Fans React To The Boys S5 Finale And That Homelander Scene


Oi! The Boys has wrapped its 40-episode run spanning seven years with a series finale that will be talked about for years, for better and for worse. Season 5 episode 8 was not everything I wanted it to be, but it was enough for where the show had gotten. Not everyone agrees. While some fans found it a nice surprise given how much they feared the show was careening off the tracks, others remain unsatisfied with how many loose threads were left dangling in the wind.

If you haven’t already watched the finale, and somehow still haven’t been spoiled on the ending despite the internet being full of screenshots from it, then go back now. You’ve been warned.

Heading into The Boys season 5, episode 8, some people were predicting an epically bungled ending that would even give Game of Thrones’ catastrophic And who has a better story than Bran?” conclusion a run for its money. Instead it arrived at what has been feeling like an inevitable conclusion for more than a season now. Homelander is stripped of his powers, the supe is shown without his metaphorical clothes on, and the catharsis viewers have been waiting five seasons for is delivered.

Was it worth the wait? Here’s what people have been saying:

Some of these criticisms I get. There were definitely plenty of side-plots and scenes that went no where, and plenty of characters that got short-changed as the train hurtled toward its final station. But if you were expecting an epic final battle from a show predicated on parodying that exact kind of storytelling, well, I’m not sure what to tell you. The issue might be less with showrunner Eric Kripke’s creative direction than with some people’s TV viewing comprehension.

I think in the end many people still complaining about The Boys simply wouldn’t have been satisfied with anything less than another whole season or two. Unfortunately, the show’s over now as Amazon Prime moves onto Vought Rising. That spin-off isn’t set to air until sometime in 2027. Anyone still pining for more sociopathic comic-book super hero satire will have to go back to the original source material in the meantime. Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson’s comic book series ran for 72 issues and concludes with a different ending than the show.





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