The Boys has had a lot of major moments throughout its five seasons, but the show's most important scene yet just occurred. Despite the series being a dark comedy full of sex jokes, The Boys levies some pretty serious social commentary, discussing politics, celebrity culture, and more. However, all of its commentary has shared a common theme, one that The Boys just highlighted in full due to a moment in its final season.
The Boys season 5, episode 3 features the return of Stan Edgar, the former head of Vought who was ousted by Homelander. Despite not being a supe, he has managed to live this long due to how smart he is and his intricate knowledge of the systems that created Vought. This is highlighted in a speech he gives in the episode, where he discusses that supes aren't the end product, but rather filling a necessary hole created by commerce and capitalism. Even if the Boys are successful in destroying supes, money still needs to be made. So, Vought will find a way to make money. Even if Vought is destroyed, shareholders still need to make money, so something else will take Vought's place. Edgar knows that there is no way to stop things like Vought from popping up as long as the system of capitalism is in place. So, the best that the Boys can do is hope that the next alternative is preferable to supes.
Stan Edgar's Speech In Season 5, Episode 3 Perfectly Sums Up What The Boys Is Really About
Stan Edgar's speech lays out what The Boys has been discussing this entire time: capitalism. Supes in The Boys are a stand-in for a lot of things, but most of the things they're being used to satirize are the results of the economic system that is in place. One of the biggest conflicts in The Boys is the supes attempting to maintain their public image. Despite them being horrible people, they must maintain a clean image in order to sell the Vought brand. Vought, like many real-world companies, cynically employs progressive politics, pretends to care about its employees, and attempts to sell consumers on things that make their lives worse in order to make a profit.
So, according to Stan Edgar, there is no way to change this unless the profit incentive is gone. The thing that the Boys are really fighting can't be killed with guns, bombs, or viruses. Instead, social change has to be made in order to collapse this system and build a new one. The Boys are facing a giant that they will never beat, and rather than telling the Boys how to beat it, Stan Edgar hopes to benefit from it. Edgar is still an enemy of the Boys because he hopes to utilize this system to benefit himself rather than help change it to benefit everyone, a decision that many real-life capitalists make every day.
We Finally Know What Stan Edgar's Endgame Is Now
Is This How The Boys Season 5 Sets Up More Spinoffs?
Vought will never end, and as long as Vought is around, there will be stories for The Boys to tell. Stan Edgar's speech seems like it could be setting up more The Boys spinoffs, as he is explicitly saying that even after killing Homelander, the Boys cannot win. This may sound exciting to fans, as the world of The Boys could seemingly continue on forever based on what Edgar is saying.
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