Tom Hardy Sends Venom: The Last Dance to Fourth on Prime Video
Tom Hardy is back on the Prime Video chart, with Venom: The Last Dance rising to fourth place overall on the streamer’s global rankings. The 2024 release has returned to the list after wrapping the trilogy, a sign that Eddie Brock still pulls audience attention well after the film’s debut.
Hardy played Eddie Brock across Sony’s three-film Venom run, which began in 2018 and ended in 2024. The trilogy has made over $1.8 billion collectively, and this latest chart move keeps the property in circulation even as the film is also available on Netflix in the U.S.
Kelly Marcel’s 2024 finish
Kelly Marcel wrote and directed Venom: The Last Dance, after helping pen the previous two films. That matters because the trilogy did not simply survive a change in format; it stayed tethered to the same creative line from the start in 2018 through the 2024 closer.
The film runs 109 minutes and follows Eddie Brock and the alien symbiote after they were labeled fugitives at the end of Venom: Let There Be Carnage. From there, the pair are pursued by Xenophages sent by Knull, a role played by Andy Serkis. The lineup also includes Chiwetel Ejiofor, Juno Temple, Rhys Ifans, Stephen Graham, Peggy Lu, and Alanna Ubach.
A trilogy with $1.8 billion
The $1.8 billion total across the three Venom films is the real business story behind this chart return. These films were superhero spin-offs that turned middling reviews into crowd-pleasing results, and Hardy’s presence at the center of all three gave the series continuity that streaming audiences still seem ready to revisit.
Venom: Let There Be Carnage added Woody Harrelson as Cletus Kasady, extending the franchise’s roster before The Last Dance closed it out. Sony also announced a new Venom movie in February as an animated outing from Sony Pictures Animation and directors Zach Lipovsky and Adam B. Stein, which keeps the brand active beyond Hardy’s trilogy.
Prime Video’s fourth-place lift
Fourth place on Prime Video’s global charts puts Venom: The Last Dance back in front of a large built-in audience at a moment when catalog viewing still matters. For a 2024 release, that kind of rebound suggests the film is not living off opening-weekend memory; it is still being discovered, rewatched, and used as an entry point into the trilogy.
Hardy’s screen history stretches back to 2015 with Mad Max: Fury Road, but the Venom run is the cleaner business story: three films, one lead, and a cumulative gross above $1.8 billion. The streaming surge is the latest proof that the franchise ended on screen in 2024 but did not leave the market.