The Boys Season 5 Review: Dark, Twisted & More Brutal Than Ever

Homelander’s fascist grip tightens in a devastating final season of The Boys that pulls no punches. It is relevant, dark, and completely unpredictable.

The Boys Season 5 Review
Jensen Ackles (Soldier Boy), Antony Starr (Homelander)

I’ve spent years watching The Boys push the boundaries of what we consider acceptable for television. It is filled to the brim with visceral gore that cannot be unseen and has become the show’s calling card. But as I sat down to watch the first seven episodes of the fifth and final season, I realized that the show’s true power isn’t in its shock value – it’s in its terrifying relevance. The Boys has never shied away from the political. It has always functioned as a mirror reflecting the fractured state of our own reality.

The Boys Season 5 Review
Karen Fukuhara (Kimiko), Tomer Capone (Frenchie)

The final season picks up immediately after the devastating events of Gen V Season 2, and the atmosphere is instantly suffocating. We find Hughie, Mother’s Milk, and Frenchie trapped in one of Homelander’s Freedom Camps. It’s a dark opening that sets the tone for the rest of the season.

The Boys Season 5 Review

At the center of this storm is Antony Starr’s Homelander, who remains the most terrifying presence on screen. We’ve always known he was a narcissistic, deeply disturbed individual, but this season, his need for validation has reached a high that I never thought possible. He is no longer content with being a hero – and that is terrifying. He wants to be a god, an idol, and he only wants those who worship him to be on Earth.

The Boys Season 5 Review
Valorie Curry (Firecracker), Colby Minifie (Ashley Barrett)

The Boys season 5 is filled with pure, fascist terror. It is genuinely scary to watch because it feels so relevant to the world that we live in today. It’s deeply unsettling to watch a man who is both all-powerful and emotionally fragile be at the helm. He is more needy than ever, and that neediness makes him infinitely more dangerous. When he doesn’t get the love he feels he’s owed, he destroys everything in his path.

The Boys Season 5 Review
Tomer Capone (Frenchie), Karen Fukuhara (Kimiko), Karl Urban (Billy Butcher), Erin Moriarty (Annie January aka Starlight), Jack Quaid (Hughie Campbell)

The Boys – Butcher, Houghie, Annie, and the rest of the crew – are mounting a desperate, almost suicidal resistance. But for the first time in the series, it feels like they are truly fighting against insurmountable odds. There is a ticking clock hanging over the narrative (the details of which I’ll keep under wraps to avoid spoilers), and it infuses every scene with a sense of frantic urgency. The stakes have never been higher.

The Boys Season 5 Review
Karl Urban (Billy Butcher)

Being the final season, the plot armor that usually protects our favorite characters feels like it has completely evaporated. I am not prepared to lose the characters that I have grown to love, but who knows how things will end. Everyone feels in danger. Knowing the DNA of this show, I’m plagued by the thought that a happy ending might not happen. If any show is willing to end things on a truly devastating note, it would be The Boys.

The Boys Season 5 Review
Susan Heyward (Sister Sage), Colby Minifie (Ashley Barrett), David Andrews (Steven Calhoun)

Of course, this show wouldn’t be the same without the “holy shit, did they just do that?” moments. This season continues to push the envelope with creative, twisted sequences that make you want to look away while simultaneously being unable to. There are several fun cameos this season that viewers will be thrilled about. It seems many actors wanted to be a part of The Boys before its final episode was released, and they did not have a chance.

The Boys Season 5 Review
Erin Moriarty (Annie January aka Starlight), Laz Alonso (Mother’s Milk)

The humor is darker than ever, but when it hits, it really hits. I had a lot of fun watching incredible action sequences and brutal fights, but I couldn’t help but feel a heavy sense of unease throughout these episodes. Usually, by the penultimate episode of a season, you can see the pieces moving toward a specific endgame. Here? I have no idea where we’re going. The stakes are so high, and the world is so broken, that I genuinely don’t know if there’s a way to fix it.

The Boys Season 5 Review
Karl Urban (Billy Butcher)

The Boys Season 5 is packed with tension and intensity. It is a brutal, honest, and devastatingly relevant piece of fiction that feels less like a superhero show and more like a warning. I am worried, I am stressed, and I am completely hooked. As we approach the end of an era, The Boys proves that it is still the most vital, dangerous show on television. I’m just not sure I’m ready to see how it all burns down.

The Boys season 5 poster

About The Boys Season 5

Homelander controls America through fascist terror, imprisoning dissenters in Freedom Camps. Butcher, Hughie, Annie and The Boys mount a desperate resistance against insurmountable odds to stop his tyrannical rule.

The Boys Season 5 will premiere the first two episodes on Prime Video on Wednesday, April 8th, followed by weekly episodes, leading up to the epic series finale on Wednesday, May 20th.

NEXT: “The Passing of the Guard”: For All Mankind’s New Generation

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