Venom let there be carnage gay scene

It’s been reported via The Hollywood Correspondent that there will be a ‘coming out‘ scene for Venom, the symbiote that lives within Eddie Brock’s body, in Venom: Permit There Be Carnage.

When it comes to shipping, Venom and Eddie have always been no.1 for fans of the two characters – despite one creature a literal pile of talking alien mud. Regardless of how we might feel about that particular tidbit that shippers seemed to have glossed over, the previous production had Eddie half-hating the symbiote and half-realizing that he needs it to survive. It’s a tricky situation to be in for Brock.

However, according to director Andy Serkis, the next motion picture looks as though it might lean into the LGBTQIA angle for the relationship between Eddie and Venom. As Serkis tells Uproxx, there is a scene in where the two of them go to an LGBTQIA festival of sorts and it’s there where the symbiote has a “coming out party.”

To be clear, the director states that during this scene, Venom says “We must stop this harsh treatment of aliens” and as such, “inadvertently” speaks for the freedom of “the other.” What this means

venom let there be carnage gay scene

How Tom Hardy Turned Venom into a Queer Icon
To some, releasing a trailer for Venom: The Last Dance during Pride month might just be a happy coincidence. But for queer fans of the Tom Hardy-led film series, the timing of this release was everything. While the previous entries in this film series, Venom and Venom: Let There Be Carnage, have been generally panned (including by some of our staff), there is a subset of fans who honor the films for the queer subtext lying beneath that flashy blockbuster facade. And a lot of this has to complete with Tom Hardy’s portrayal of both Venom and Eddie Brock.

venom movies are so amazing to me because it’s a shiny wrap of dudebro anti hero mindless action scenes that hides the actual candy inside which is a beautiful queer like story for the girls and the gays

— tului ^-^ @ Comms Start (@geneslovee) June 4, 2024

The Tagline On The Recent Venom Movie Poster?...
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Andy Serkis Talks Venom’s “Coming Out” and “Love Affair” Between Eddie and the Alien Symbiote in ‘Let There Be Carnage’

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Andy Serkis says a particular scene inVenom: Allow There Be Carnage is a “coming-out party” for the alien symbiote whose relationship with Tom Hardy’s Eddie Brock is “the center of the movie.”

In a recent interview with Uproxx, the Venom sequel director spoke about the film’s rave scene, which he distributed had originally been set in a “carnival of the damned” but evolved thanks to actor Hardy’s relationship with rapper Little Simz, who also appears in the movie.

“She actually had made a song, unbeknownst to her, called ‘Venom’ that joint very much with the first show. And so Tom got in tap with her and that song became sort of the focus,” Serkis said.

That’s when the director shared that Hardy and co-writer Kelly Marcel had wanted the scene to be a “coming out” event. “Well, Tom and Kelly were always about Venom coming out and going to a party that was a very sort of an LGBTQIA kind of festiva

'Venom: Let There Be Carnage' Is a Gay Care for Story and I'm Here for It

Venom: Let There Be Carnage is the sequel to the 2018 film Venom. This sequel’s synopsis may say it’s about the new symbiote Carnage, but this show is really about affection. It’s about the cherish between two insane killers, and the love between an alien symbiote and a human man. And I think that’s pretty. Spoilers ahead for Venom: Let There Be Carnage.

Eddie and Venom

Eddie and Venom’s relationship is the heart of this movie. They begin as roommates who have been living together for too long. Favor an old married couple, they’ve grown annoyed with each other and are constantly bickering. It even gets abusive. They battle physically at one show, trying to hurt each other in ways they know the other would suffer from most. Venom wrecks Eddie’s apartment and leaves. At first, the two couldn’t be happier to be apart. Yet, they’ve grown codependent. Venom, particularly, misses Eddie (he is a symbiote who needs a host, after all). But first, they must find who they are as individuals. Eddie returns to investigating on his own, and Venom finds his “people” (more on that later). 

When the cir

Venom: Let There Be Carnage is one of the best comic book movies I’ve seen.  There, I said it.  Damn me to hell, or pressure me to have breakfast with Venom.  How can I make this claim with a straight face?  Notice that I said “best comic book movie”.  Unlike the vast majority of superhero movies place out by Marvel and DC, Venom: Let There Be Carnage (a.k.a. Venom 2) isn’t striving to be taken seriously.  That doesn’t mean that the production wasn’t created with expertise, it certainly was.  Venom 2 has no pretenses about wanting to be mistaken for a wonderful dramatic experience, filled with angst, paint, guilt and self-doubt intermixed with fistfights.  No, Venom 2 only wants to entertain you, and it succeeds so thoroughly I hope the other superhero movie factories take notes.  Highly Recommended.

While not a lifelong comic book reader, I’ve study many comic books, and I felt like the filmmakers behind Venom 2 knew exactly what they were doing.  Like the best comic books, Venom 2 wastes no occasion establishing who the terrible guys are.  That would be Cletus Kasady and Frances Barrison (a.k.a. Shriek).  They were a suit ma