9/17/2023 0 Comments Toxin marvel eddie brock![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Symbiote children tend to be stronger than their parents, and Kasady and Carnage were incensed at the idea of anyone usurping their place. In much the same way the Venom symbiote and its host, Eddie Brock, initially spawned Carnage (and the other symbiote characters who inspired the Life Foundation symbiotes in 2019’s Venom) Carnage’s pregnancy is part of an asexual process where a symbiote produces a child as a response to panic or threat. Carnage from writer Peter Milligan and artist Clayton Crain introduced readers to a “pregnant” Carnage who was preparing to spawn a symbiote child, one of a truly unmanageable number of different symbiote offshoots born in Marvel comics over the years. Carnage #1 (2004) Image: Peter Milligan, Clayton Crain/Marvel ComicsĪ four-issue miniseries, 2004’s Venom Vs. Who is Toxin and what does this have to do with Carnage? Well, as with all of the best Venom stories, it’s a comically convoluted but fun yarn about weird alien pregnancy, jealousy, and a lot of slime. Mulligan just so happens to share his name with the first host of the Toxin symbiote in Marvel’s numerous Venom spinoff comics. In his final scene, actor Stephen Graham shows off the glowing blue eyes of seemingly possessed police officer Pat Mulligan. Taking a hint from Venom’s late-act Carnage reveal via Woody Harrelson’s take on Cletus Kasady, the sequel sneakily debuts a very special new symbiote before the credits roll. Venom: Let There Be Carnage may look like it’s singularly focused on Venom and Carnage’s feud from the outside - but take a closer look at the film’s final tease and you’ll find that it’s secretly a big screen family affair. ![]()
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