The Boys: Homelander Finally Has a Weakness That He Can’t Laser

Amazon Prime Video’s The Boys has a habit of exploring Homelander’s vulnerabilities when his physical abilities are off the table, and it continues to do so with its much-anticipated fourth season. Early in the season’s premiere, viewers see another subtle element that could undo everything Homelander has worked for: he is aging. It’s a rude awakening that he is not as perfect as he’d always believed when he starts peeing more often, with his hands coming away each time holding his own gray hair. 

Supes make Vought a ridiculous amount of money, but they are only marketable when they look their best. Aging does not sound good for any supe, especially one like Homelander, in a world where it is practically unheard of for supes to grow old. Vought keeps that fact hidden from the public to maintain the illusion that superheroes are immune to such human weaknesses. The company continues to raise new supe generations, phasing out any deemed unfit for the cameras. Homelander knows this, and realizing that his longevity might not match that of older supes like Stormfront, Soldier Boy, and the rest of Payback disturbs him.


Why Does Homelander Age?

Face off between Homelander and Soldier Boy in the aftermath of Herogasm.

For a supe widely regarded as the pinnacle of Vought’s experiments with Compound V, it is interesting that Homelander is aging at all, especially since Vought already scaled this hurdle as far back as the ‘50s. While The Boys does not explicitly address Homelander’s faster aging, fandom circles speculate that it could be because he is the most ‘human’ supe ever, having had Compound V introduced to his genetic makeup at a cellular level. 

For others, the effects might have begun after the battle with Soldier Boy. Given Soldier Boy’s radiation blasts can weaken even the strongest supes by burning Compound V out of their bloodstream, as seen with Queen Maeve, Homelander’s accelerated aging may be a side effect of his proximity to the blast at Seven Tower. 

Homelander’s Uncharacteristic Reaction

Homelander in "incognito" mode, as Sage calls it, when he goes to call on her for advice.

Very few things have rattled Homelander as much as his aging does. He struggles to find answers to this unwelcome discovery, and in doing so, is forced to make some mental changes. For the first time, he seeks counsel from someone he considers subordinate to him and is willing to listen to criticism, while uncomfortably, without tearing who’s talking apart mid-sentence.

Viewers see the first test of his mental growth in the person of the smart-mouthed Sister Sage, who pointedly highlights every flaw in his design, particularly the one that bothers him. She flips his superiority complex on him when he asks her to prove to him why she’s called the smartest person on the planet, despite him seeking her out of his own free will. With a casual once-over, she condescendingly tells him that he’s graying, using the fact that his stylist now dyes his hair 1.67 times more often than before as a reference.

“And between that and your large prostate—look at your hands; you’ve been washing them more often, so likely you’ve been peeing more often, which makes sense—you got a lot of power, but you do age.”

What Does This Mean for Vought and the Seven?

The Seven has been all but that number for most of the show, but with Homelander and his perceived invincibility at its helm, there has been almost no fuss to fill the empty spaces at the table. However, now that the most powerful supe in the world realizes that his longevity is in question, he significantly accelerates his plans for world domination. Now at the pinnacle of leadership at Vought, he enlists Sage and Firecracker alongside The Deep, Black Noir II, and A-Train to help him establish a ‘kingdom’ for his son, Ryan, whom he publicly speculates is going to have the last spot on Vought’s foremost superteam.

Homelander is, however, only willing to have it as such if he remains in the picture himself, which makes it more about cementing his own status as God-on-Earth while he still can. Coming to terms with the idea that someone else will take his place, even if that person would be his own son, is difficult for him.

It is one thing to have to leave the limelight due to age, and it is entirely another to watch other people insinuate that someone else might need to fill your shoes soon. His reaction is barely suppressed discomfort when he overhears that Ryan is practically more valuable to the movie production team at Vought than he is. This, especially after they had to incur a budget deficit of $9 million due to their using visual effects to make the older supes (including Homelander) appear younger in The Dawn of the Seven.

Ultimately, the old, destructive Homelander re-emerges in the season finale. He holds a handful of gray pubic hair and furiously crushes them, reminding fans that his response to anything beyond his control will always be pure destruction. 

Amazon Prime Video’s The Boys finally returned to the big screen for a much-awaited fourth season, introducing new players in this game of cat and mouse between regular humans and supes. Valorie Curry’s Firecracker and Susan Heyward’s Sister Sage join the Seven as pivotal players in advancing Homelander’s tyranny. Meanwhile, Billy Butcher’s psyche frays from Compound V use and births a resulting parasite that helps him become an even more ruthless supe-killer. 

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Abdulqudus Mojeed

TV/Movie Stuff Writer

Whether movies or TV shows, plot details jump out at me whenever I watch them; I can't fight it. What I now enjoy doing is exploring them in depth through research and writing. It helps me understand the story better while letting me relive and share the moments that hit hardest.