The Boys Tricked Everyone With its Big Season 5 Cameos
This article contains spoilers for The Boys season 5 episode 5.
Supernatural fans were intrigued to find out earlier this year that the final season of The Boys would feature a long-awaited reunion. Jared Padalecki and Misha Collins were set to guest star alongside Jensen Ackles’ Soldier Boy in episode 5, playing “douchebags,” The Boys (and Supernatural) showrunner Eric Kripke teased. So when it was released, excited viewers may have been checking their watches as the episode ticked over the 45-minute mark, wondering when the duo might actually show up.
When Padalecki and Collins did finally appear onscreen as ageing supes Mister Marathon and Malchemical—minor antagonists in the comics the show is based on—they weren’t alone. In a rather cunning bit of misdirection, we were so focused on our Supernatural faves that we didn’t expect the rest of the surprising cameos that The Boys had in store during the episode!
Let’s take a look at everyone we met playing cards at Mister Marathon’s mansion. That is, before they died horribly, of course…
Kumail Nanjiani
Like almost everyone on this list, the Eternals actor appears as himself during the final minutes of episode 5. He sits next to The Boys executive producer Seth Rogen during the group’s card game and discusses Vought’s capture of Aziz Ansari, Macaulay Culkin, Joaquin Phoenix, Kiefer Sutherland, Benedicts Wong and Cumberbatch, and even Meryl Streep.
Rogen and Kumail Nanjiani are connected through mutual colleagues in the comedy world, such as director Judd Apatow, who produced Nanjiani’s award-winning movie, The Big Sick.
Seth Rogen
Rogen tells Homelander they already met at the premiere of one of Black Noir’s movies, Silent Vengeance 3: Vengeance Reloaded, but Homelander clearly can’t remember the encounter.
In reality, it would probably be hard for most of The Boys’ cast and crew to forget Rogen, who has been an executive producer on the hit show since 2016, along with his longtime collaborator, Evan Goldberg. The Pineapple Express star has made minor cameos on the mothership show before, and has also produced several spinoffs in the franchise, including Gen V and Diabolical.
Here, Rogen amusingly suggests that getting Lena Dunham to write a piece for The Atlantic will draw more eyes to the plight of people being rounded up into Vought’s “freedom” camps, but he seems to be playing both sides, as he tells Homelander that he’s planning to testify before Congress that Post Malone is a suspected Starlighter.
Christopher Mintz-Plasse
Breaking out in 2007’s Superbad (co-written by and also starring Rogen) where he starred as the iconic Fogell a.k.a. McLovin, Christopher Mintz-Plasse previously made an appearance as another fictional version of himself in Rogen’s 2013 apocalyptic comedy horror, This Is the End, with an ensemble cast that also boasted Jonah Hill, Jay Baruchel, Danny McBride, Craig Robinson, and Michael Cera.
In The Boys, Mintz-Plasse suggests turning in his Superbad co-star to snag a coveted movie role, and tries to smoke a joint with Homelander, which is not well received (to put it mildly.)
Will Forte
SNL alum Will Forte is yet another celebrity playing a skewed version of himself here. He admits he turned in Channing Tatum (who also popped up as Danny McBride’s sex slave in This Is the End) and drops a bombshell by telling everyone that fellow SNL co-star Bill Hader has been executed. For what, we can only imagine, but it must have been some big talk against Homelander and Vought’s deadly dealings.
Forte and Rogen are notably connected through the former’s role in Akiva Schaffer’s 2012 sci-fi comedy The Watch, which was co-written by Rogen and also starred Erin Moriarty in an early role before she went on to her breakout part as Starlight in The Boys.
Craig Robinson
Robinson only gets to register a little surprise at seeing Soldier Boy before he gets moved directly into Mister Marathon’s path and explodes, but it sure is fun to see him, however briefly.
The popular comedian and musician previously appeared in This Is the End, Knocked Up, Pineapple Express, and Sausage Party, the 2016 adult animated movie co-written by Rogen. He is also beloved for his role in Brooklyn Nine-Nine as Doug “the Pontiac Bandit” Judy.
Jared Padalecki
Finally, we get to the actors not playing themselves in this episode 5 cameofest! Supernatural star Jared Padalecki previously revealed his episode 5 character as Mister Marathon before its release, but we still didn’t really know what to expect!
Mister Marathon is a drug-peddling D-list speedster who was in The Seven at one point, but he was replaced with A-Train when he “got slow.” Homelander notes that Mister Marathon stars in movies made by Sony Pictures Television, one of the production companies behind The Boys, where “washed-up supes go to die,” though this seems like more of a dig at Sony’s live-action Spider-Man universe, where they can’t use any other big Marvel characters, so are stuck trying to make stuff like Madame Web a thing.
Mister Marathon tries to convince Soldier Boy to kill Homelander and stop his plan to become the new messiah. He manages to appeal to a surprisingly pro-choice Soldier Boy, but he ultimately pushes back against Mister Marathon’s plan and destroys both his legs before stamping on his head. Before that, Soldier Boy eventually determines that his old pal Bombsight probably has the remaining V1 everyone’s been looking for this season.
Misha Collins
Ackles and Padalecki’s other longtime Supernatural co-star, Misha Collins, also appears in the episode as a minor Supe named Malchemical, who can create deadly gases. He breathes one such gas in Homelander’s face, knocking him out and asking Soldier Boy to team up with them against Homelander.
Soldier Boy breaks his neck after realizing that no matter how messed up his biological son is, he can’t kill him.



































































































































































