Editorials
Violent Superhero Mayhem: The 10 Goriest Moments from “The Boys” So Far
With all episodes of The Boys’ second season now available on Amazon Prime Video, we’re already counting the days until season three. It doesn’t help that exciting casting news has started trickling in, like the addition of Jensen Ackles as original supe Soldier Boy. Eric Kripke’s adaptation of Garth Ennis’ comic book series presents an atypical take on the superhero story. Complex characters, satirical takes on topical events, and an insane amount of blood and guts.
The Boys never shies away from shocking violence or brutality, creating no shortage of jaw-dropping moments throughout both seasons. Now that the second season has concluded and the long wait for season three begins, we look back at ten of the series’ goriest moments so far. Warning: There will be spoilers ahead.
Lamplighter’s Self-Immolation – Season 2, Episode 7

Starlight’s predecessor in The Seven retired, only to be found in the second season as an orderly at the Sage Grove Center. There, Lamplighter (Shawn Ashmore) helped Vought administer experiments on psychiatric patients in secret. His demotion from The Seven, subsequent guilt over his experiments on young patients, and residual feelings of failing his father results in Lamplighter helping Hughie break into Vought Tower to free Starlight. He never intended to return from their mission alive, though, and self-immolates in front of The Seven mural. It’s a gruesome demise.
Popclaw Gets Carried Away – Season 1, Episode 3

A-Train’s secret girlfriend, Popclaw (Brittany Allen), struggles with Compound V addiction. After injecting her latest dose, she gets frisky with her landlord. Thanks to Compound V and her super-strength, Popclaw ends up bursting the landlord’s head like a watermelon during peak ecstasy. Oops.
Mesmer’s Face Meets Sink – Season 1, Episode 7

Telepathic supe Mesmer (Haley Joel Osment) assisted the Boys, giving them critical intel on Vought’s insidious doings with terrorists. He made one fatal error, however, when he decided to betray them. Naturally, Billy Butcher (Karl Urban) doesn’t take kindly to betrayals. Billy corners Mesmer in a bathroom and proceeds to smash his face, repeatedly, into a pulp against a sink.
Stillwell’s Eyes – Season 1, Episode 8

Madelyn Stillwell (Elisabeth Shue) kept Homelander (Antony Starr) firmly under her thumb for nearly all of season one. In the finale, though, her lies finally caught up to her. The discovery that his child is alive and well was the straw that broke the camel’s back, and he bore his laser eyes into hers. The slow meltdown, leaving behind two gaping holes in her skull, proved a particularly shocking death for such a significant player.
Homelander’s Terrorist Takedown – Season 1, Episode 8

The season one finale opened with a bloodbath that also worked as a foreshadowing of Madelyn’s death: Homelander’s unhinged takedown of a terrorist operation. He put the special ops team on standby and proceeded to lay siege on all living beings inside the warehouse. With his laser vision, he gleefully dismembered, maimed, and culled his way through, amidst screams of terror.
Kimiko’s Revenge – Season 2, Episode 5
Of all the characters in The Boys, Kimiko (Karen Fukuhara) has had an especially tragic history. Season two delivered brief happiness when she got to reunite with her brother. An encounter with Stormfront (Aya Cash) ripped away from her happy reunion, leaving her brother dead. It sent Kimiko down a dark path for vengeance, with insatiable blood lust. She becomes a hired assassin, resulting in one of the most disturbing kills yet.
A-Train Smashes Through Robin – Season 1, Episode 1

The inciting event that started it all. Hughie begins the series in relationship bliss, having just made plans with lady love Robin to move in together. She takes a one-half step off the curb, however, and explodes. It’s not spontaneous combustion, but a Compound V fueled A-Train (Jessie T. Usher) that plowed through her while moving at the speed of light. Poor Hughie was left covered in his girlfriend’s innards while still holding her detached hands.
Translucent’s Demise – Season 1, Episode 2

Translucent (Alex Hassell) has the power of invisibility and impenetrable skin, making him one of the toughest supes to kill. When the Boys capture him, they discover that Translucent’s insides aren’t as invulnerable as his exterior and plant a bomb in his bum. Translucent’s mouth gets him into trouble one last time. He triggers Hughie’s rage, prompting Hughie to detonate the bomb. Poor Hughie gets covered head to tow in innards for the second episode in a row.
Courtroom Bloodbath – Season 2, Episode 7

For once, the Boys put their efforts toward taking Vought down legally. Building all season long, it culminated in Vought’s downfall via Congressional hearing. Just when the vigilante team was poised to celebrate their much-earned victory, however, the courtroom turned into a shocking bloodbath as heads exploded. Many heads, seemingly at random, popped like water balloons, spraying the floors and walls with the red stuff.
Through the Belly of the Whale – Season 2, Episode 3

Leave it to the Deep (Chace Crawford) to screw things up in the way only he does best. Or rather, to so wholly underestimate a foe. When the Boys’ plan to hide out on a boat gets exposed, the Deep enlists his aquatic friends to capture the vigilantes. That includes Lucy, the sperm whale. Lucy and the Deep block the boat’s path to the shore, not realizing until far too late that it won’t slow Billy Butcher down. He drives the boat right into Lucy, killer her and leaving the team sorting through her guts. It’s… a lot.
Editorials
André Øvredal’s ‘Troll Hunter’ Remains One of the Best Found Footage Movies
In this day and age, the word “troll” is often used to describe various online nuisances. Yet as abundant and irksome as the modern troll can be, they aren’t usually as fearsome as their mythological counterparts. I’m not talking about the small and gentler versions that have become more common to see in media. No, there are much bigger and scarier trolls out there—and André Øvredal’s movie Troll Hunter is one of the best places to find them.
It doesn’t take long for Troll Hunter (or Trolljegeren) to dump the Blair Witch Project-esque setup and aim for something a lot fresher. The trajectory of the story is augmented by Otto Jespersen’s character Hans, the titular Troll Hunter. The second he comes barreling out of the deep, dark woods and shouts “troll” at the camera, this movie takes a turn into what feels like uncharted territory. Not only subject-wise, but also conceptually.
For fantastical and made-up subject matter in cinema, found footage is a fast way to add a guise of believability. After all, what we accept to be the most crucial aspect of documentaries—the truth—rubs off on pseudo-documentaries, despite our understanding of the pretense involved. That is what Øvredal delivered with Troll Hunter: a movie so convincing that some viewers wondered if trolls really do exist. So, had this been straightforwardly made, it likely wouldn’t have been as effective. Conventional narratives would be more inclined to treat something like trolls as flat out unreal, and never try to convince the audience to think otherwise.

Hans petrifies the three-headed Tusseladd troll.
The viewers, like the characters trailing Hans, are quickly thrown into the deeper end of that extraordinary story. They have to process all this new information while staying on the go. So, although there is no significant amount of meandering, narratively or physically, there is still a good amount of atmosphere, not to mention tension building. It’s never anything frightful, but then again, Troll Hunter isn’t your standard offering of horror; it’s more on the low end of the dark fantasy spectrum. We aren’t ever spirited away to a faraway world—we stay in rather familiar surroundings, as well as dip into those less so. The outcome is a movie where you’re constantly more in awe than in terror.
As fantasy fiction might do, Troll Hunter prefers not to deal with incredulity. There is no time to waste on doubt, as interviewer Thomas (Glenn Erland Tosterud), soundperson Johanna (Johanna Mørck), and cameraman Kalle (Tomas Alf Larsen) all follow Hans around, recording whatever this character is willing to reveal about his bizarre job. Of course, the Troll Hunter himself is not an open book; in that respect, the diegetic documentary fails to fully capture and unpack the more interesting of its two subjects. Yes, all those giant, monstrous trolls are indeed incredible, but understandably, your mind wanders to their pursuer. What kind of person signs up for this gig and then chooses to stick with it for so long?
Reviews have called out Troll Hunter for its lack of character development. In regard to Thomas and his fellow documentarians, that criticism is valid, but bear in mind, they aren’t the focus of the story, either. Meanwhile, Hans is a well-crafted character. At least better than first realized. Before he was introduced, Hans had already grown tired of the troll grind. Fed up with that low compensation for his services, resentful of the bureaucracy, and wanting to expose his employer on a large scale, Hans’ discontent is glaring.
Then there are those finer details about the Troll Hunter, such as that indifference to both the natural splendor of his everyday surroundings and the affections of an obviously smitten colleague, that also suggest some level of despondency. So it is fair to say this movie doesn’t feature any sizable growth for its characters; however, the namesake isn’t underwritten. No doubt, putting a real-life character like Otto Jespersen in that role is partly why Hans is so fascinating—maybe even relatable.

Otto Jespersen as Hans the Troll Hunter.
There is always a small risk whenever using the term “mockumentary” to describe a found-footage movie, as the word could imply humor where there is none. In the case of Troll Hunter, the term’s usage is appropriate. Some folks have claimed the English-dubbed version has the more comedic tone, however, the Norwegian cut isn’t exactly humorless. Apart from the trolls’ absurd appearances, this is a movie where the characters nearly choke on the monsters’ farts, and Christians are like walking targets. Hans’ complete apathy towards everything is another cause of laughter. Overall, the comedy is intentionally dry and inconsistent. Unfunny, though? Absolutely not.
In a movie where endemic creatures are maltreated, as well as disavowed from living freely and peacefully, it’s hard not to notice the ecological message buried beneath the story. In addition to that is the unmistakable political satire. There is this whole business about intrusive and unsightly power lines—like trolls, they’re big blemishes on the land—that leads to what is perhaps the movie’s funniest moment. The scene in question is that one where certain electric lines, the ones secretly being used to keep the trolls at bay, go in a loop and don’t actually send power to any residents. Yet the monitors of said lines don’t find this at all weird. So it stands to reason that Øvredal was having a go at those who accept the government’s doings without question.
Looking past the fact that trolls aren’t actually real, this movie is an enlightening source of information. And not just for international audiences; Norwegians, too, get schooled about their homeland’s own mythology. It’s also evident from everything on screen that Øvredal and his crew were enthusiastic about the topic. The creature designs are the most indicative of that zeal; those imaginative yet myth-accurate manifestations are equally amusing and grotesque. One second you’re laughing at their phallic noses, the next you’re white-knuckling during a hairy sequence. Most surprisingly is how well the trolls’ visual effects hold up after fifteen years. It’s not all spotless, but on the whole, they remain impressive.
Vouching for a mockumentary about trolls isn’t easy, but those who do come around and give it a shot will more than likely be grateful for the recommendation. For Troll Hunter is a real find in that vast and varied genre we call “found footage“.

A bridge troll reaches up for food and finds Hans decked out in armor.

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