Oh, the frustrating state of Billy Butcher, that beloved and irascible prick, here in The Boys Season 4. First, heâs demoted. Next, heâs ejected. Then, he bruises his way back in, only to be booted. Again. Which brings us to episode 4 (âWisdom of the Agesâ), where for the umpteenth time, Motherâs Milk returns Billy Butcher to standing with the group. Enough! Can we just say that the Boysâ formal command structure is fragmented, that theyâre all just passengers in the teamâs communal teardrop window van, traveling to the site of their next big mistake? Because Butcherâs status seems to be conveniently unstable, much like his condition thatâs supposedly terminal. Letâs get a closer look at those creepy-crawlies scuttling around beneath his skin:Â
While Butcher is prone to disorientation and blackouts, and frequent interactions with an apparition of his late wife that only he can see, heâs also able to ram crowbars through the faces of furiously-multiplying supes and take clandestine meetings with black bag CIA guy Joe Kessler. And shortly after his latest reinstatement, itâs also revealed that Billy Butcher somehow has the power to explosively dismember another supe attacker. Itâs Ezekiel (Shaun Benson), or at least it was Eziekel. The first appearance since Boys season 1 for the super-stretchy, blonde dye job sham preacher, now an ally of Firecracker, results in a particularly messy redistribution of his supposedly godly body parts.Â
Butcher has become both unreliable and more reliable. All of that subcutaneous grub scurrying, while allegedly making him terminal, has also mysteriously made him incredibly powerful.  Â
So was it the Compound V that did it? Maybe, maybe not. In an impulsive play to save his clinically brain dead father, Hughie contracts with A-Train to steal him a vial of Comp-V from Homelanderâs quarters. (A-Train does this, in the process discovering HLâs mason jar full of gray pubes, his secret stash of breast milk, and a vengeful Ashley Barrett leaving a floater in the head supeâs toilet.) When Butcher discovers the plan, he tells Hughie to quit while heâs behind, because Compound V will only worsen his dadâs situation. Butcher even admits he kept dosing himself with V. âAll it did was bring up the big day.â Hughie should know better, anyway, given his own misadventures with the Vought superdrug. Maybe he should have listened to Kimikoâs heartfelt but pragmatic advice via text. âI think youâre supposed to let him die.â
(The circumstances of Hughieâs A-Train meetup also involve his first exclusive team-up with Kimiko, a fun character moment derailed by the reappearance of Kimikoâs enemies in the Shining Light Liberation Army. Kimikoâs personal history with the scarred SLLA fighter we met briefly in episode 3 is intriguing. But once she blows her in half with a grenade launcher, only for Kimiko to regenerate like itâs no big thing, any tension in the scene dissipates.)
Homelander has gone home, upon the advice of all of the Homelanders in Homelanderâs shattered vanity mirror of a brain. But itâs not an opportunity for humanity and healing. Itâs an opportunity for vicious spite. Emotional and physical torture of the researchers who raised him in a facility operated by Vought International. Re-lived scenes from his violent lab rat youth, like the âbad roomâ with its red vault door, or the oven where they attempted to burn off his skin. (âGet in the oven, Frank.â) And the humiliation of Marty (Murray Furrow), the research lead, who Homelander forces to publicly masturbate before lasering the manâs groin anyway. A sneering frat boy prank and desperate act of projection, perpetrated by a superhuman whose insecurities are his own built-in kryptonite. But hey, at least Homelander brought the lab an ice cream cake. Fudgie the Whale!Â
Starlightâs reclamation of her power comes with great responsibility, which Annie January squanders by losing her cool on live television. Given Annieâs private medical records by Sister Sage during a broadcast of Truthbomb, Firecracker reveals Annieâs decision to have an abortion to the rabidly conservative viewing audience of Vought News Network. Starlight drowns out Firecrackerâs ugly pronouncements of âbaby killer!â by punching her repeatedly in the face, but Sage watches the commentary on the live feed go crazy â âFirst pebble down the mountainâ¦â â and Robert Singer calls Annie to withdraw his support of her and the Starlight House nonprofit. Singerâs regulatory bill for supes was set to fly through Congress. Now, not. âSorry doesnât bring back all the Republican votes you just torched.âÂ
Firecrackerâs toxic Iâm rubber and youâre glue act is causing a lot of Lâs for the Boys. Itâs all so much performative blather from the new Seven supe, who Homelaner has characterized as âlooking like she just fell off her jet ski.â Whatâs next from Firecracker? Showing up to the State of the Union dressed like a Batman villain? But itâs working. When Butcher and MM threaten to release incriminating information about Firecracker having sex with a minor, she turns it around on them, just like she did with Starlight. âFuck around and find out,â Firecracker retorts, and leans into monster mode. She had a relationship âwith a sweet young man.â Her sin was âwashed awayâ by the love of Jesus. All of that bullshit. The damage is done. Firecrackerâs brand remains strong â whatever you throw at her, it sticks to you â and the Boys are no closer to stopping Homelander and Sageâs plan for a coup.
BOYS NOIZE:
- The V52 Expo is an upcoming Vought event that resembles CPAC crossed with Comic-Con, and whoâs on the list of announced speakers but Sam Riordan and Cate Dunlap. Speaking of Gen V, We also get an advertisement featuring Derek Wilson as Tek Knight, the Boys universe investigative journalist who never met a hole he didnât want to fuck. âTonight, 8/7 central, on The Whole Truth. After their bloody campus rampage, Marie Moreau and the other Goldolkin Four have seemingly vanished into a dark, gaping holeâ¦â According to exec producer Eric Kripke, they were already writing the scripts for Gen V season 2 when co-star Chance Perdomo â As Andre, he was one of those falsely accused âGodolkin Fourâ â died in a motorcycle accident. (His role will not be re-cast.) As its first spinoff, the events of Gen V are emerging as increasingly relevant to whatâs occurring in the main Boys timeline.
- âStab me in the heart, I die. Stab me in the brain, and the little fuckinâ bitch grows back.â As the worldâs smartest person, it turns out Sageâs brain is furiously regenerative. But this process also causes her discomfort. Which leads us back to her episode 3 hookup with the Deep. She employs him again, this time saying they can continue their sex having, but only if he performs a field lobotomy on her frontal lobe. And he does it. This squirmy scene, where Deep sticks the probe in Sageâs eye socket, is very much giving Total Recall. âWhen you feel the crunch, youâre thereâ¦â Â
Johnny Loftus (@glennganges) is an independent writer and editor living at large in Chicagoland. His work has appeared in The Village Voice, All Music Guide, Pitchfork Media, and Nicki Swift. Â
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