Filmtracks Home Page Filmtracks Logo
MODERN SOUNDTRACK REVIEWS
Menu Search
Filmtracks Review >>
Venom: The Last Dance (Dan Deacon/Various) (2024)
Full Review Menu ▼
Average: 2.68 Stars
***** 17 5 Stars
**** 29 4 Stars
*** 47 3 Stars
** 48 2 Stars
* 35 1 Stars
  (View results for all titles)
Composed and Co-Produced by:
Dan Deacon

Co-Orchestrated and Conducted by:
Pete Anthony

Co-Orchestrated by:
Jon Kull
Jim Honeyman
Andrew Kinney
Philip Klein
Henri Wilkinson
Edward Trybek
Gernot Wolfgang
Mike Watts
Jonathan Beard
James Young
Jaimee Jimin Park

Additional Music by:
Stephen Richard Davis
Nathaniel Blume
Tori Letzler
Alex Liu
Roger Suen
James Young

Co-Produced by:
Jason LaRocca
Total Time: 57:29
• 1. Knull's Order (1:24)
• 2. Area 51 to 55 (2:35)
• 3. Venom and Eddie at the River (1:52)
• 4. Hanging Out at the Waterfall (2:04)
• 5. Newsflash (1:45)
• 6. Lab Battle (3:27)
• 7. Remember Me (8:13)
• 8. Sky Dive (0:38)
• 9. Desert Walk (0:38)
• 10. Frequent Flyers (0:45)
• 11. Strickland Reprimands Paine (1:48)
• 12. Sneaking Around (1:04)
• 13. What Are You Doing Here (2:18)
• 14. Request Permission (0:59)
• 15. Say When (3:41)
• 16. Phoning Home (4:39)
• 17. Ramping Up (1:19)
• 18. Strickland and Paine (2:23)
• 19. General Bosco Banana Man (1:03)
• 20. Explaining the Backstory (5:39)
• 21. Crashing the Party (0:45)
• 22. Following the Osprey (0:49)
• 23. Safer Underground (0:47)
• 24. Poking Around (1:38)
• 25. Blasting Out (1:11)
• 26. It's Not Safe Here (1:57)
• 27. Last Try (0:58)
• 28. It's a Showdown (1:08)

Album Cover Art
Sony Classical
(October 25th, 2024)
Digital commercial release, with vinyl options.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,194
Written 11/4/24
Buy it... for a serviceable and generally agreeable score for the concept, Dan Deacon playing the genre safe with a decent narrative that achieves a few tonal highlights.

Avoid it... if you lament the total loss of consistency across the three scores comprising the Venom sub-franchise to this point, nothing surviving from the prior entries in this sequel.

Venom: The Last Dance: (Dan Deacon/Various) Fulfilling the three-film contract guiding the Venom offshoot of Sony's Spider-Man Universe, the 2024 sequel Venom: The Last Dance concludes the story of Eddie Brock and the Venom symbiote. In the process of achieving some destiny for Venom and Brock, the movie introduces a new villain out there in the universe, Knull, responsible for the creation of the symbiotes that plague Earth and eying a return to power. The plotline of this third movie deals with his attempt to receive a power from the death of either Venom or Brock to assist in this evil plan. A nasty accomplice of this cranky baddie is a lizard/arachnid hybrid of immense size, otherwise known as a Xenophage, that is the kind of thing kids have nightmares about seeing emerge from the hole at the bottom of their toilets while sitting on them. And then there are the human soldiers of Imperium who are getting involved in the symbiote phenomenon for better or worse. By the end of this tale, the whole point is to see a bunch of human and symbiote combinations in battles against ugly, undesirable creatures that need eliminated. Critics found little point to Venom: The Last Dance though audiences provided some moderate responses to perhaps salvage the franchise for another day. With Kelly Marcel coming aboard as director for this entry, so too did her collaborator, composer Dan Deacon, an American electronic musician who has increasing dabbled in mainstream film scoring during the 2020's. While his prior film music certainly did not earn much of a mainstream spotlight, Venom: The Last Dance accomplishes exactly that. He takes the opportunity to devise a score that resembles a safely conservative product that any such emerging composer would devise to bolster credentials for that attention. In other words, it's a score that focuses on not screwing up. With the help of a massive crew of support, Deacon further broadens his palette and writes a score with a surprisingly conventional orchestral base to coincide with his comfortable synthetic tendencies. There's absolutely nothing special about Deacon's approach to the score, but, on the other hand, it's a perfectly serviceable and workmanlike genre entry nestled amongst a handful of songs. While there are challenging passages of atonal muck, the entirety of the work provides more than adequate depth for the narrative on screen and is actually quite listenable on its own.

  • Return to Top (Full Menu) ▲
  • © 2024-2025, Filmtracks Publications