
“The Boys” universe is expanding with a prequel series titled “Vought Rising.” It will star Jensen Ackles and Aya Cash reprising their “Boys” universe roles as Soldier Boy and Stormfront, respectively.
The new series will be set in 1950s New York. Ackles came on stage during “The Boys” Comic-Con panel Friday and made the announcement, calling the prequel a “lurid pulp saga prequel.” Ackles also confirmed he will be returning for “The Boys” fifth and final season, following his cameo in last week’s Season 4 finale.
“We are excited to bring you the next deranged series from the world of ‘The Boys,'” “The Boys” creator Eric Kripke and “Vought Rising” showrunner Paul Grellong said in a statement. It’s a twisted murder mystery about the origins of Vought in the 1950s, the early exploits of Soldier Boy, and the diabolical maneuvers of a supe known to fans as Stormfront, who was then going by the name Clara Vought. We cannot wait to blow your minds and trouble your souls with this salacious, grisly saga drenched in blood and Compound V.”
Popular on Variety
Related Stories

High-Resolution 8K Has Its Places, but TV Might Not Be One of Them

'Flow,' Animated Feature Oscar Contender and Annecy Winner, Lands Fall Release Date (EXCLUSIVE)
“The Boys” Comic-Con panel, which comes one week after the Season 4 finale dropped on Amazon July 18, included Kripke and cast members Jack Quaid, Erin Moriarty, Karen Fukuhara, Tomer Capone, Laz Alonso, Antony Starr, Jessie T. Usher, Claudia Doumit, Nathan Mitchell, Chace Crawford, Susan Heyward and Valorie Curry. Ackles made a surprise appearance at the end, and Jeffrey Dean Morgan (who joined the cast in Season 4 as CIA agent Joe Kessler) moderated the panel.
It kicked off with a musical medley of “The Boys” in-universe songs, including “Chimps Don’t Cry,” “Never Truly Vanish,” “Let’s Put the Christ Back in Christmas” and A-Train’s rap “Faster.”
Starr revealed during the panel that the cringeworthy breastfeeding scene between Homelander and Firecracker in Season 4 got pretty messy.
He called the breastfeeding scene “the weirdest thing” he’s done on the show — which is already known for some “weird shit.” During Season 4, Starr’s Homelander grows closer to series newcomer Valorie Curry’s patriotic supe Firecracker, and the two cement their partnership with the eye-popping scene. Homelander, who has an obsession with milk (specifically breast milk), breastfeeds from Firecracker while being cradled like a baby.
“It was the psychology behind it, it turned into a love scene,” Starr said while discussing the scene on stage with Curry. “I don’t know if you heard me, but I was like, ‘What the fuck are we doing?'”
Laughing, Curry said she clearly remembered the moment and even got an indentation of Homelander’s eagle insignia from his costume on her thigh. She revealed that Starr “took almond milk straight to the eye” while filming.
When “The Boys” wrapped up Season 4 last week, there were several cliffhangers leading into the show’s fifth and final season.
Homelander (Starr) has effectively taken over the U.S. government, after the new president has enacted martial law. Homelander and Vought’s power has dramatically increased, and now all of the Boys have been split up, kidnapped and taken to undisclosed locations — meaning Hughie (Quaid), Starlight (Moriarty), Mother’s Milk (Alonso), Frenchie (Capone) and Kimiko (Fukuhara) are missing in action. A post-credits scene also revealed that Ackles’ supe Soldier Boy, a Captain America ripoff introduced in Season 3, has been preserved in a cryo-chamber. In Season 3, Homelander learned that Soldier Boy is his father, setting up an awkward family reunion for Season 5.
The Season 4 finale, which featured an attempted attack by a shapeshifter on the president-elect and the successful murder of the vice-president elect Victoria Neuman (Claudia Doumit) by Butcher (Karl Urban), came just a few days after the real-life assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump. The episode was originally called “Assassination Run,” but was retitled to simply “Season Four Finale.” There was also a content warning, explaining that the episode was shot in 2023 and “any similarities” were “coincidental and unintentional.”
“The season finale of ‘The Boys’ contains scenes of fictional political violence, which some viewers may find disturbing, especially in light of the injuries and tragic loss of life sustained during the assassination attempt on former President Trump,” read a statement shared by Prime Video. “‘The Boys’ is a fictitious series that was filmed in 2023, and any scene or plotline similarities to these real-world events are coincidental and unintentional. Amazon, Sony Pictures Television and the producers of ‘The Boys’ reject, in the strongest terms, real-world violence of any kind.”
Jennifer Maas contributed to this story.
Read More About:
Jump to CommentsMore from Variety
‘Kneecap’ Selected by Ireland for Oscars International Feature Film Race
AI Content Licensing Deals With Publishers: Complete Updated Index
SciTech Awards Committee Investigating 11 Areas of Innovation for Academy Consideration
Jimmy Kimmel Turned Down Hosting 2025 Oscars Because ‘I’m Not Good at Balancing’ It and Late Night Show: ‘It Was Just Too Much Last Year’
Fubo’s Battle With Venu Sports Is a Stopgap Measure
International Oscar Race: Kyrgyzstan Proposes ‘Heaven Is Beneath Mother’s Feet’
Most Popular
‘Inside Out 2’ Becomes First Animated Film to Hit $1 Billion at International Box Office
Channing Tatum Says Gambit Accent Was Supposed to Be ‘Unintelligible’ at Times and He Was ‘Too Scared to Ask’ Marvel for the Costume to Bring…
Box Office: ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Returns to No. 1 in Fifth Weekend as ‘The Crow’ Bombs and ‘Blink Twice…
Oasis’ Liam and Noel Gallagher Drop Biggest Hint Yet That Group Is Reuniting
Ryan Reynolds Was ‘Mortified’ to Cut Rob McElhenney’s ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Cameo but the ‘Sequence Wasn’t Working’: ‘I Had to Kill a Darling…
Taylor Swift Praises Charli XCX After ‘Sympathy Is a Knife’ Reignited Feud Rumors: ‘Her Writing Is Surreal and Inventive’
‘Ted Lasso’ Eyes Season 4 Greenlight With Main Cast Members Returning
China Box Office: 'Alien: Romulus' Becomes Hollywood's Second Biggest Film of 2024
‘Super/Man’ Trailer: Christopher Reeve Doc Captures the Late Actor’s Superhero Stardom and Life After His Near-Fatal Accident
Bradley Whitford Slams Cheryl Hines for Not Speaking Out After Her ‘Lunatic Husband’ RFK Jr. Endorsed Trump for President: ‘Way to Stay Silent…
Must Read
- Film
‘Megalopolis’ Trailer’s Fake Critic Quotes Were AI-Generated, Lionsgate Drops Marketing Consultant Responsible For Snafu
- Music
Sabrina Carpenter Teases and Torments on the Masterful — and Devilishly NSFW — 'Short n' Sweet': Album Review
- Film
Tim Burton on Why the 'Batman' Films Have Changed and How 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' Saved Him From Retirement
- Film
Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck Are the Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton of the 2020s
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXOAjq2taKaVrMBwwMeeZJunqah6t7vUoJ%2BtZaKewKq6xmanq52hqrKtedKeqaKdo2K3prrSnqVmmZOguaa%2FjJqwmmWTlsCpeZBram9oaGWAcXyO