It's the zeitgeist that everything has to have some atypical sexual connotation. I'll give you the scene where Venom ridiculously tells Eddie to get his things and get out of [their] apartment was clearly tongue in cheek nod to a romantic breakup, but the rest of the film is basically just two guys who can't survive without each other in a literal sense; i.e.: Venom needs a compatible host and Eddie can't be his best, relevant self without the abilities imbued upon him by Venom. This film was shamelessly a buddy comedy; romanticizing it is just another angle from which to make commentary that really isn't relevant but feels topical for "reasons."I keep seeing references to this, did I miss something in these movies? Like Im guessing this is referring to Venom and Eddie having like...romantic feelings for one another? Or was there like a gay scene between Eddie and the Detective I missed? Like at least as far as I could see both movies are genuinely about how much Venom and Eddie don't like one another and they're forced to tolerate each other for the sake of killing something, and to a lesser degree, a pair of chickens. Not quiet sure where the LGBTQXYZ+ part comes in.
I suppose one could say Eddie being white and Venom being black its a metaphor for post-Civil War reconstruction era South and the tension between the newly freed slaves and the white confederates?
I'm a heterosexual male who loves my my best friend who is also male. We've fought. We've made up. I promise you there was no sexual tension there. Why cinematic portrayals of something similar automatically become "queer" because it's lazily applicable to modern times is, well, lazy. Unless someone wants to convince me of the tacit sexual tension between Sgt. Riggs and Sgt. Murtaugh from the Lethal Weapon franchise?
So two guys can't love each other and express it unless they're gay?The part at the beach where they say they love each other.