Spider-Man (Peter Parker) killed the Venom symbiote in the Spider-Man 3 movie by using high-frequency sounds from a bell tower, which weakened it enough for Harry Osborn (New Goblin) to fatally stab Eddie Brock, causing the symbiote to die with its host; in the comics, different Spider-Men have fought Venom, but Peter Parker (and sometimes Ben Reilly) has "killed" or defeated Venom by separating the host, with the symbiote often returning in other forms or hosts.
Meanwhile, Venom and Spider-Man fight on a deserted island, and Spider-Man strands Venom there after faking his own death.
Is Venom Really Dead in Venom: The Last Dance? At the end of Venom: The Last Dance, things turn out to be quite emotional for Eddie and Venom as Venom sacrifices himself to destroy The Codex and protect Eddie. He absorbs himself in the army of Xenophages sent by Knull to the earth.
It appears that the symbiote dies when they blast the meteorite with the particle accelerator, and Peter use Anti-Venom to free it from Harry. Whether or not some of it resides in Harry still or elsewhere remains to be seen.
In Amazing Spider-Man #299-300, Venom upped the ante on his campaign and revealed himself to Mary-Jane. Outraged, Spider-Man battled the creature, and defeated Venom when he encouraged Brock to lash out with webbing - he knew that the webbing was part of the symbiote, and that projecting too much would tire it.
During his final battle with Spider-Man, Harry temporarily gains lucidity and urges his friend to destroy Venom, at the cost of his own health. Peter reluctantly complies with Harry's wishes, destroying the symbiote, with Harry rendered comatose from the ordeal.
"Eight Deaths of Spider-Man" is a 2024 storyline published by Marvel Comics. It was created by Joe Kelly after the conclusion of Zeb Wells' run on The Amazing Spider-Man. The story involves Doctor Doom asking Spider-Man to defeat Cyttorak's Scions, giving him mystical armor that will resurrect him up to eight times.
Forming a particularly strong attachment to Eddie Brock, the Venom symbiote kept him alive for five-hundred years; replacing his failing organs with simulacrums manifested from its living abyss.
Top 10 Saddest Spider-Man Movie Deaths
The saddest Marvel deaths often cited include Iron Man (Tony Stark) for his ultimate sacrifice, Black Widow (Natasha Romanoff) for her selfless act and fight with Clint, Vision (especially his repeated deaths), Gamora (sacrificed by Thanos), Yondu Udonta (a father's sacrifice), and Wolverine (Logan) in Logan, for his emotional farewell to Laura, plus the devastating snap victims in Infinity War like Spider-Man, Black Panther, and Groot.
Only a few select people can withstand his seemingly endless talking, resulting in his mouth being sewn shut in the final act of X-Men Origins: Wolverine. Ajax also threatens to sew Wade's mouth shut in Deadpool when Wade is undergoing (unconventional) cancer treatment because of his nonstop talking.
Venom contains a massive amount of HP because of his role as a Vanguard. This is why Wolverine is the ideal counter for the symbiote since he can instantly rack up Rage. This will also boost his damage. If Venom ends up running away from a complex situation, Wolverine's Feral Leap ability can prevent him.
The result is that Venom dies to save Eddie and save the world from Knull's wrath, since Knull planned to decimate the planet where the symbiotes sought refuge. The Codex was the only key to Knull's prison, and since Venom died, it no longer exists.
The only reason Venom is physically stronger was because the symbiote gave him Spider-Man's powers the only difference being that when Peter got his powers he was a skinny teenage nerd compared to Venom when he got his powers was at physical human condition.
Last bit, to answer your initial question, Eddie was left wounded and dying from the spear, crawled back to the church where he got Venom for the first time, and Carnage (just the symbiote, no Cletus), without the All-Blood powers, struck a deal with him to be his host and save his life...
While coming close to killing Spider-Man numerous times in battles since their initial encounter, Venom also began to act as an antihero of sorts, hunting down and often killing people it believed to be guilty, while attempting to protect those in danger.
A note on the letters page of The Amazing Spider-Man #125 states: "It saddens us to say that the whiplash effect she underwent when Spidey's webbing stopped her so suddenly was, in fact, what killed her.", although later issues would reveal Gwen died from the fall itself.
Peter B. Parker divorced Mary Jane Watson in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse primarily because he was afraid to have children, fearing he'd endanger them and their future due to his dangerous life as Spider-Man, leading to rocky times and their split. This contrasts with the comics' complex, controversial deal with Mephisto to erase their marriage, with the movie offering a more grounded, relatable reason for their breakup, ultimately setting up his journey to reconcile with her.
No, Peter Parker is not officially diagnosed as autistic in Marvel comics or films, but many fans interpret his character through an autism or neurodivergence lens due to traits like social awkwardness, intense scientific focus (hyperfocus), difficulty with social cues, and feeling like an outsider, leading to discussions about him potentially being autistic or having ADHD. While some point to these behaviors as indicative of autism, other interpretations suggest Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) or simply his gifted, awkward personality.
Eddie and Venom arrive to fight Carnage. Venom is overpowered but provokes Frances into using her powers to separate Carnage and Cletus, after which he devours both. The collapsing cathedral crushes Frances. Mulligan, having survived Frances' murder attempt, becomes infected by a piece of Carnage.
Morlun is the only one to successfully kill Spider-Man. And even he died in the process. Ultimate Spider-man was technically killed by the Punisher. As he shot Peter.
The symbiote was implied to prefer Peter as a host as opposed to Harry, likely due to his power as Spider-Man. Its refusal to rejoin Harry when Peter attempted to return it the first time suggests this and even Harry says that the symbiote attaching to Peter after his injuries was not intentional.