đď¸Supersonicđď¸
Alex/Supersonic was a painfully irrelevant character who was introduced and briefly killed off all in S3. While his time on the show was short, his had his license to drive his way into all of our heartsâŚ
Alexâs abilities are actually never shown in the show whatsoever. It is mentioned that he has the ability to generate a sonic boom by clapping his hands, but we unfortunately never get to see this before his life is cut short by Homelander.
I find Alexâs role significant, not because of his weird faux love triangle with Annie, but because of the nature of âsoundâ throughout the series. Alex proves himself to be an ally, and to align himself with Annie on her journey to take down Vought. He gives us valuable insight into how not every supe is brainwashed and radicalized, and yet, we watch as his advocacy goes unnoticed and still punished.
He was a child star, a musician, and a true hero, but his power wasnât in the limelight like Annieâs. Despite the obvious fame he had, he was supposed to be an encouraging voice in Annieâs head telling her that sheâs not alone, and he served that purpose exactly.
Like literally every character we see get killed in this show, I just pretend theyâre not actually dead and weâre going to get a Dawn of The Seven style âAvengers Assembleâ moment for the finale, but yeah no, this flopâs dead.
âLet us give masculinity back its flowering wand of reciprocal relationship with the natural world. Let us call Dionysus to the gates of our cities and homes. A man who can dance with plants and honor beasts, a man who can be a woman and an androgen and an animal, is more than a gender. He is a celebration. A hive of humming bees. A secret network of fungus ready to erupt as the air moistens. A murmuration of birds. A cluster of grapes. A throng of singing women. A magician.â
â Sophie Strand, The Flowering Wand: Rewilding the Sacred Masculine
The sun-eyed witchâď¸
every time i remember that photo of the little inuk girl with her puppy i engage in inconsolable hysterics
All the Seven ( + Will Solace) from âHeroes of Olympusâ saga!Â
𧨠Ryan Butcherđ§¨
An under-analyzed character from The Boys cast, Ryan is the son of The Homelander. Being the first official natural-born superhuman, I find it curious that Ryan was never injected with compound V. Even though none of the babies could have consented to being shot up with a potentially lethal drug, Ryan having a genomic affinity for world shattering power forms the basis of any Evil Superman story you can think of.
Ryan being the first, and really the only one of his kind, creates this distance between him and the other Supes. None of them chose this life, but Ryan was raised with powers he never got to explore nor understand, while he was sequestered away under the protection of Becca. Homelanderâs reaction to this lack of self realization is heartbreaking to me, specifically because, unlike Homelander, Ryan was raised a human instead of an experiment. I find it almost insulting that Vought essentially propped Ryan up to have the exact backstory they fabricated for âJohnâ: a quiet life in a farmhouse in the middle of nowhere, Ă la Clark Kentâs origin story.
Ryan being this cookie cutter doppelgänger of his father creates this dynamic of showing the audience the hero Homelander could have been had he been raised by people instead of maniacal scientists in a lab. Additionally, it provides a bitter form of clarity on the nature of corruption. Given the circumstances that John went through, wouldnât any and every baby grow up to be exactly like him? You can try to explain that youâre special or youâre different, but without any form of support system or human socialization, and between being baked alive and probed beginning at infancy, I doubt most people would be capable of maintaining their humanity.
I pray that Ryan is able to truly internalize that the deaths of Becca, the stunt actor, and even Grace werenât truly his fault. I mean, if someone gave you superhuman strength as a preteen wouldnât you have an alarmingly high body count by now? If you ask me, the kidâs doing good, all things consideredâŚ
I think the most valuable lesson you should take away from his character is the concept of chance. Anyone, given the circumstance, could have been either John or Ryan. Ryan has the *chance* his father didnât to be a real hero, but whether he chooses power or mercy, is entirely up to chance.
*Butcherâs influence on Ryan is fascinating to me because, heâs a horrible role model. Butcher has just as horrible tendencies and selfish whims as Homelander, and yet, in Ryanâs eyes, is the more humane of the two purely because heâs just some guy. Now that Butcher can rival the strength of Homelander, and Ryan knows everything his fatherâs done, only time will tell how Ryan will begin to unpack his new perspective on Billy.*
Every problem with S4 stems from the decision to make The Boys a 5 Season show, making the writers have to riff for the majority of the season. If they just stayed on schedule all the weird filler wouldâve been cut and weâd be gearing up for the series finale.
Selene, the moon herself đ