The first footage from The Boys Season 4 has been unveiled in a new teaser trailer, which includes Jeffrey Dean Morgan’s series debut.
A new look has been revealed for the fourth season of Prime Video’s hit superhero satire series The Boys.
Coming to Prime Video in 2024, Season 4 of The Boys will be picking up right where the Gen V finale left off. Election-themed posters of Antony Starr’s Homelander and Karl Urban’s Billy Butcher have teased the new episodes, but footage hadn’t yet been revealed before the release of the all-new teaser.
After the teaser was first treated to fans at CCXP in Brazil, it’s now been made available online and can be seen below.
In the NSFW trailer, new looks are revealed for the returns of members of both the Seven and the Boys. Notably, the trailer also reveals a first look at Jeffrey Dean Morgan who joins the cast of the series with Season 4. Also included are several glimpses of the gory madness that’s coming in the new season, such as a peek at an especially bloody Homelander — who bears a creepy smile on his face.
The Boys is based on the original comic books by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson. Eric Kripke developed the live-action series adaptation for Prime Video and serves as showrunner. Along with Starr and Urban, the ensemble cast of characters also includes Jack Quaid, Erin Moriarty, Jessie T. Usher, Chace Crawford, Karen Fukuhara, Tomer Capone, Laz Alonso, Dominique McElligott, and Jensen Ackles.
Meanwhile, the world of The Boys will continue to expand beyond the upcoming fourth season of the main series. Gen V was renewed for Season 2 after a highly acclaimed first season, so there will be more to come from the first live-action spinoff. It was also just announced that a new spinoff series, dubbed The Boys: Mexico, is in the works as well with Blue Beetle writer Gareth Dunnet-Alocer. With that noted, the main series doesn’t have an endgame set just yet, as showrunner Eric Kripke backpedaled previous claims the show could run for five seasons, teasing it could be much longer than that.
“I have since realized that literally no one in history is worse at predicting the amount of seasons of a show, like literally,” Kripke said, per Inverse, referring to how another show he created, Supernatural, ultimately ran for 15 seasons. “I have learned my lesson and I’ve stopped predicting how many seasons these shows go. You will find out in hindsight.”