Hubbry Logo
Soldier BoySoldier BoyMain
Open search
Soldier Boy
Community hub
Soldier Boy
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Soldier Boy
Soldier Boy
from Wikipedia
Soldier Boy
Herogasm and The Boys character
From left to right: Soldier Boy I as depicted in the television series' The Boys and Gen V and Soldier Boy III as depicted in the comic series
First appearance
Last appearance
Created byGarth Ennis
Darick Robertson
Based on
Adapted byEric Kripke
Designed byLaura Jean "LJ" Shannon
Greg Hopwood
Portrayed byJensen Ackles
In-universe information
Full nameBen (television series)
SpeciesSupe[broken anchor]
GenderMale
TitleSoldier Boy
B.C.L. Red (Big Chest-Laser)
OccupationSuperhero (only publicly)
Propaganda film actor (formerly)
Affiliation
WeaponShield
Chest-laser
FamilySoldier Boy I:
Homelander (son; television series)
Ryan Butcher (grandson; television series)
Significant othersHomelander (Soldier Boy III; comic series)
Crimson Countess (Soldier Boy I; season 3)
NationalityAmerican
Abilities
  • Super-strength, speed, stamina, indestructibility, agility, reflexes, senses, and mental processing from Compound V
  • Combat-experienced and hand-to-hand combatant
  • Accelerated healing
  • Slowed aging
  • Master tactician, strategist, and field commander
  • Wields a shield made of a proprietary, high-density Vought alloy (fictional metal, highly durable and bullet-resistant)
  • Emanation of Compound V-negating nuclear radiation (Soldier Boy I; season 3)

Soldier Boy is the name of three superhero characters in the comic book series Herogasm and The Boys, created by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson. The first character introduced (but the third Soldier Boy in the timeline, with his two predecessors having died) is the elected leader of the Vought-American-sponsored superhero team Payback. He is depicted as one of the only "Supes" (i.e. "superpowered" or "superhuman" individuals, often acting as "superheroes") with selfless, benevolent motivations, who detests the use of profanity. However, Soldier Boy annually has sex with Homelander alone at the "Herogasm" orgy, under the mistaken hope that the "test" of doing so will convince Homelander to let him join his own superhero team, The Seven. After his most recent dalliance with Homelander, Soldier Boy is captured by CIA black ops agent Billy Butcher and brutally tortured and murdered by him for information on Homelander's recent activities. The original Soldier Boy is later revealed to have been mercy killed by Mallory during his first mission at the Battle of the Bulge, after his "Avenging Squad" inadvertently caused Mallory's men to be massacred, and been replaced by the second for the remainder of the war.

In the Amazon Prime Video television adaptation, Soldier Boy (Ben) is introduced in the third season, portrayed by Jensen Ackles. A composite character of the comic book characters, this Soldier Boy is depicted as the first American non-aging Supe, created by Frederick Vought during World War II, whom Mother's Milk deems responsible for his family's downfall. A foul-mouthed "bonafide war hero", while working with the CIA during the Cold War as the leader of Payback, Soldier Boy was betrayed to the Russian government and experimented on for forty years. He is inadvertently freed by the Boys in the present-day while they were seeking the "superweapon" B.C.L. RED to use to kill Homelander, which in actuality is Soldier Boy himself, who, due to experimentation, can now emit an energy beam from his chest (Big Chest-Laser) which negates the superpowers of any other Supes with whom it comes in contact. It is later revealed that Vought used Soldier Boy’s sperm to create Homelander without his knowledge (he was told to provide a sample for research purposes), thus making them father and son. Ackles returned in the 2023 spin-off series Gen V, portraying a Supe's imaginary friend Soldier Boyfriend, modelled after Soldier Boy. The character has received a positive reception.

Appearances

[edit]

Comic book series

[edit]

Soldier Boy III

[edit]

Soldier Boy is introduced in Herogasm as the "elected" leader of the Vought-American-sponsored superhero team Payback. At the titular annual orgy of Supes, he is said to have had sex with Homelander alone every year out of the belief that he will let him join his own superhero team the Seven (a promise which Homelander has no intention of fulfilling), primarily existing as comic relief. As Homelander is inspired to begin planning a "Supe revolution" against Vought and their puppet rulers in the White House shortly after having sex with him for the most recent time, Soldier Boy remains obliviously standing by Homelander's side as he prepares to announce his plans only for him to be interrupted by the Guy From Vought.[1]

In The Boys arc "The Self-Preservation Society", Soldier Boy has his nose bitten off by CIA black ops agent Billy Butcher, the Homelander's archenemy and leader of the Boys, who begins to brutally beat and torture him for information on the Homelander and his activities over the next few days, mocking him for having claimed to be the same Soldier Boy who fought in World War II, kept alive by being frozen in suspended animation, an identity he was forced to assume and impersonate by Vought. In the "What I Know" arc, Butcher is revealed to have killed Soldier Boy with a public funeral being held for him and members of the Seven (including the Homelander) serving as his pallbearers.[2][3]

Soldier Boy I

[edit]

In The Boys arc "Barbary Coast", in precedence of telling "Wee Hughie" Campbell about the true sadistic nature of Billy Butcher, Lieutenant Colonel Greg D. Mallory tells him about his own history with Supes, beginning with his captaincy during World War II, when his company was made by government and Vought officials to supervise the "Avenging Squad", a team of the first American-made Supes, led by the first Soldier Boy, during the Battle of the Bulge. While eager to serve, Soldier Boy had little military experience, and ordered the flying members of the team to inspect the area for a Nazi presence, oblivious to the fact that doing so would expose their position. Realizing what Soldier Boy had done, Mallory only had time to give his men a brief warning before the enemy (a nearby Waffen-SS platoon) attacked, massacring both his and Soldier Boy's men. After coming across a mortally wounded Soldier Boy, near-vertically bisected by a blast, in the aftermath, Mallory had then dropped a grenade by his feet before walking away, mercy killing him.[4][5]

Soldier Boy II

[edit]

Continuing to tell Hughie about his own past in The Boys arc "Barbary Coast", Mallory reveals that by 1950, he learned that new versions (new Supes under the same designs and branding) of Soldier Boy and his brethren had been created by Vought to replace them, fighting elsewhere, known as "Crimefighters Incorporated" after the war and making propaganda films for the United States government. This second Soldier Boy would eventually later die in unknown circumstances, and be succeeded by the third in modern times, presented by Vought (like the second) as the first still-alive Soldier Boy.[6]

Television series

[edit]

The Boys (2019–present)

[edit]

In the third season of the television series adaptation, Jensen Ackles portrays a composite character based on the various comic book characters known as Soldier Boy, created by Nazi defector Frederick Vought during World War II in 1944, via injections of Compound V into a normal soldier. After being mentioned by Stan Edgar in the 2020 second season as an early test subject for Compound V, represented via a statue,[7] Soldier Boy is said by Marvin T. "MM" Milk in the third season to be responsible for killing his grandfather whilst thwarting a carjacking, motivating his father's decision to "work himself to death" as a lawyer attempting to bring down Vought and causing MM's Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. Soldier Boy was said to have been killed while preventing a nuclear meltdown during the Cold War. Believing this story to be false and upon learning of the location of a Russian superweapon known as B.C.L. RED said to have actually killed Soldier Boy, Queen Maeve sends Billy Butcher to verify whether it did or not and then retrieve it, both hoping to potentially use the weapon to kill Homelander, the unstable leader of the Seven, due to Vought having equated him and Soldier Boy to have been on a similar to equal power level.

Interrogating and killing Soldier Boy's former sidekick Gunpowder after injecting himself with "V-24" (a temporary variant of Compound V) given to him by Maeve, giving himself temporary superpowers,[8][9] Butcher learns that Soldier Boy was actually killed during a joint black ops mission between his Supe team Payback and the CIA in Nicaragua in 1984, working against the Sandinistas, under the supervision of Butcher's own mentor Grace Mallory.[10][11][12][13][14][15] Confronting Mallory, Butcher learns that the vast majority of her men had been massacred by Russian and Nicaraguan troops in an ambush in 1984 and that while she did see Soldier Boy fight off several soldiers in the subsequent battle,[16] she had been knocked out while avoiding friendly fire from Gunpowder and only learned of Soldier Boy's death upon her awakening caused by an unknown "superweapon" (B.C.L. RED), witnessed by his then-girlfriend Crimson Countess.[17]

Not wanting it publicly known that the Russian government had the capability of killing Supes, President Ronald Reagan had ordered the incident to be covered up with Vought receiving full immunity. In reality, Stan Edgar had orchestrated the whole incident to get rid of Soldier Boy by allowing Payback to betray him as revenge for the physical and mental abuse he had inflicted upon them, with the intention of replacing him with Homelander. The team managed to incapacitate Soldier Boy with novichok, but not before he burned Black Noir's face and bludgeoned him repeatedly in the head with his shield, leaving Noir with significant brain damage.

After failing to track down the Crimson Countess in the present, Butcher and The Boys make their way to Russia and infiltrate the secret laboratory which Maeve believed to hold B.C.L. RED. After being overwhelmed by Russian soldiers, whom Butcher and Hughie Campbell then kill after taking more V-24, Butcher discovers and opens the B.C.L. RED. pod, only to find it contains a still-living, comatose, and bearded Soldier Boy. Inadvertently awakened from his induced coma, Soldier Boy exits the pod and releases a powerful radiation blast from his chest (Big Chest-Laser) that hits Kimiko Miyashiro and leaves her powerless and wounded (counteracting her usual regenerative abilities). The Boys retreat to stabilize her as Soldier Boy escapes, Butcher surmising his new abilities to be a result of experimentation.[18]

Soldier Boy returns to the United States by smuggling himself onto a commercial flight. While wandering New York City, he experiences a powerful flashback (triggered by hearing a song that was played whilst he was being experimented on), causing him to relive several traumatic moments while in Russian captivity. The ensuing rage triggers a destructive radioactive burst and he levels the better part of a five-story apartment complex, drawing the attention of Homelander as a potential new supervillain. After finding his way to former Vought executive "The Legend," he recovers his original uniform and confronts the Crimson Countess, who Butcher had restrained as a show of good faith in a bid to join forces with him (with MM being falsely led to believe was to use her as bait to kill Soldier Boy). After revealing his torture and disappointment that Payback never came to rescue him, Crimson Countess reveals that she and the rest of Payback secretly despised him and betrayed him to the Russians for no money. Afterwards, Soldier Boy kills her with a radioactive burst.[19][20][21][22][23]

After joining forces with Butcher and Hughie, with Soldier Boy agreeing to kill Homelander in exchange for them helping him track down and kill the remaining members of Payback, the group infiltrates Herogasm, an annual superhero orgy hosted by Soldier Boys' former teammates the TNT Twins. After the TNT Twins claim Noir sold him out to the Russians, Soldier Boy suffers another PTSD episode and releases an energy blast, destroying the building, vaporizing the Twins and multiple guests, and injuring others. Before the group can escape, they are confronted by Homelander. Hughie, Butcher, and Soldier Boy manage to overpower Homelander after a fight, but he is able to escape the energy blast in the nick of time.

While hunting down Mindstorm, one of the two remaining members of Payback (the other being Noir), Soldier Boy starts to hear voices which greatly concerns Hughie and Butcher. Butcher reveals to Hughie that he has supplied Soldier Boy with marijuana to keep him from having another destructive episode. After triggering a booby trap, Mindstorm attacks Butcher by forcing him to endlessly relive his traumatic past. Soldier Boy leaves Butcher for dead despite Hughie's protests. Later, Hughie confronts Soldier Boy about his PTSD, drug use, and constant showboating of his military past. Hughie had previously learned from the Legend that Soldier Boy's service during the Second World War was mostly propaganda, having taken more active roles in suppressing race riots and opposing the Civil Rights and peace movements, with there being "rumors about Dealey Plaza". Later, realizing the error of his ways, Hughie betrays Soldier Boy and saves Mindstorm, who in turn frees Butcher in return for being teleported to safety. Soldier Boy arrives soon afterward and bludgeons Mindstorm to death with his shield, but not before learning from him Edgar's role in his capture and the reason for it. A few years before he was captured by the Russians, Soldier Boy had provided semen samples to Vought scientist Jonah Vogelbaum for genetic experimentation, which Vogelbaum had subsequently used to create Homelander as a more powerful replacement. After learning from Mindstorm, Soldier Boy reveals the information to a shocked Homelander during a phone call to him.

After Soldier Boy informs Butcher and Hughie of the revelation that he is Homelander's father, the two, and later the rest of the Boys and Maeve, become concerned that he and Homelander will team up. He tells Butcher of his own privileged background, starkly contrasting with the humble original story developed by Vought, which allowed him to enter Frederick Vought's Compound V trials. Soldier Boy's father, a prominent steel magnate, neglected him and regarded him as a disappointment, disowning him and his new superhero persona as he had not earned his superpowers himself. Soldier Boy, Butcher, and Maeve go to Seven Tower to fight Homelander and Black Noir, detaining the Boys in a disused safe at the Flatiron Building. However, Homelander, having earlier killed Noir (for keeping his parentage secret) and retrieved Ryan, attempts to connect with Soldier Boy saying that they and Ryan could be a family. After Soldier Boy disowns Homelander as weak, damaged, attention-seeking, and a disappointment, he attempts to blast him and fulfill his agreement with Butcher. However, after Ryan lasers Soldier Boy to stop him from attacking Homelander and Soldier Boy makes the mistake of striking Ryan in retaliation, he ends up fighting Butcher, Annie, MM, and Kimiko with Homelander reluctantly fighting Queen Maeve. When they attempt to use a batch of novichok improvised by Frenchie to knock out Soldier Boy, he attempts to release an energy blast in retaliation. Before he can kill the Boys, a grievously-injured Maeve pushes him out of the window to save them, losing her own powers when he discharges mid-air. In the aftermath, Soldier Boy is detained in cryostasis on Mallory's orders, while his statue in front of Seven Tower is toppled by supporters of both Homelander and Stormfront after Vought's news media wing report that Soldier Boy's attack was motivated by Russian indoctrination.

In the season 4 finale when Speaker of the House Steven Calhoun assumes the office of President of the United States on behalf of Homelander, he discovers Soldier Boy is alive in a stasis pod and immediately brings Homelander to his location. Homelander overlooks his pod with a sad expression.

Gen V (2023–present)

[edit]

Ackles reprised his role as Soldier Boy in a "cameo" in the episode "Jumanji" of the 2023 spin-off series Gen V. While trapped inside Cate Dunlap's (Maddie Phillips) mind, the main group encounters Soldier Boy, who exists as an imaginary friend in Cate's mind, known simply as "Soldier Boyfriend". Soldier Boyfriend introduces himself and his relationship with Cate before explaining what is occurring in Cate's mind, such as the lightning being blood vessels bursting. Soldier Boyfriend warns them to find a way to escape before her mind collapses and they all enter a vegetative state, intending to tell them of the method himself before he is zapped by electricity from Cate's mind.[24][25]

Promotional material

[edit]

Soldier Boy is mentioned and pictured throughout the 2020–2021 promotional web series Seven on 7 with Cameron Coleman, with the last film he had starred in, 1983's Red River, being released to Vought's new "Vought+" streaming service, while The Boys Presents: Diabolical first season finale "One Plus One Equals Two" mentions Homelander to be the first Supe since Soldier Boy to hold the same level of "caliber" as him in the public eye;[26][27] Eric Kripke additionally expressed interest in a future episode of Diabolical set in the comic series' continuity, like "I'm Your Pusher", adapting Soldier Boy III's and Homelander's sexual relationship, which was not adapted to the live-action series' different Soldier Boy I, with Ackles potentially also voicing the younger character.[28]

To promote the character's appearances in the third season of The Boys, Jensen Ackles appeared in several videos depicting Soldier Boy's in-universe promotional campaigns for Vought and the United States government in the 1980s, in particular recording several anti-drug PSAs and serenading the dancers of Solid Gold with a rendition of Blondie's "Rapture".[29][30][31][32] Following the airing of this cover, Ackles additionally expressed interest in recording a potential album of similar cover works, tentatively entitled "Soldier Boy Sings The Hits".[33][34]

Powers and abilities

[edit]

The character was designed as a parody analogous to Marvel Comics' Captain America, a basic "supersoldier" trained in shield-fighting, who maintains a genuinely patriotic and innocent approach to his role, not realizing the depravity of the Supes around him (never resorting to foul language or joining his team during the "Herogasm" orgies, although he privately has sex with Homelander at each one, believing each encounter to be a "test" for him to join the Seven and leave Payback).[35] He is in the habit of reciting the names of states while engaged in battle. It is claimed he fought in World War II, though Butcher claims otherwise and refers to this story as an insult to the people who really did; Soldier Boy is later revealed to be the third Supe to have taken the mantle, after the first was killed during his first mission and the second fought during the war only to die later.

For the 2022 third season of the television adaptation, Soldier Boy was redesigned by Laura Jean "LJ" Shannon and Greg Hopwood as analogous to both Captain America, Superman, and the Winter Soldier, in particular the former's "Nomad" depiction in the 2018 Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) film Avengers: Infinity War, as portrayed by Chris Evans, with a practical pointed shield for defense and attack. Soldier Boy also possesses the ability to produce radiation that can be released from his chest in beams of energy or explosive burst, that can also fry the Compound V out of a Supe's system, courtesy of Soviet-era experimentation.[36][37][38][39][40] Soldier Boy is frequently described as being nearly as strong as Homelander, which is proven in the episode Herogasm, where his superhuman strength and durability rivals that of Homelander, allowing him to fight him almost evenly. Soldier Boy is also shown to be a formidable hand-to-hand combatant as well, as he was able to overpower and defeat Butcher in their brawl when Butcher was empowered by Temp-V.

Development

[edit]
Ackles at the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con

Addressing Soldier Boy III's sexual relationship with Homelander in the Herogasm comic series, Eric Kripke confirmed that it would not be adapted to the television series adaptation,[41][42][43] with Jensen Ackles instead portraying the original World War II-era heterosexual Soldier Boy I introduced in the "Barbary Coast" arc of The Boys.[44] In the show, Soldier Boy survived the war into modern times, having been held prisoner and experimented on in a laboratory, in-and-out of an induced coma, from 1984 to 2022.[45][46] Prior to Ackles' casting, Kripke intended to "cast an older actor, because we were going for like a grizzled John Wayne sort of vibe",[47] before instead offering Ackles the role. Kripke and Ackles had previously worked together on the first five seasons of The CW's Supernatural. Ackles was also "in contention for a brief time" (although did not audition) for the role of Steve Rogers / Captain America in the 2011 Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) film Captain America: The First Avenger (prior to Chris Evans's casting), a character of which Soldier Boy is a parody; Ackles characterised them as "Captain America on his ass, [and] as if [he] gave up super-heroism and was just your drunk and inappropriate uncle".[48][49] On the character's relationship with Homelander in the third season of the television series adaptation, Ackles stated that:[43][50]

"Homelander is the new iteration of Soldier Boy. He's the new kid on the block in Soldier Boy's eyes. Going back to that toxic masculinity: very true to form, one of the first things that ever comes out of Soldier Boy's mouth after he looks at a big poster of Homelander is 'What the fuck?' It's just looking at the world around him, knowing he doesn't fit in and [that] things are different. And there it is, personified in this statuesque red, white and blue superhero. He's not thrilled about that. The relationship is immediately contentious. They have their words."[43][50][51]

Reception

[edit]

The character and Ackles' portrayal in the third season of the television series adaptation have received a positive media reception.[52]

Ackles' cover of Blondie's "Rapture" received additional praise from the band itself, with original singer Debbie Harry describing the rendition as "epic".[53][54][55]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Soldier Boy is a superhuman character in the Amazon Prime Video series The Boys, portrayed by Jensen Ackles as Benjamin, America's first successful Compound V-enhanced soldier created by Vought American during World War II. Born in 1919 to an abusive industrialist father, his official Vought-propagated backstory portrayed him as rising from poverty through hard work and bravery, masking a reality of privilege and trauma that influenced his combative, self-aggrandizing personality. As leader of the Vought-sponsored superhero team , Soldier Boy served as a patriotic icon in efforts during WWII and later operations, including CIA-backed missions, embodying an of macho with , near-invulnerability, and the capacity to emit explosive radiation blasts from his chest. Betrayed by members during a 1980s confrontation with rivals, he was captured by Soviet forces, subjected to experiments that amplified his destructive powers, and placed in cryogenic stasis until liberated by Billy Butcher's team in the present day. In season 3, Soldier Boy pursues vengeance against Homelander—whom he sired via artificial insemination—and temporarily allies with The Boys, but his uncontrolled blasts level city blocks, and his archaic prejudices and authoritarian instincts underscore the series' critique of unchecked superhuman power and corporate myth-making.

Appearances

Comics

Soldier Boy denotes three successive superheroes sponsored by Vought-American in the comic series The Boys, co-created by writer Garth Ennis and artist Darick Robertson, serving as a parody of legacy patriotic figures like Captain America. The original iteration emerged during World War II, enhanced via an experimental serum known as Compound V (specifically V-One variant), which granted superhuman strength, durability, agility, reflexes, and extended lifespan without aging. This version fought Axis forces, embodying Vought's early militaristic exploitation of superhuman assets for propaganda and combat. Subsequent replacements proved markedly inferior, reflecting the series' critique of corporate diluting heroic ideals into incompetence and . The second Soldier Boy operated as a fraudulent, panic-prone figure lacking the founder's prowess, while the third, active in the , led the corporate Payback but displayed only marginal enhancements from Compound V, including superhuman speed to evade bullets and skilled handling of a steel-alloy for offense and defense. This final version appears prominently in the Payback storyline, where he participates in Vought-orchestrated missions but crumbles under real threats. In key events, the third Soldier Boy encounters during an assault on ; bites off his nose amid combat, captures him alive despite severe injuries, and subjects him to prolonged torture for intelligence on supergenics' vulnerabilities and locations. ultimately executes him in a brutal manner, underscoring the character's fragility against non-supes driven by rage and preparation. These depictions span the main The Boys series (issues including #32–34 for the confrontation and demise) and the Herogasm miniseries, highlighting Soldier Boy's role in satirizing manufactured heroism and its rapid obsolescence.

Television

Soldier Boy is portrayed by actor Jensen Ackles in the Amazon Prime Video series The Boys. Ackles was announced for the role on August 17, 2020. The character makes his live-action debut in the third season of The Boys, which premiered on June 3, 2022, and features prominently as a key figure in the season's narrative arc across multiple episodes. Ackles reprises the role in a brief cameo in the sixth episode of Gen V, the first season of the The Boys spin-off series, which originally aired on October 20, 2023; this appearance depicts a hallucinatory version of the character. Jensen Ackles is set to return as Soldier Boy in Vought Rising, an upcoming prequel series to The Boys set in the 1950s, with production beginning in August 2025; the show explores the character's early years and Vought's origins, with Ackles starring alongside Aya Cash as Liberty. No release date has been announced.

Other media

Soldier Boy has inspired a range of merchandise tied to The Boys franchise, including officially licensed t-shirts depicting the character in comic-style artwork, available through specialized retailers. Apparel such as unisex tees featuring Soldier Boy's likeness is sold via Sony Pictures' official store, often priced around $24.95 with options for worldwide shipping. Cosplay costumes replicating Soldier Boy's outfit, complete with armor, helmet, and accessories, are offered on platforms like Amazon, targeting fans for events like Halloween. Custom and handmade items, including figurines and apparel variants, appear on marketplaces like Etsy, reflecting fan-driven demand. No adaptations in video games, animated series, or other formats beyond comics and live-action television have been released as of 2025.

In-universe biography

Comics depictions

In the comic book series The Boys, created by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson, Soldier Boy serves as a satirical take on the archetypal patriotic superhero, akin to Captain America, emphasizing incompetence, cowardice, and corporate exploitation rather than genuine heroism. The character manifests in three distinct iterations, each representing Vought-American's evolving attempts to market a star-spangled figurehead for propaganda purposes during and after World War II. These versions highlight the series' critique of manufactured icons, portraying Soldier Boy not as a valiant defender but as a disposable pawn in Vought's supe-industrial complex. The original Soldier Boy, designated Soldier Boy I, debuted as the leader of the Avenging Squad, a precursor team to later groups like , operating during the . First depicted in The Boys #52 ("Barbary Coast, Part 1," March 2011), he embodies wartime but is shown committing atrocities, such as sexually assaulting a local woman during a Pacific campaign against Japanese forces, underscoring Ennis's deconstruction of heroic myths through moral depravity. Possessing baseline and durability enhanced by Compound V, he wields a for combat but lacks exceptional prowess compared to later supes. His tenure ends in obscurity, killed off-panel amid the squad's failures, symbolizing Vought's early, rudimentary supe experiments. A second iteration briefly referenced in flashbacks maintains the patriotic motif but receives minimal narrative focus, serving primarily to illustrate Vought's iterative branding failures post-war. The most prominent version, Soldier Boy III, leads the corporate-sponsored team Payback in the late 20th century and first appears in the miniseries Herogasm #1 ("Babylon," 2009). Depicted as an aged, out-of-touch relic desperate for relevance, he covets a spot in The Seven, prompting Payback's disastrous assault on Vought Tower. Cowardly and buffoonish, Soldier Boy panics during the confrontation, urinating himself and singing show tunes like "Yankee Doodle Dandy" amid the chaos. Homelander dispatches him gruesomely by lasering off his genitals before exploding his head with heat vision, reducing him to a pile of viscera and reinforcing the supes' fragility against top-tier threats. His abilities mirror the originals—superhuman strength sufficient for brawling, enhanced durability against conventional weapons, and shield-throwing proficiency—but prove woefully inadequate, positioning him as Vought's faded mascot rather than a peerless warrior. Across depictions, Soldier Boy's portrayal critiques and , with discarding iterations as public tastes shift, devoid of loyalty or legacy. No version exhibits advanced powers like flight or energy projection, relying solely on physical enhancements that pale against modern supes, emphasizing Ennis's theme of supes as flawed, hype-driven celebrities.

Television storyline

In the third season of The Boys, Soldier Boy is depicted as the patriotic superhero and leader of the Vought-managed team Payback, active during the 1980s and presumed killed in action during a covert operation in Nicaragua on December 12, 1984. Beneath his facade of patriotic heroism, he embodies arrogant, pompous, and misogynistic toxic masculinity, marked by abusive, vengeful, and petty tendencies toward teammates. Archival footage and Vought's historical narratives portray him as America's first successful Compound V-enhanced superhuman, injected during World War II, with abilities including superhuman strength, durability, and later-developed radiation emission. Flashbacks reveal his domineering and abusive treatment of Payback members, including Crimson Countess and Black Noir, fostering resentment that culminates in their betrayal; with Vought's tacit approval, the team hands him over to Soviet agents during the Nicaragua mission. This behavior stemmed from deep insecurities and bitterness due to his father's verbal abuse, dismissing him as a "disappointment" and "not good enough," which fueled his need to assert dominance and despise weakness in himself and others. Captured by the USSR, Soldier Boy endures decades of cryogenic stasis interspersed with brutal experiments aimed at weaponizing his powers, resulting in his ability to generate blasts capable of stripping Compound V from other supes' bloodstreams. He awakens in 2022 after Russian operative Grace Mallory and her team inadvertently trigger his release during an assault on a hidden facility. Disoriented and vengeful, Soldier Boy systematically eliminates surviving members, triggered by humiliations and betrayals into extreme rage and uncontrolled destructive outbursts. Examples include lethally blasting Crimson Countess at point-blank range after her confession of hatred and betrayal at her Voughtland performance on June 13, 2022; killing Mindstorm with a radiation blast upon learning Vought had replaced him with Homelander; and later projecting his father's disappointment onto Homelander by calling him a "weak, sniveling pussy" during confrontations. His pursuit draws the attention of , who, desperate to counter , injects himself and with temporary Compound V and recruits Soldier Boy for his destructive potential. The alliance proves volatile, marked by Soldier Boy's misogynistic attitudes, substance abuse, and intent to eradicate all supes indiscriminately upon learning from Mindstorm that is his biological son, conceived via 's use of his preserved semen; he often lashes out violently at perceived weakness, such as attacking Butcher. During the event on June 25, 2022, Soldier Boy unleashes a blast that decimates supes and Soldier Boy himself survives but is subdued temporarily. In the season finale on July 1, 2022, , Hughie, and Soldier Boy infiltrate Tower to confront ; Soldier Boy activates a full-power detonation, depowering nearby supes including Queen Maeve, but halts upon spotting Ryan Butcher. When Soldier Boy attempts to kill the boy, intervenes, defeating him in combat, after which , , and other supes agree to return Soldier Boy to cryogenic containment rather than execute him, preserving him as a potential asset. Soldier Boy's storyline extends into the fourth season through flashbacks and references, including Butcher's hallucination-induced interactions and a 2024 mention of a failed attempt on facilitated by his temporary release, underscoring ongoing geopolitical tensions over his custody between U.S. and Russian interests.

Powers and abilities

Comics versions

In the comics published by from 2006 to 2012, "Soldier Boy" is a title held by multiple characters created by and , each embodying a satirical take on patriotic super-soldiers akin to . The first Soldier Boy led the Avenging Squad during World War II-era operations, demonstrating superhuman strength sufficient to combat enemy forces and enhanced durability to survive battlefield conditions. Subsequent iterations, including the third Soldier Boy who headed the Payback team in the 1970s and 1980s, exhibited similar physical enhancements: superhuman strength allowing them to overpower normal humans and lesser supes, increased stamina for prolonged combat, and resilience to conventional weapons and injuries that would incapacitate non-supes. These abilities stem from Compound V administration, Vought-American's serum granting variable superhuman traits, but Soldier Boy variants are depicted as mid-tier supes, vulnerable to higher-powered adversaries or coordinated assaults without specialized offensive capabilities like energy blasts. No version displays radiation emission or depowering blasts, features unique to the television adaptation; instead, their prowess relies on melee combat skills honed through military-style training and a signature shield for defense and offense. This portrayal underscores their role as Vought's tools, prioritizing symbolism over raw power, with each iteration meeting inglorious ends—such as death in botched missions or betrayal—highlighting the fragility beneath their heroic facade.

Television version

In the television adaptation of The Boys on Amazon Prime Video, Soldier Boy, portrayed by Jensen Ackles, possesses superhuman strength sufficient to overpower other supes and destroy structures with ease, as seen in his confrontations during Season 3. He exhibits exceptional durability, surviving prolonged cryogenic freezing, torture, and direct hits from high-caliber weaponry without fatal injury. Soldier Boy's signature ability is the emission of radioactive energy blasts from his chest, which produce concussive force capable of leveling rooms and emitting that temporarily or permanently depowers other Compound V-enhanced individuals, as demonstrated at and against . This power emerged as a of Soviet experiments involving radioactive exposure during his decades-long , enhancing his offensive capabilities beyond standard supe physiology. Additional attributes include accelerated healing, immunity to conventional poisons and diseases, resistance to extreme temperatures, and partial immunity that allows him to resist mental manipulation attempts. He also demonstrates superhuman speed and agility in combat, enabling rapid strikes and evasion. Soldier Boy employs a triangular emblazoned with an eagle, constructed from an advanced that withstands superhuman impacts and gunfire, using it for both defense and as a thrown in engagements. His extended lifespan, with minimal aging since the , underscores the Compound V's longevity effects, positioning him as one of Vought's earliest successful supes.

Creation and development

Comics origins

Soldier Boy was co-created by writer Garth Ennis and artist Darick Robertson as a recurring element in the satirical superhero deconstruction of The Boys comic series, embodying a critique of patriotic iconography and corporate superhero branding. The character's concept draws from archetypes like Captain America, portraying an "America's first superhero" as a mantle passed among ineffective or disposable individuals managed by Vought-American to sustain public mythos and profit margins. The original Soldier Boy iteration first appeared in The Boys #2 (October 2006), published by Comics, as the leader of the World War II-era Avenging Squad, a -backed team deployed against Nazis but revealed as militarily useless. In this depiction, Soldier Boy suffers a breakdown during the on December 1944, screaming incoherently amid combat; CIA operative Grace Mallory mercy-kills him to silence the liability, after which conceals the death and substitutes replacements to preserve the brand. Subsequent versions, including the cowardly, shield-wielding leader of team (a parody of the Avengers), debuted in The Boys: Herogasm #1 (April 2009), published by following Wildstorm's cancellation of the main series. These iterations underscore and Robertson's intent to expose superheroes as commodified products, with Soldier Boy's lineage illustrating Vought's pattern of recycling identities for expendable supes rather than genuine heroism.

Television adaptation

The television adaptation of Soldier Boy for The Boys, developed by showrunner , substantially reimagined the character from his origins to serve as a credible threat to . In the , Soldier Boy is depicted as an incompetent, cowardly figure and a title passed among multiple holders, functioning primarily as a satirical take on without significant power or depth. Kripke noted that Garth Ennis's version was "a completely bumbling loser," but the series required a supe with comparable strength to Homelander for dramatic conflict, stating, "It’d be great to have a who was as strong as him and could actually fight him." This version positions Soldier Boy, portrayed by , as the first successful recipient of Compound V, America's inaugural superhero who fought in and subsequent conflicts under Vought's promotion. Betrayed by his team in 1982, he was captured by the Soviets, subjected to torture, and weaponized, emerging with (PTSD) and a dependency on marijuana to manage symptoms. His powers include , durability, and shield proficiency akin to the comics, but augmented by explosive energy blasts capable of depowering other supes by frying their Compound V. Biologically, he fathers via insemination, adding layers of generational tension and paternal rivalry absent in the source material. Ackles was cast after submitting a self-taped audition during the COVID-19 pandemic, performing opposite pre-recorded lines from Karl Urban's Billy Butcher, despite not being on the studio's initial shortlist of more prominent actors. With Kripke's guidance—drawing from their prior collaboration on Supernatural—Ackles advocated aggressively for the role, which premiered in season 3 on June 3, 2022. The adaptation emphasizes Soldier Boy's confident yet damaged persona, contrasting the comics' bootlicking cowardice, to explore themes of toxic masculinity and wartime trauma within the series' critique of superhero idolatry.

Themes and cultural impact

Patriotic symbolism and heroism

Soldier Boy's visual design draws heavily from iconic American patriotic symbols, featuring a star-spangled shield reminiscent of Captain America's, a cape evoking the American flag, and a styled after World War II-era attire, positioning him as Vought International's engineered emblem of national pride and martial valor. In both the comics and television adaptation, he is marketed as the premier supe soldier who fought Nazis during , with public narratives emphasizing his role in liberating and upholding democratic ideals against totalitarian threats. This portrayal aligns with mid-20th-century tropes, where superhuman figures symbolize unyielding and heroic sacrifice. However, the series subverts this symbolism by revealing Soldier Boy's heroism as a fabricated corporate , with flashbacks depicting him as a product of Compound V experimentation rather than innate valor, and his wartime exploits as exaggerated for profit rather than genuine patriotism. In the television version, his leadership of team during the involves CIA-backed operations that prioritize geopolitical dominance over moral heroism, culminating in betrayal and cryogenic storage after a failed mission in on December 12, 1982. Showrunner has described Season 3's exploration of Soldier Boy as interrogating "America itself as a ," using his arc to contrast public adulation with private cowardice and brutality, such as his indiscriminate radiation blasts and abusive treatment of subordinates. In the comics, Soldier Boy similarly parodies the archetype as an incompetent, foul-mouthed leader whose "heroic" facade crumbles during a Herogasm event, exposing the hollowness of Vought's patriotic branding. Kripke notes that while the TV iteration amplifies Soldier Boy's era-specific machismo and nationalism—evoking 1940s-1980s American self-image—the core critique remains: superheroes like him cloak fascism and self-interest in the rhetoric of patriotism, rendering true heroism illusory. This duality underscores the character's role in deconstructing how corporate-controlled icons exploit national symbols to mask ethical voids, privileging spectacle over substantive defense of liberty.

Masculinity and generational conflict

Soldier Boy's character in The Boys television series exemplifies a mid-20th-century archetype of masculinity rooted in stoicism, physical dominance, and unyielding patriotism, reflecting the cultural expectations of World War II-era American men who prioritized toughness and emotional restraint. Actor Jensen Ackles, who portrays the character, described Soldier Boy as hailing from "a time when men were supposed to be tough" and suppress vulnerability, traits amplified in flashbacks depicting his leadership of the Payback team through intimidation and abuse. This portrayal critiques such ideals as toxic, evidenced by Soldier Boy's arrogant, pompous, and misogynistic demeanor embodying unchecked toxic masculinity, with deep insecurities from his father's verbal abuse—dismissing him as a disappointment and inadequate—fueling bitterness, a need to assert dominance, and contempt for weakness in himself and others. He exhibits abusive, vengeful, and petty tendencies toward teammates behind a facade of patriotic heroism, reacting to humiliation, betrayal, or reminders of personal failures with extreme rage and violence, such as lethally blasting Crimson Countess after her betrayal confession, killing Mindstorm upon learning Vought replaced him with Homelander, projecting paternal disdain onto Homelander by calling him a "weak, sniveling pussy" and attempting to kill him, and attacking Butcher when perceiving weakness; these triggers often unleash uncontrolled destructive outbursts via his radiation powers. The generational conflict emerges prominently through Soldier Boy's biological paternity of , revealed in the third season's penultimate episode on July 2, 2022, positioning him as a flawed whose legacy perpetuates dysfunctional male dynamics across eras. noted that Soldier Boy's introduction shaped season 3's exploration of toxic masculinity transmitted "from generation to generation," with embodying a modern, media-saturated evolution—seeking paternal validation Soldier Boy withholds, leading to clashes that highlight evolving yet persistent pressures on male identity. In the season finale aired July 8, 2022, Soldier Boy's readiness to depower and abandon despite their relation illustrates old-guard pragmatism overriding filial bonds, contrasting 's emotional fragility and amplifying intergenerational tensions over what constitutes authentic manhood. This father-son rift extends to broader thematic critiques, where Soldier Boy's rejection of Homelander's pleas for approval—dismissing him as weak in a July 2022 context—reinforces a causal chain of unaddressed trauma, from Soldier Boy's cryogenic in 1982 to Homelander's lab-raised isolation, without resolution across generations. Kripke emphasized this unpursued dynamic as central, noting in 2024 that season 5 would delve deeper into their unexplored relationship, underscoring how outdated masculine norms fuel ongoing conflicts rather than foster growth.

Critiques and controversies

Soldier Boy's depiction as a bigoted, misogynistic figure from a bygone era of American heroism has drawn criticism for reinforcing stereotypes of toxic , with actor describing the character as "toxic masculinity embodied in one character." A therapist analyzing the role labeled him the "poster boy" for such behavior, citing his emotional suppression, aggression, and inability to form healthy relationships as rooted in generational trauma and outdated norms. Some conservative reviewers argued this portrayal distorts traditional into a of evil, using Soldier Boy's bravado and —such as references to slapping women "like Connery"—to advance a partisan agenda against and pre-1960s heroism. The character's homophobic remarks, including the slur "Captain Lesbo" directed at Stormfront, sparked backlash from fans who deemed it unfunny and offensive, leading to accusations of homophobia against Ackles himself despite the satirical intent. This reflected broader debates on the show's handling of prejudice, with Soldier Boy's era-specific bigotry—evident in his violent reactions to LGBTQ+ elements—critiqued as either authentic to his origins or excessively punitive in a modern context. The television adaptation also omitted a controversial comic storyline where coerces Soldier Boy into sex as a mock audition for , a decision praised for preserving the TV versions' characterizations—'s conservative disdain for non-heteronormative acts and Soldier Boy's unmanipulable power—while avoiding the ' more exploitative tone. Politically, Soldier Boy's arc has been faulted for aligning with the series' perceived left-leaning , portraying him as an untrustworthy PTSD-ridden monster whose explosions and betrayals symbolize unchecked and , which some outlets claimed only drew ire from right-wing audiences after repeated cues. Critics from outlets skeptical of bias noted this as part of a pattern where traditional patriotic symbols like Soldier Boy are systematically vilified to critique , potentially alienating viewers by conflating historical grit with inherent villainy. Vought's in-universe content for Soldier Boy's films, issued satirically post-season 3, underscored the character's controversies by warning of "outdated" attitudes on race, , and sexuality, mirroring real debates over retroactively judging period-specific heroism.

Reception

Critical analysis

Soldier Boy's portrayal in The Boys subverts the conventional image of the patriotic World War II-era superhero by emphasizing his origins in propaganda and personal failings, positioning him as a flawed antagonist rather than an infallible icon. Created as America's first super-soldier through Compound V administration during the war, his public persona masked private abuses, including paternal mistreatment mirroring his own father's brutality and betrayal by his team, Payback, during a 1980s Nicaragua operation that led to Soviet capture and experimentation. This backstory, revealed across seasons, critiques the mythologizing of national heroes, drawing parallels to real historical figures amplified by media for wartime morale, where empirical evidence of heroism often coexists with moral lapses. The character's embodiment of mid-20th-century masculine norms—prioritizing , dominance, and suppression of weakness—fuels thematic explorations of generational trauma and interpersonal dysfunction, as articulated by showrunner , who credits Soldier Boy with shaping 3's focus on how such ideals perpetuate cycles of emotional unavailability in father-son relationships. Behaviors like belittling allies, resorting to for coping, and rejecting vulnerability are depicted as self-isolating, with clinical analyst Georgia Dow interpreting them as hallmarks of patterns that erode individual resilience by conflating toughness with emotional avoidance, ultimately harming both perpetrator and victims. While this analysis aligns with the series' causal depiction of repressed trauma manifesting in violence, such as Soldier Boy's radiation-emitting blasts during rage, it risks overlooking adaptive functions of these traits in high-stakes combat environments, where data from indicates correlates with unit cohesion under duress; the show's narrative, however, prioritizes satirical condemnation over nuanced historical realism. Critics have lauded ' performance for rendering Soldier Boy a compelling whose charisma offsets his repugnance, enabling audience sympathy amid atrocities like civilian endangerment in his quest for legacy restoration. Yet, his narrative arc draws scrutiny for incomplete resolution, particularly in season 4, where post-season 3 cryogenic stasis yields only a brief, non-speaking post-credits appearance, forgoing anticipated confrontations with son and underdelivering on setup for paternal reckoning. This handling suggests structural prioritization of ensemble plots over individual payoff, potentially diluting the character's thematic weight in later seasons despite confirmed prominence in .

Fan perspectives

Fans of The Boys have widely praised Jensen Ackles' portrayal of Soldier Boy, often citing his charismatic performance as elevating the character into a fan favorite despite his antagonistic role. Many appreciate the blend of humor, arrogance, and vulnerability Ackles brings, making Soldier Boy more compelling than purely villainous figures like Homelander. Discussions on platforms like Reddit highlight Soldier Boy's appeal as a "Chad" archetype—crass, unapologetic, and embodying outdated masculinity—resonating with viewers who enjoy his unfiltered patriotism and reliability in keeping his word, even amid moral ambiguity. Some fans argue he is not inherently more evil than protagonists like Billy Butcher, viewing his actions in context of wartime betrayal and supe politics as defensible rather than irredeemable. This perspective contrasts with critiques that his likability stems overly from Ackles' charm, potentially undermining intended disdain for his toxic traits. Supernatural enthusiasts, familiar with Ackles' prior roles, express enthusiasm for his casting, though some express frustration when expecting a heroic turn akin to , only to encounter the show's of such tropes. Overall, Soldier Boy's fanbase values his role in exploring generational heroism and supe flaws, with calls for his return in future seasons reflecting sustained popularity.

Portrayal debates

The portrayal of Soldier Boy in The Boys has generated significant debate among viewers and analysts, particularly concerning the tension between his charismatic depiction and his morally reprehensible actions, including misogyny, substance abuse, and betrayal of allies. Fans have expressed admiration for the character's unapologetic demeanor and Jensen Ackles' performance, often citing his old-school bravado as appealing, despite explicit on-screen evidence of abusive behavior toward teammates like the TNT Twins and Crimson Countess. This sympathy has led to arguments that some audiences romanticize toxic traits, overlooking his role as a self-serving antagonist who prioritizes personal glory over heroism. Critics and commentators have highlighted Soldier Boy's embodiment of toxic masculinity as a central element of the portrayal, with Ackles himself noting the character's pursuit of adoration through aggressive, domineering traits. A therapist analyzing the described him as the "poster boy" for such behavior, pointing to his emotional suppression, of women, and violent responses to vulnerability as exaggerated critiques of outdated gender norms. However, debates persist on whether this effectively condemns the or inadvertently glamorizes it through Ackles' compelling performance, which conveys underlying from decades of cryogenic isolation and corporate exploitation. Adaptations from the have also fueled discussion, with Soldier Boy reimagined as a more psychologically layered figure—less cartoonishly inept and more a product of Vought's manipulative propaganda—contrasting the source material's portrayal of him as a bumbling, implied sexual abuser of . This shift avoids the ' more elements, such as the avoided paternal twist, to emphasize generational conflict and patriotic akin to a warped parody. Detractors argue the TV version risks humanizing him excessively, potentially diluting the critique of supe entitlement, while supporters praise the nuance for enhancing thematic depth on heroism's facade. Comparisons to Homelander underscore portrayal variances, with Soldier Boy depicted as strategically ruthless yet capable of fleeting loyalty, unlike Homelander's unchecked psychopathy, prompting questions on relative villainy and narrative intent. These debates reflect broader tensions in The Boys' approach to anti-heroes, balancing entertainment with moral indictment.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.