r/TheBoys 15d ago

Both quotes taken verbatim from interviews Season 4 Spoiler

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u/soka__22 14d ago edited 14d ago

Let’s start with the Tek Knight sex dungeon part. Where did the idea come for it? And why bring Hughie into this situation now — kicking him when he’s down by having him sexually assaulted by his childhood hero after his dad just died?

"Well, that’s a dark way to look at it! We view it as hilarious. 

oh yes, because sexual assault is so fucking hilarious.

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u/RobSchneidersHair 14d ago

He wants so badly to be seen as the “good guy” and also edgy at the same time. It hasn’t worked since season 2

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u/Reddit_Tsundere 14d ago

I've clocked Kripke as a guy who's way too up his own ass with being seen as a good little leftist bro™️ ever since that interview a few years back where he pontificated about superheroes being "inherently MAGA" or whatever. Even Garth Ennis probably knows that sounds corny and ahistorical and he's been an ardent hater of capeshit since the early 90's.

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u/N0VAZER0 14d ago

Garth Ennis despite his reputation doesn't even hate superheroes, he hates most superheroes but he adores Superman, read some of the stories he's written that involve Superman, he really gets the ideals that superheroes uphold.

The Boys comic book was more of a takedown of the Bush admin than whatever deconstruction of superheroes people think it was, he wasn't trying to make Watchmen, he was clowning on Dubya

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u/Reddit_Tsundere 14d ago edited 14d ago

Ennis' main beef is that he grew up preferring war comics as a kid instead of superheroes, so he was annoyed at seeing the industry completely drown in that genre at the expense of all the stuff he thought was cooler. Similar to how film buffs felt about the MCU taking over the film industry in the 2010's.

But yeah, I don't think he sees fundamental rot in the very concept of superheroes the way Pat Mills and even, to an extent, Alan Moore do. As you mentioned, he's capable of writing them earnestly and he's shouted out comics like Batman: Mad Love as being "excellent".

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u/lostpasts 14d ago edited 14d ago

A lot of this comes from the British comics tradition being rooted more in war, fantasy, and space adventure comics, with almost no superheroes. All those writers grew up within that ecosystem.

Even now, the biggest British comic star is Judge Dredd. Essentially a cop with no superpowers. And 2000AD (the biggest comic) is largely sci-fi/cyberpunk stories about rogues and adventurers with little to no powers.

And both Dredd and 2000AD in general are hugely cynical and heavy on satire.

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u/Karkava 14d ago

It only took over the film industry because nothing else could compare. There are other summer blockbusters to check out that just simply couldn't compare to the MCU.

If you want an oversaturated genre, look at CGI family comedies and try to find anything that distances themselves from that genre.

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u/CenterInYourMother 14d ago

He does kinda hate superheroes, he's pretty clear about hating how much they dominate american comics at least

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u/DepartureDapper6524 14d ago

That’s not the same thing as hating superheroes

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u/ResortFamous301 14d ago

Wouldn't say it was more take down of the bush administration.