispose of a victim. Never.
Venom: The Last Dance Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality 

Venom's 1080p/AVC-encoded video transfer looks every bit as bold and vibrant as a comic-book movie should. There's just one hitch. VFX
sequences come in three varieties: dim and muddled, dark and nearly opaque, or beautifully lit and flawed, showing all the seams of the CG. It doesn't
make for a very satisfying look, but technically, all is as it was meant to be. Colors are rich and fierce, black levels are as inky as they come, delineation
is semi-decent, and contrast leveling is on point. Again, being able to see all the hard work the filmmakers and effects artists have put into a shot would
be ideal, but I suppose beggars can't be choosers (at least when FX personnel are under the gun of restrictive deadlines). Detail is generally excellent,
with crisp, razor-tendril edges and refined textures, particularly when the sun is out or a lab's lighting is up to snuff. I also didn't catch sight of any
significant artifacting, banding, blocking or errant noise, meaning Venom's encode is sound.
Venom: The Last Dance Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality 

While the 4K release is the way to go if you want the biggest and baddest in audio, the standard Blu-ray is no slouch, offering a tight DTS-HD Master
Audio 5.1 surround track that doesn't disappoint. The movie gets loud, and I mean loud. LFE output is aggressive and rousing, with low-end explosions
packing some nice kick. Rear channel activity is assertive and engaging as well, creating an immersive soundfield full of accurate directional effects and
plenty of convincing interior and environmental ambience. Dialogue remains clear and intelligible in the face of the most eruptive madness, and
prioritization is spot on. The Last Dance has a blast of a soundtrack too, with classic rock hits sounding every bit as infectious as you might
hope.
Venom: The Last Dance Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras 

- Venomous Laughs (HD, 3 minutes) - Outtakes and bloopers.
- Author of Mayhem: From Writer to Director (HD, 6 minutes) - Introducing the filmmaker.
- Venom Unleashed (HD, 5 minutes) - An action and stunts featurette.
- Bonded in Chaos (HD, 6 minutes) - A quickie about actor Tom Hardy's performance.
- Venom's Inner Circle (HD, 6 minutes) - A trip with the Moons.
- Brock Bottom (HD, 3 minutes) - Mrs. Chen interview.
- Savor the Last Bite (HD, 5 minutes) - A "Venom Legacy" featurette.
- Deleted & Extended Scenes (HD, 13 minutes) - "From Bar to the Abyss," "Dog Fight," "Strickland's Pursuit," "Venom's Guilty
Pleasure," "Toxin's Warning," "Penthouse" and "Xenophage Landing."
- Previs Scenes (HD, 5 minutes) - For the Airport, Desert and Lab Attack scenes.
- One Last Dance (HD, 3 minutes) - A featurette with Tom Morello and his grandson.
Venom: The Last Dance Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation 

The best thing that can be said of Venom: The Last Dance is that it is a decent bit of fun and that it (seemingly) brings Sony's version of the
character to a solid close, making way for whatever the MCU proper decides to do. It's too short, cartoony and choppily edited for its own good, but
fans of the series will likely find a few things to enjoy. Sony's standard Blu-ray release may not be as big or bad as its 4K cousin, but it does make
finding something to enjoy in the film that much easier too, thanks to its striking video presentation, strong lossless audio track, and fair complement of
extras.