“We are Venom.” What once sounded chaotic and thrilling now carries something darker in VENOM 4. This isn’t simply another battle between heroes and villains — it feels like the slow collapse of the boundary separating man from monster. Eddie Brock is no longer struggling to control the symbiote. He’s beginning to fear that there may be nothing left of himself without it.

From the opening moments, the film embraces pure instability. Cities pulse with paranoia, shadows seem alive, and every encounter carries the sense that violence could erupt at any second. The world itself feels infected by symbiote chaos, as though reality is slowly bending beneath the influence of something ancient and uncontrollable.
Tom Hardy once again proves why his version of Eddie Brock remains so compelling. Beneath the dark humor and madness lies genuine emotional damage. Eddie feels exhausted, isolated, and increasingly consumed by the creature living inside him. Their relationship no longer resembles partnership — it feels closer to addiction.

What makes this chapter especially fascinating is how deeply it explores identity. Venom is no longer simply a separate entity whispering in Eddie’s mind. The two are evolving together, merging emotionally and psychologically in ways that become genuinely unsettling. The film constantly asks whether coexistence is even possible… or if one side must eventually consume the other.
Visually, VENOM 4 looks feral and chaotic in the best way possible. Rain-covered streets glow beneath neon lights while symbiote transformations explode across the screen like living nightmares. Black tendrils twist through darkness with horrifying beauty, creating action sequences that feel unpredictable and almost animalistic.
The brutality is turned up dramatically this time around. Fights are faster, uglier, and more savage than ever before. Bones crack, bodies are thrown through entire buildings, and Venom moves with terrifying aggression that makes him feel less like a superhero and more like a predator unleashed into the modern world.

Yet despite all the destruction, the film never loses its strange sense of humor. The twisted conversations between Eddie and Venom remain one of the franchise’s greatest strengths. Their arguments, insults, and bizarre emotional dependence create moments that are both hilarious and strangely heartfelt amidst the chaos.
The new threats facing Eddie feel far more psychological than physical. This time, survival isn’t simply about defeating enemies — it’s about resisting transformation. As more symbiotes emerge and humanity begins losing control, Eddie realizes that the greatest danger may be the growing part of himself that enjoys becoming Venom.
One of the film’s strongest elements is its horror atmosphere. VENOM 4 leans heavily into body horror and paranoia, creating scenes that feel disturbing in ways previous installments only hinted at. The symbiotes are portrayed less like comic-book creatures and more like invasive forces capable of reshaping human nature itself.

Emotionally, the story becomes surprisingly tragic. Eddie is trapped between two impossible choices: reject Venom and lose the power keeping him alive, or fully embrace the symbiote and risk losing his humanity forever. That emotional conflict gives the film real weight beneath all the destruction and spectacle.
By the final act, VENOM 4 descends into absolute chaos. Entire city blocks collapse beneath symbiote warfare, monstrous creatures emerge from darkness, and Eddie Brock is forced to confront the terrifying truth about what he has become. The action becomes louder, bloodier, and more emotionally desperate with every passing moment.
Because in the end, the scariest monsters are not the ones hiding inside the darkness…
They are the ones learning to enjoy it.
