Amazon Prime Video recently released the episodes of season 3 of the series The Boys, which has been so well received by the public that it has already confirmed a fourth installment, in addition to giving us great moments of satire and unexpected and fun references to other popular franchises.
SPOILER ALERT!!! —->>>>
If you are not up to date with the episodes of the third season of the Amazon series, The Boys, maybe you should think twice about continuing to read this note.
And it is that, there is the series The Boys, it has brought some interesting characters from the comic series of Garth Ennis Y David Robertson with each season, but to the character that they have added in this third installment of the series, they have just brought one of the biggest fan favorites.
Since, during the most recent episode, TheBoys heads to Russia to search for Homelander’s murder weapon that has been hidden behind the iron curtain, so after infiltrating the base, and before finding the proper weapon, The Boys stumble upon a cage with a Russian tag on it. and a little friend inside, who is none other than Jamie the hamster.
You see, inside the pages of the comic series dynamiteJamie is Hughie’s pet recovered from severe abuse, so for the Amazon Prime series, Jamie is introduced as a hopped hamster in Compound V, giving him the ability to not only fly, but crash into rocks. people.
So when he confronts the Russian soldiers, Jamie makes quick work of them, knocking one of the soldiers off the head before flying off to any other adventure, but originally, Jamie wasn’t a super-powered hamster, just a regular one from a bad home who, with Hughie’s help, and Annie to have a better life.
So heading twelve years later, he reappears in the 2020 prequel/sequel The Boys: Dear Beckyso now this super-powered hamster that burrows its way through people’s skulls and might be too much for some, but as The Boys showrunner, Eric Kripkesaid: “Prime Video has literally never said no. But with that said, I think the writers do an incredible amount of self-restraint, believe it or not.”
“We really agonized over where the line is, because we never want to cross the line from outrageous to gratuitous or exploitative, or cheap or shocking for shock”Kripke adds. “There’s an unbelievable amount of anxiety, hand-wringing, guessing and second-guessing where it should be, because I really think we’ve realized that no one is going to tell us no, so we have to find out for ourselves.
“I realized that you can take those banana moments, but grind them into the character, and to the point where you can’t tell the character’s story without it. Those tend to be our best moments, so we aspire to that.”