Venom: Kèo Cuối (2024)” – The Final Fight Between Monster and Man
Venom: Kèo Cuối (translated as Venom: The Final Bet) storms into theaters in 2024 as the explosive conclusion to Sony’s antihero trilogy. Directed by Andy Serkis, the film delivers a thrilling, emotional, and action-packed farewell to one of Marvel’s most unpredictable characters — Eddie Brock and his alien symbiote, Venom.
Set in a world on the brink of collapse, Kèo Cuối opens with Eddie (Tom Hardy) and Venom in hiding after the chaotic aftermath of Let There Be Carnage. Governments are hunting all alien symbiotes, and a mysterious biotech corporation known as GenTek is developing weapons specifically to exterminate them. But when an ancient, god-like symbiote named Klyntar Prime awakens beneath the Earth’s crust — one that could consume all life and even destroy the multiverse — Eddie realizes he and Venom may be the only beings capable of stopping it.
The twist? In order to defeat Klyntar Prime, Eddie must face the ultimate choice: sacrifice his humanity or allow Venom to fully take control. Their bond, which has always been turbulent and often hilarious, is now tested to the breaking point. The "final bet" refers to a deal between them — one last mission, one last chance to do something right before it all ends.
With stunning visuals and grotesque, high-octane symbiote battles, Venom: Kèo Cuối is the most visually ambitious entry in the trilogy. New symbiote hybrids are introduced, including a deadly GenTek-engineered villain called “Scythe,” whose blades can slice through even alien matter.
Tom Hardy delivers a raw, layered performance, portraying Eddie as a broken man trying to do the right thing while slowly losing himself. The film also features cameos that link to the broader Spider-Verse — teasing that while Eddie’s story may end, Venom’s legacy might live on elsewhere.
Dark, emotional, and violently spectacular, Venom: Kèo Cuối explores themes of identity, trust, and redemption in a world where the line between monster and man has never been blurrier.
In the end, it asks: can a monster become a hero — even if it costs him everything?
This is not just the final chapter. It’s the ultimate reckoning.