
God-fucking-damn-it. Just when you want a comic to be all above board and shallow, they get all deep on ya. Some times a cigar is just a cigar and other times it’s a big brown cock for others to suck at. Ask me every day and I’ll tell ya The Boys is jus that. But, all dick jokes aside, the Boys #15 ventures into character driven territory that is anything but virgin for Garth Ennis.
We’ve endured poised post-commie trips, caped offenses, hamsters where they shouldn’t be and females violent as they come (or cum if you count little Nina) but this latest issue is trying to build some depth into what is the shallow end of the pool so far. The Boys have been nothing but a head-bashing, ball-smashing, nut –busting good time up till this point. Now Garth Ennis has seen fit to add character depth to what once were somewhat two dimensional characters. Not that I have a problem with that. I love what has been done to this point. Ennis has done his best to poke, prod, and cajole all of the major comic publishers into lather. It’s his lets-see-if-we-can-piss-everyone-off-at-once-ness that has me coming back every month to read the new issues.
This week we pick up a new story line with the same characters several months older. While poking fun at everyone who has written a new story arc, and everyone who ever will, Ennis tries to bend this new story into something no one saw coming. A meeting of the lesser minds one might say, without giving anything away that is.
This review is short, I know, but so much goes into this issue its hard to review without giving anything away. The best I can do is to allude what happens without being too clever at it.
Now on a different note I gotta say the female is my all time favorite character. If this women existed in real life I’d have already married her by now or at least devoted my miserable drunken life to her world aspirations. The back sneak-peak cover confirms this and makes me giggle uncontrollably. For those of you who need a refresher read The Boys issues 1-3 over again.
Overall rating: Starscreem. Ennis is taking this comic places others are too afraid to think of.





