Venom Movie - Spiderman? who's he?

  • 🇵🇦 Nuestro primer dominio localizado está en español en kiwifarms.pa. Our first localized domain is on Spanish on kiwifarms.pa.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Just saw it and I thought it was okay, people take this goofy superhero shit way too seriously.
It's also looking good in box office terms, it's expected to have an 80 million opening weekend.
 
I saw the film last night, and I have to say, I enjoyed it! While there's a fair amount of cheesy quipping, it's more of the Venom symbiote second-guessing and mocking Eddie than LOLSORANDOM I AM MASTURBATING WITH A UNICORN (lookin' at you, Deadpool), and I really enjoyed the fact that Venom was allowed to be a messy, unpolished bastard who straight-up eats people.

Yeah, the Planet of the Symbiotes part is pure bullshit, but the Life Foundation/Lethal Protector stuff is okay. And I liked that we got a little time to get to know Eddie and build some anticipation before it's on with the suit and the CGI really kicks in.

Current Rotten Tomatoes score is something like 33% with critics, 89% with audiences. I think that sums it up, really.
I feel the whole Planet of the Symbiotes plot point was for the final fight and to have Venom stand out from his kind.
I first did not know who Eddie was referring to at the end when he said he had the "interview of the century" but once I saw it was San Quentin Prison, I knew who he was going to see. I was surprised to see Woody Harrelson as Cletus Kasady but from other roles I've seen him in, I think he could pull off Carnage. Maybe if a uncut version of this movie comes out and does well, the sequel may go into the R-rating territory.
 
I feel the whole Planet of the Symbiotes plot point was for the final fight and to have Venom stand out from his kind.
I first did not know who Eddie was referring to at the end when he said he had the "interview of the century" but once I saw it was San Quentin Prison, I knew who he was going to see. I was surprised to see Woody Harrelson as Cletus Kasady but from other roles I've seen him in, I think he could pull off Carnage. Maybe if a uncut version of this movie comes out and does well, the sequel may go into the R-rating territory.
It's about twenty years past when he should have, but Old Man Mickie Knox could be okay.
 
I saw the film last night, and I have to say, I enjoyed it! While there's a fair amount of cheesy quipping, it's more of the Venom symbiote second-guessing and mocking Eddie than LOLSORANDOM I AM MASTURBATING WITH A UNICORN (lookin' at you, Deadpool), and I really enjoyed the fact that Venom was allowed to be a messy, unpolished bastard who straight-up eats people.

Yeah, the Planet of the Symbiotes part is pure bullshit, but the Life Foundation/Lethal Protector stuff is okay. And I liked that we got a little time to get to know Eddie and build some anticipation before it's on with the suit and the CGI really kicks in.

Current Rotten Tomatoes score is something like 33% with critics, 89% with audiences. I think that sums it up, really.
>Planet of the Symbiotes Stuff
Oh so I was right then, hopefully it wasn't as bad as the original material
 
First part of it was pretty boring, but once Venom actually shows up it basically becomes a cartoon (probably more than the actual cartoon coming in December), and I loved every second of it. Now if only Sony didn't chicken out and give the movie the R rating it should have gotten.
 
First part of it was pretty boring, but once Venom actually shows up it basically becomes a cartoon (probably more than the actual cartoon coming in December), and I loved every second of it. Now if only Sony didn't chicken out and give the movie the R rating it should have gotten.

Sadly, it's doing pretty well at the box office. Probably because of the PG-13. The big question is if this has legs or how it does in China.
 
Better than DC's productions, mostly.

The plot is a giant exceptional mess, just fucking awful imconsistent shit that you can see the studio execs forced their Too Many Cooks input on to justify being on salary.

The saving (Not Topher) grace is Tom Hardy playing off himself interacting with the symbiote. I imagine it was the "favorite 40 minutes" of his that were cut, cause he does a good job at it, and it's definitely the most enjoyable parts of the movie.

I've never been a huge fan of edgelord Spiderman, so the more comedic take on the symbiote doesn't hugely offend me. I don't know how out of character it is, and it's not Deadpool levels of snarky. I honestly believe had they cut the stupid unnecessary action scenes, focused a lot more time on the development of Eddie and Venom's interaction, and just had someone whose diet doesn't primarily consist of rubber cement do a one over on the plot, it could of been a very enjoyable film.

Oh and get someone attractive as his love cuck interest. Seems like they were trying to one up RDJ Iron Man for unappealing comic book love interest.
 
I wonder how radically this changed during development? The early trailers seemed to indicate it would be more of a psychological thriller with horror/action elements rather than a cookie cutter Marvel snarkfest.
 
Box Office: ‘Venom’ Launches to $80 Million, ‘A Star Is Born’ Draws $42.6 Million

The unlikely dynamic duo of “Venom” and “A Star Is Born” have livened up the fall moviegoing season with the best October weekend of all time in North America.

Tom Hardy’s superhero tale “Venom” grabbed $80 million at 4,250 sites for Sony and Marvel while the Lady Gaga-starring remake of “A Star Is Born” earned an estimated $42.6 million at 3,686 locations for Warner Bros. — both well above pre-weekend forecasts. “Venom” smashed the record for an October opening, topping the $55.8 million launch of “Gravity” by 43%.

“Venom” also dominated at the international box office with $125.2 million, setting an international record for an October opening. South Korea led the way with $16.3 million.

“Venom” and the critically acclaimed “A Star Is Born” were both able to draw effectively from beyond their core audiences. The strong domestic openings pushed the weekend’s total business to about $174 million, or 15% above the prior mark of $151.5 million set in 2015 when Matt Damon’s “The Martian” opened, according to comScore.

Adrian Smith, Sony’s domestic distribution chief, told Variety that the studio was able to overcome downbeat reviews by putting emphasis on “Venom’s” fun factor. “The idea was always to make a film that all audiences could enjoy,” he added.

Sony is hoping “Venom” will launch a shared universe similar to Disney’s lucrative superhero franchise. “Zombieland” director Ruben Fleischer helmed the film, which carries a $100 million budget. Hardy portrays Eddie Brock, a journalist bound to the alien entity known as Venom.

The fourth iteration of “A Star Is Born,” directed by Bradley Cooper, arrived in theaters amid a wave of positive buzz and an awards campaign that’s gained traction since its debut at the Venice Film Festival on Sept. 5. The release of the soundtrack album on Friday added to the film’s drawing power, according to Warner’s domestic distribution head Jeff Goldstein.

“This is a movie that will be around for months,” Goldstein added. “There’s a lot of room for growth, particularly among younger audiences.”

Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst with comScore, credited Sony and Warner Bros. with savvy scheduling and noted that “Venom” is yet another success for Marvel.

“A box office star is born as October sings a glorious tune the likes of which the industry has never heard before for the oft overlooked month, as a perfect harmony of superhero blockbuster and Oscar bound musical create one of the most perfectly orchestrated movie weekends at the multiplex in recent memory,” he added. “And the Marvel brand is just unstoppable.”

The weekend lifted the overall domestic total for 2018 to $9.11 billion as of Sunday, up 9.2% over the same point last year, according to comScore. Universal’s “First Man,” Fox’s “Bad Times at the El Royale” and Sony’s “Goosebumps 2” are the major openers next weekend. Universal’s “Halloween” is expected to do strong business of at least $50 million when it opens on Oct. 19.

Warner Bros.’ second weekend of animated entry “Smallfoot” finished third this weekend with $14.4 million at 4,151 venues, followed by Universal’s second session of Kevin Hart-Tiffany Haddish comedy “Night School” with $12.3 million at 3,019 locations. Amblin-Universal’s “The House With a Clock in Its Walls” finished fifth with $7.3 million in its third weekend for a domestic total of $55.1 million and $87.4 million worldwide.

Lionsgate’s fourth weekend of Anna Kendrick’s comic thriller “A Simple Favor” came in sixth with $3.4 million to take its 24-day domestic total to $49 million. Warner’s fifth weekend of horror-thriller “The Nun” followed in seventh with $2.6 million to push its 31-day take to $113 million.

Lionsgate-CBS Films’ second weekend of “Hell Fest” was battling for eighth place with Warner’s eighth weekend of “Crazy Rich Asians” with $2.1 million each. “Asians” has hit $169 million and is 2018’s 10th biggest domestic grosser.

Rounding out the top 10 was Fox’s fourth weekend of “The Predator” with $900,000, giving the sci-fier $50 million in 24 days. Studio 8-Sony’s “White Boy Rick” followed in 11th with $575,000 in its fourth frame to reach $29 million domestically.

National Geographic’s second weekend of rock climbing documentary “Free Solo” finished 12th with $540,000 at only 41 sites, followed by Fox’s debut of teen drama “The Hate U Give” with $500,000 at 36 locations. “The Hate” will go wide on Oct. 19.
 
Lets hope that the full movie is as good as the 4 minute clip makes it out to be.
Yeah, I am kinda worried that it might fall in the same trap SM3 and TAM2 did where it just tries to do way too much in one film. But no matter how it turns out, It'll still probably have had more effort into it than any of the other recent Sony Spiderman films.
 
Atrás
Top Abajo