Movies News Talk
In the realm of The Boys, where superheroes are sometimes more villainous than heroic, James Stillwell is one character that particularly strikes me as a real "superhuman". This page investigates why Stillwell gained Homelander's respect and why he is, indeed, a more powerful force than Homelander personally.
Homelander claims to have unparalleled strength, but his actual concern is not of any other Supe but James Stillwell, Vought-American CEO. Though he is not a superhuman in the conventional sense, Stillwell, a character in The Boys who epitribes corporate evil, is a very strong force because of his ability to control and manipulate, even someone as strong as Homelander.
A key scene in The Boys #64 reveals Homelander's respect for Stillwell. Homelander visits Stillwell expecting fear and respect after masterly planning a coup against the US government. Stillwell, unconcerned by Homelander's threat, treats him apathetically though. Homelander's begrudging respect results from this calm display combined with Stillwell's ability to see through Homelander's façade, which causes him to declare Stillwell a "superhuman."
Stillwell's character captures the subtle way that corporate power shapes society. Operating with a chilling sense of amorality and putting profit above human life, he is a personification of Vought-American's ethics. Stillwell is a really horrible man, able of unimaginable cruelty without regret since his personal agenda beyond Vought's success lacks.
Stillwell in The Boys has two quite different endings. He is still serving Vought in the main series, even after his crimes are revealed, so underscoring his relentless allegiance to the company. But in the epilogue, Dear Becky, Stillwell breaks down and ends up living alone—a more realistic and human ending. These different paths highlight Stillwell's actual risk—that of his capacity for manipulation and control—even if he is taken out of the business world.
Homelander's comment on Stillwell being a superhuman is ironic since he ignores Black Noir, his clone produced by Vought to eradicate if he ever strays from line. She is the actual superhuman in his midst. Under Vought's control, this latent power exceeds even Homelander's might, yet his self-absorbed attitude keeps him blind.
The Boys investigates the ideas of competence and incompetence, stressing how equally perilous both can be. Although Homelander's actions are motivated by his own self-serving needs, Stillwell's skill in system manipulation makes him a more dangerous person able to cause extensive grand-scale suffering. The show finally makes the case that a seemingly normal person with a sly and merciless attitude to reaching their goals rather than a horrific superhuman defines actual evil.
The Boys gives readers a lifetime lesson on the perils of unbridled authority, especially in businesses. Even if superheroes are the flashy villains, the show finally criticizes the sneaky character of corporate greed and the people who weaponize it. Stillwell's character reminds us frighteningly that real power comes from clever system manipulation and ruthless profit-seeking even at the expense of human life, not from brute force.