Over the years, Spider-Man did rejoin with the symbiote a few times, usually in the name of heroism. In Venomized, a Venom symbiote from another reality bonded to him for a little while.
The Foes of Venom
Eddie Brock's dislike of Peter Parker before he bonded with the symbiote translates into a deep love-hate relationship with Spider-Man, as Venom simultaneously wants to kill Spider-Man, but also re-bond with him.
Venom eventually comes to Spidey's aid and they work together to defeat the symbiote.
It's a result of the spell Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) casts at the end of No Way Home, but a spot of Venom's symbiote is left behind on the bar after Eddie has left. The scene means No Way Home does technically feature the Sinister Six.
Combining with the nearby Brock, the symbiote shared his hatred for Spider-Man, as well as mentally sharing with Brock its former host's secret identity of Peter Parker. From there, the two would be known as Venom, seeking violent retribution against the man who had wronged both of them.
Combining with the nearby Brock, the symbiote shared his hatred for Spider-Man, as well as mentally sharing with Brock its former host's secret identity of Peter Parker. From there, the two would be known as Venom, seeking violent retribution against the man who had wronged both of them.
Venom has endured as one of Spider-Man's most prominent villains, and was initially regarded as one of his three archenemies, alongside the Green Goblin and Doctor Octopus.
Besides communicating the apparent fact that Venom wants to eat brains — and Peter's looks tasty to Venom — Venom's hunger appears to be proof of an intrinsic attraction to Peter Parker.
Eddie Brock Becomes Venom (Scene) - Spider-Man 3 (2007) | Movie CLIP HD.
The Black Suit, otherwise known as the Symbiote Suit, is a living, breathing entity now known as the Venom Symbiote. It's seen a storied history of its own, beginning with Spider-Man before taking its own shape with photojournalist Eddie Brock to become the fan-favorite anti-hero Venom.
Edward "Eddie" Brock (a.k.a. Venom) was best friends with Peter Parker before going to college. He was working at Empire State University labs when the Venom symbiote was being studied.
He thought that by exposing the serial killer's identity, his father would finally give him the affection he craved. Unfortunately, the opposite happened, and their relationship strained even more. These events led to Eddie's hatred of Spider-Man and Peter Parker and eventually joining Venom.
Venom's alter-ego, Eddie Brock, already had a minor role in the script. Arad felt the series had relied too much on Raimi's personal favorite Spider-Man villains, not characters that modern fans were actually interested in, so Raimi included Venom to please them, and even began to appreciate the character himself.
Topher Grace also played Eddie Brock, a Daily Bugle employee that quickly becomes Peter Parker's rival, in Spider-Man 3. After detaching from Peter, the alien symbiote collectively known as Venom chooses Eddie as its new host.
Miles Morales, the movies' first black Spider-Man, was the focus of the movie, yes, but he was a Spider-Man among Spider-Men. But Morales' time as our lone webslinger doesn't last long.
“Buried in his brain is some knowledge of that connection.” So, we know that in the Tobey Maguire Spider-Man universe, Venom knows that Peter Parker is Spider-Man. And if the symbiote retains knowledge from all of its doppelgängers, then it would make sense that Tom Hardy's Venom knows who Spider-Man is as well.
His fear made complete sense from an in-universe perspective and lent Venom something unique as a villain. He was the one opponent Spider-Man was genuinely frightened of.
While Venom grew to be regarded as one of Spider-Man's archenemies, later comic book storylines depict him as an antihero, and he even reluctantly teamed up with Spider-Man when the lives of innocent people were at risk.
However, just before this, venom tells Eddie that symbiotes have a hive mind that spans “universes”. The reason why venom reacts so viscerally to seeing Peter Parker/Spider-Man on tv? Just like the NWH villains: Venom remembers Spider-Man killing him. That's why he goes “ohhhhh…that guy” and licks the screen.
Some people are completely immune to his Spider-Sense. Venom is known to act without setting off his Spider-Sense. This is because the symbiote acquired all knowledge of Peter's Spider-Sense and adapted to combat it. This immunity extended to Venom's "son" Carnage.
File this one under “no-brainer,” Carnage has long since been defined as Venom's true arch-nemesis, even more so than Spider-Man.
Richard Parker was the brother of Ben Parker and the father of Peter Parker, the super hero known as Spider-Man. He was responsible for the creation of the Venom Symbiote alongside Eddie Brock Sr..
While Eddie Brock is the only person who Venom remains close, Brock is also happy to be without the symbiote sometimes.