Spoilers for the first three seasons ahead.
I nearly dropped "The Boys" after a third season that felt repetitive and stalled out. It was only because I knew that the show was ending with the fifth season that I decided to catch up on the fourth one, and then I debated whether to just write up the last two seasons together. However, I think the fourth season has enough for me to talk about in its own post.
There's still a lot about the fourth season of "The Boys" that is repetitive and feels like it's stalling for time. We don't appear any closer to the show's final goal of either killing Homelander or watching everybody die trying. However, there are some different goals and side-quests this year that play out in interesting ways, as well as a few new characters and old characters in new roles. Right off the bat, the best new addition to the show is Susan Heyward as the superintelligent Sister Sage, who is absolutely fascinating to watch because she is working toward her own unstated goals the whole time, which don't match the goals of anyone else in the show. She also has a habit of temporarily lobotomizing herself to enjoy sex and junk food binges, which gets funnier every time it happens.
I also like Valorie Curry as Firecracker, a right wing influencer and conspiracy theory peddler, who spearheads the media misinformation campaign against Starlight. I didn't think it was possible, but "The Boys" becomes even more blatant about tying Homelander's supporters to the alt-right this season, with Firecracker as a cutting caricature of the new breed of MAGA-era white nationalist zealot. The show apparently got a little too close to current events for comfort, prompting the finale to change its official title from "Assassonation Run" to "Season Four Finale," due to some of the depicted events. I found the Firecracker storyline the most difficult to watch due to how grating her schtick is, but I'm also very appreciative of it, because the satire is so spot-on.
Easily the most improved performer is Cameron Crovetti as Ryan, who is given much more to do as he gains more autonomy and starts asking more difficult questions of his two father figures. "The Boys" is better about balancing its dark humor with more sincere storylines this year, and Ryan experiencing some growing pains was one of the better ones. I also want to highlight Claudia Doumit as politician Victoria Neuman, who is one of this year's major villains. Like Sister Sage, she's a villain with some shades of gray, and it was genuinely hard to predict where her loyalties were ultimately going to land. I also want to acknowledge that Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Rosemarie DeWitt, Will Ferrell, and Tilda Swinton appear in this season in roles I will not spoil.
As for the main characters, the showrunners did a decent job of giving everyone new things to do, while not making it too obvious that nobody was making much progress. A-Train and Ashley got some of the funnier interactions as they toyed with dumping Vought. Deep and Black Noir (Nathan Mitchell) are pretty much pure comic relief at this point. Homelander gets points for never getting any less disturbing every time he shows up. On the other team, Hughie and Annie had a good season, weathering a lot of ups and downs. I wasn't sure why Frenchie and Kimiko were seemingly on a break at the beginning of the season, or how Frenchie ended up in a deeply problematic relationship with a guy named Colin (Elliot Knight), but at least that one wrapped up well. Butcher had a very big, meaningful arc this year, but it wasn't executed too well, regrettably.
I continue to prefer the show's worldbuilding to any of its actual plot. Season Four gives us a holiday ice show, an Avenue Q parody (complete with a song number about informing on your parents), superpowered farm animals, and the most depraved versions of Batman and Spiderman I have ever seen. The shocks are still pretty inventive and disgusting, which I respect, even if this part of the show hasn't worked for me for the past few seasons. And I'm looking forward to the finale, and seeing if "The Boys" can top itself one more time. This feels like the right time for "The Boys" to be ending, and I'm glad it's going on its own terms.
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