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This article contains spoilers for the Season 4 finale of Prime Video's "The Boys." In the finale of this season of "The Boys," Homelander, the self-obsessed superhero with a desire for all ...
Homelander learns from Firecracker that the mole is still alive and they become intimate when she feeds him her breast milk. Homelander begins to give Firecracker more weight on the team. Homelander kills Webweaver thinking he is the mole and sends The Deep and Black Noir II to kill Butcher and the rest of The Boys, without success.
Going into the final season, Kripke highlighted the fact that Homelander is “literally all trauma” after becoming the de facto leader of the “free” world through his machinations ahead of ...
Homelander (Antony Starr) has his most tense and terrifying episode of 'The Boys' yet in Season 4, Episode 4, as he takes revenge on a lab where he spent time as a child.
Becca confronts Homelander over his actions. Homelander retaliates by criticizing Becca for the way she is raising Ryan, going so far as to forcefully grab her wrist. Ryan defends her by using his powers against Homelander and makes Homelander leave. A police helicopter finds the Boys and attempts to stop the yacht. Kenji manages to free ...
M.M. gives up leadership of The Boys, passes the baton back to Butcher again, and considers leaving with Monique and Janine; A-Train convinces him not to leave. The Boys discover a plan to assassinate Singer that will be carried out by an unidentified Supe shapeshifter. Homelander kills Webweaver, believing he is the leak.
The eponymous Boys as depicted in the television series and comics respectively.. The following is a list of fictional characters from the comic series The Boys, created by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson, and subsequent media franchise developed by Eric Kripke, consisting of a live-action adaptation, the web series Seven on 7, the animated anthology series The Boys Presents: Diabolical, and ...
Initially, Homelander was cruel "top to bottom" upon arrival in the lab, Kripke previously noted. Starr, however, wanted more complex emotions with Homelander returning to the place where he grew up.