![]() ![]() ![]() On Friday, Venom, an extra-dark and slimy and body-horror-oriented spin on the feared/beloved Marvel character, will hit theaters, with Tom Hardy in the titular role. It does not, however, explain how Topher Grace got cast as a vicious extraterrestrial supervillain in the first place. And this, hand to god, is what he sees:īiologically speaking, Venom is a big ol’ dark cell that beats up all your existing cells. But before he turns fully super-evil, Parker hands off a slime sample to a scientist buddy of his. ![]() It gloms onto Peter Parker, the lovable doofus otherwise known as Spider-Man, and wraps him up tight in a new black suit, which seems ominous. So for all its stumbles, all its bloat, all its catastrophic miscasting, give Sam Raimi’s woebegone 2007 blockbuster Spider-Man 3 credit for describing the Venom phenomenon in simple biological terms anyone can understand.
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