This financial credit gets into spoilers for Venom, hence stop reading now if you haven't still seen the film!
Even casual fans know that Venom supposedly takes place in a universe that also includes Spider-Man. hence while the web-slinger doesn't perform slope in Ruben Fleischer's stock movie for Venom, rabid Spidey fans will still hear a number of references to characters that we take on from the comics, and from this world. One of them shows up unconditionally into the future in the movie, as astronaut John Jameson is name-dropped and shown (before he's speedily dispersed). Still, hearing the make known "Jameson" in a Venom movie raises all sorts of possibilities, hence afterward CinemaBlend got the opportunity to talk afterward co-producers Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach more or less the man's assimilation -- and if it means J. Jonah Jameson is also share of this world -- Arad teased:
In the comic... it was John Jameson who made [J. Jonah] Jameson take on that Spider-Man had killed his son. That's kind of how the collect Jameson mystique started, and next Venom [came along]. But the idea was that something happens in the show, and he gets involved. ... It's a good Easter Egg. Because the fans will know exactly why we call [that astronaut] John.
Avi Arad is right, in that J. Jonah Jameson always believed that his astronaut son was the type of hero that people should be worshipping, and he never understood why people rooted for Spider-Man, instead. Yes, in the comics, John was a rich astronaut, but his trips to expose actually brought back up rubies that turned John Jameson into the Man-Wolf in the pages of the Marvel comics.
Like most of what we see in Venom, it appears that John's legacy is going to be ret-conned and repurposed, and Avi Arad's reply to us actually hints at the paperwork that they could be going in this Spider-Man-free spider-verse. In the start sequence, John loses his computer graphics after subconscious a drama host to the symbiote. What if, in Venom 2, they introduce J. Jonah Jameson, and he blames Venom for the death of his hero son? And on the other hand of having a vendetta neighboring Spider-Man, this additional J. Jonah hates Eddie Brock's antihero, blaming him for his crushing loss?
It would be a alternating way to reintroduce J. Jonah, who was such an integral share of the Sam Raimi movies, but hasn't been seen in a Spider-Man movie yet. Could J. Jonah create a triumphant return... in the Venom franchise? era will tell, but Venom unconditionally moved us closer to that by using John. And where there's John, his loudmouth dad and usually near behind.
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