Venom: Let There Be Carnage aims to continue the character’s separation process from Spider-Man, an almost symbiotic relationship much like the one Eddie Brock has with his alien visitor. That trend will continue as Venom's sequel director Andy Serkis confirmed the film takes place in a world separated from the MCU's Peter Parker.

The first Venom movie was not especially well-received back in 2018, although Tom Hardy’s role as Eddie Brock was enough to convince producers to make a sequel for Marvel anti-hero. This time around, they brought in the talented Serkis, a man mostly known for his brilliant motion capture work in The Lord of the Ring franchise but who’s started adding a couple of directing credentials under his belt too with Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle.

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With Venom: Let There Be Carnage's trailer having just premiered, Serkis sat down with IGN to discuss some of the easter eggs that can be found in the preview, as well as some of his thoughts on the kind of story he wants to tell. With this in mind, Serkis made clear that this iteration of Venom remains completely detached from the MCU’s Spider-Man, because “the Venom story is his own world” and Brock is completely unaware of the web-swinging New Yorker.

To further elaborate on Serkis’s comments, he’s not completely ruling out some type of connection between the MCU’s Spider-Man and Venom forming, it’s just that it won’t be happening in this movie, thus dispelling any cameo rumors out there. That, of course, doesn’t mean the film will lack certain Marvel or Spider-Man references here and there, but these will primarily come in the form of easter eggs.

Serkis has been pretty vocal about his excitement to direct Let There be Carnage, clearly looking to make the best of the comical interactions between Eddie Brock and Venom, while also looking to introduce great villains that can fix the many shortcomings in the first Venom movie. With an absolute psychopathic villain like Carnage and his host Cletus Kasady, plus the emotional complexity of a character like Shriek, Venom: Let There be Carnage definitely promises a new type of antagonist for Marvel.

One of the key aspects that could point to the creative direction Serkis took is whether Let There be Carnage sticks to the PG-13 rating of the first movie or if it opts to scale its gruesome violence to higher levels. With the success of Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker, at least it’s been proven that an R rating is no obstacle for enviable commercial success.

Venom: Let There Be Carnage is scheduled to be released in theaters on September 24, 2021.

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Source: IGN