It's impossible to see Chuck The Same Way After The Boys Season 4.
Supernatural's Chuck was not a conventional Godlike character—silly, caustic, and slovenly—but those flaws were mostly a front to conceal his actual nature. Chuck could pretend to be Supernatural's most merciless, terrifying villain by flicking an imaginary switch, whose great force exuded invulnerability. However, Supernatural's God cannot be seen in the same light once The Boys season 4 ends since Rob Benedict's cameo pushes the boundaries of taste in such a way that it becomes difficult to conceive the same actor is most recognized for playing the Lord Almighty.
Away from Supernatural, Rob Benedict has starred in Masters of Sex, Lucifer, and Bosch. First, with the first clone in the chain stroking himself over a picture of Firecracker and his clones trailing behind, Frenchie and Kimiko stumble across Rob Benedict's Splinter using his clones to form a super-human centipede of self-pleasure. Then things worsen. It is evident from Splinter's forced use of his talent during a fight against The Boys that his skills do not include copying clothes, so a procession of nude Rob Benedicts clogs the screen, genital - multiple sets - on full display.
Rob Benedict cast as Splinter's less appealing boyfriend
Along with reuniting with several Supernatural alumni on The Boys, Eric Kripke has a habit of subtly referencing little details and supplementary Easter eggs only Supernatural watchers would find. For instance, Jim Beaver's The Boys character bears exactly the same name as Robert Singer, his Supernatural counterpart. For those familiar with Supernatural just because Rob Benedict portrays him, The Boys season 4's Splinter is considerably funnier. Seeing an actor who once portrayed an all-powerful villain and the Father of All Creation writhing around on the floor naked with MM makes an already-amusing scene all the more ludicrous.
Rob Benedict's God would make for a natural cast addition even if he seems to be dead should Supernatural ever make return. For the Supernatural viewers who have, for many years, identified the same actor as the face of God, the shocking and repulsive super-human centipede picture is even more surprising and repulsive. The Boys presents a startling dichotomy between the holiness of Benedict's Supernatural character and the absolute abject unholiness of every single thing Splinter does in season 4. The actor's choice strangely gives The Boys' Splinter scenes even more forbidden feeling.
Supernatural Reunion Ruins God for the Second Time Since SPN Ended Boys Season 4
From dairy goods to Ant-Man, The Boys has destroyed a lot of things for a lot of people; God from Supernatural is among the most recent casualty. Since their 2019 premiere, The Boys' cast has included numerous Supernatural stars including Jensen Ackles, Jim Beaver, and Jeffrey Dean Morgan among the most well-known names under Supernatural creator Eric Kripke. The Boys' rowdy world of full-frontal nudity, graphic fatalities, and Karl Urban's continuous endeavor to break television's "f**k"s-per-minute record is obviously very different from the tone of The CW's Supernatural.
Rob Benedict is the most recent addition to the always expanding roster of Supernatural crossover actors among The Boys' cast. Originally presented as mild-mannered writer Chuck in Supernatural season 4, Benedict was finally revealed to be portraying God himself and proven to be Sam and Dean's last nemesis in season 15. Benedict makes his The Boys bow as Firecracker's pitiful, devoted assistant Splinter in season 4. As the name implies, Splinter is able to create flawless clones of himself; he makes excellent use of this capacity in several quite creative ways.
Wait, Did Gen V Already Do This With Supernatural's God?
The Boys season 4 Cameo by Rob Benedict carries a sense of déjà vu as Gen V committed a similar offense against another God actor. Jack, portrayed by Alexander Calvert, assumed God's in-universe role when the Winchesters emerged triumphant in their last battle. Jack adopted the God perspective of the cosmos at the climax of Supernatural season 15, despite being Lucifer's real son; Calvert later returned in The Winchesters in that same capacity. Calvert, however, also showed up as a Gen V season 1 Godolkin University student.
In the most unusual of turns, Alexander Calvert's Gen V persona, like Rob Benedict's Splinter, exposed his entire genital region in shockingly graphic manner. Calvert's Rufus character had his penis blown apart courtesy to Marie Moreau's blood-control abilities; very little of that incident was left to the imagination; challenging the super-human centipede for shock factor.
Gen V tracks Godolkin University's pupils and introduces several new Supes whose powers span virtually useless to extremely strong.
From The Boys' clone-sterbation to Gen V's dicksplosion, it cannot be a coincidence that the only two characters to serve God in Supernatural have not only seen full-frontal scenes in The Boys' universe but also participated in two of the most horrific scenes across Amazon's whole superhero series. One could even argue that The Boys is reveling in the most horrible and wicked situations available for the actors behind Supernatural's most holy characters, only for kicks.
Eric Kripke developed the superhero/dark comedic satire series The Boys based on the same-named comic series. Set in a "what-if" universe honoring superheroes as gods and celebrities with few consequences for their deeds. To reveal them for what they are, one group of vigilantes headed under a vengeance-obsessed guy named Billy Butcher will fight back against these super-charged "heroes".
Phase
Release Dates
Chapters 1–3
July 13
Fourth Episode
June Twenty
Five episodes
June 27.
sixth episode
July Fourth
seventh episode
Jul 11
Episode eight
August 18
* Availability in the United States
Not here.
Not available
Not available.