ScreenCrush: The Podcast! - Gen V - Season 2 Episode 7 BREAKDOWN - THE BOYS Easter Eggs You Missed!
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Well, Gen V finally revealed the truth behind Cypher and set up the end game for the season.
And a little bit later, we're going to talk about every clue about that big Cypher reveal.
Welcome back Screen Crush, I'm Ryan Airy, and this is all of the Easter eggs references and little things you might have missed in the seventh episode of season two of Gen V.
Now, the title of this episode is Hell Week, which has a couple of different meanings.
One, Thomas Godalkin is, of course, about to unleash hell on campus.
But two, Hell Week is when fraternities take in new pledges by tormenting them, like Rufus says to Sam.
We're giving you a pledge, and it's your job to put through hell this week.
Put another way, Hell Week is when young people suffer through hardship in order to gain a sense of belonging.
And that's exactly what the heroes have been doing all through this show.
They have all suffered hardships that have brought them closer together.
And their sense of community has been built on one word, and that's the theme of this episode,
forgiveness.
At the start of this season, Sam and Kate were villains who had done terrible things in the service of Homelander.
Remember that woman that you grabbed?
She was screaming for her boyfriend, but you just dragged her away.
Sam then had to learn how to forgive himself, and Kate tried to earn forgiveness by getting everybody released from Elmira.
But also, Jordan starts off the season by resenting Marie, and she forgives both her and Kate.
Emma has to recognize Sam's inner journey, and in this episode, she finally cuts him some slack.
But most importantly, we see that the characters in this episode have to learn to forgive themselves,
which we will talk about as we go along.
So we start with the nightmare that Annabeth is having about Marie's death.
And I actually think these nightmares were created by Sister Sage to manipulate Marie,
but I'll talk about that a little later in the video.
Notice that right after the nightmare, when she storms into Jordan's room,
they're dreaming in their female body, but then shifts to their male form when they're startled.
Now, this could be like a turtle response that we mentioned last week,
where when they're threatened, Jordan switches to their defensive form.
Or, remember, Jordan was also born male and then had to hide their identity from their parents.
So this might be a force of habit, having to swap to mail when their parents barged into the room.
Now, when they figure out the Marie has left, Jordan says,
Oh, God damn it, Marie, I know you do you leave me behind again.
And they're referring to how Marie left them all behind when they escaped Elmira.
And also here's a small detail.
Notice that Stan Edgar decorates his bunker with this painting that's mostly sky.
It's a way to create the illusion of outdoors when they're in a basement.
And maybe they couldn't afford Giancarlo Esposito for two episodes,
because Zoe is there so they can ask her if they can,
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Now, back to what I was saying.
Kate and Marie have a conversation that in a stealthy way teases exactly how Sister Sage is
manipulating her in this episode.
When Kate asked Marie to heal her, she says,
Kate, I tried to heal you when your skull was broken. I couldn't.
But we know that she's actually making excuses because she doesn't want to heal Kate
because, well, you know, she went on a murder rampage last season.
Now, if she had learned to forgive Kate,
then Kate would have read Godalkin's mind at the end of the episode,
and she would have known that he was actually cipher.
So what we see here is that Marie and the whole campus
are going to pay the price for Marie not learning to forgive others.
But more importantly, Kate explains how Vot controlled her
by building her up and making her believe that she's better than everyone else.
So until this episode, Marie denied that she was the all-powerful chosen one.
But now, she's believing her own hype, and Kate tells her,
I thought I knew it was
best. I was so sure
I was better than all of you and stronger.
I believed all the shit they told me.
That's how they get you.
So this is the trap that Seifer has set for her.
She has become stronger by feeding her
this chosen one narrative.
Like Valentina did to Bob and the Thunderbolts.
Exactly. So elsewhere, Jordan explains to Annabeth
that Sam...
Big jumps. Faster than we can drive.
And this, of course, is like the Hulk,
who can jump three miles at a time,
or the superboy Connell,
who can't fly, just jumps a lot.
Now, narratively, it's a smart way to separate the cast members so they can have their own storylines and conflicts.
So Annabeth tells Jordan that she doesn't like having powers.
In fact, she says...
I love boring.
And this goes back to Annabeth's closeted allegory.
She's a closeted self-hating soup, so equating boring to normalcy is a way of saying that her powers make her strange,
and this feeds into that same self-loathing.
Jordan also grew up keeping their powers a secret, but has found a way to be content by celebrating their uniqueness.
And speaking of self-loathing...
Maybe you should see therapist.
So Cypher's in his secure location trying to work out how polarity blocks his powers.
And then he does something interesting.
He decides to kill himself.
Yeah, should probably just end it.
But he does this because, now that somebody can counter his powers,
he is no longer strong.
He is weak and in his eyes he does not deserve to live.
But he also hates himself because he is not the mastermind behind everything.
He says,
Marie came back.
Just like Sage said,
That she would.
Now, over the season, I have pointed out how he is similar to X-Men leaders.
Like Xavier, he is disabled and has mind control powers,
and he teaches the soups to understand their powers and where they come from.
And like Magneto, he's rallying the kids to go to war.
But it turns out that he's way more like Apocalypse, who believes that only the strong survive.
So my mission is to call this herd.
Staminates the Birmingham.
But the reveal that Sage was actually the one who was a step ahead of everyone else is very interesting,
because it tells us that this whole season was not orchestrated by Cypher.
Sage is the mastermind pulling the strings.
Here's Sage again?
Well, she's a new member of the seven that orchestrated Homelander's rise to power in the Boy season four.
Now, we don't know what her ultimate plan is, but I doubt that it's to have Godalkan
going crazy and culling the herd.
Maybe this was all so she could get Marie to reach her highest power level so she could kill
Homelander.
Let me know what you think Sage's plan is down in the comments.
And, speaking of Sage, if she orchestrated Marie to be in this exact time and place,
then it's even possible that she sent Annabeth,
her visions. Right how? Well, it's like Vader torturing Han Solo and the Empire strikes back.
Vader hurt Han and then planned to kill him. And that planning then sent visions to Luke Skywalker
showing that his friends were going to die. Sage could have done the same thing here,
planning on killing Marie so that Annabeth would see her die, which only drives Marie to separate
herself from her friends. So Anderson then arrives and they all compare notes, and then Marie,
as this Christ-like figure, heals his mental wound. Now of all the suits, she is the only one
we have seen that has like traditional godlike powers to heal the sick and raise the dead.
And did you notice that when she's healing Anderson and he's having his seizures, it affects
everyone in the room and disrupts their own electromagnetic brainwaves? Similar to Xavier having
seizures in the movie Logan, you know, the ones that ultimately killed the entire X-Men team.
And you guys know that we love to compare this show to its Marvel counterparts, which is why we
made these boys parody shirts. Billy Butcher as the first appearance of Punisher, Soldier Boys,
Captain America, Issue 1. And then we have this God You College shirt and my personal favorite,
super baby as the Nirvana baby. Shopping our merch store helps out our channel so much. Links are below.
Thank you guys for your support. So on campus, Rufus approaches Sam with the butt guy from a few
episodes ago and he tells them that it's his responsibility to look after a pledge. So in frat culture,
this is how they incorporate new members by humiliating them for a week to prove that they really want to be in the
club. Like Tyler on his porch, yelling at meatloaf. You're too old, fat man. Exactly. But there's a symbolic
meaning here. Sam is being forced to control someone and Cyphers powers are taking control of people and
then forcing them to act against their will. And then good guy Greg shows up. Turns out he is not a
mind-controlled villain like I thought, but he is a romantic rival for Sam. And it's funny that in the
previous scene, Annabeth and Jordan talk about how Sam jumps really far, but he can't fly,
and in this scene, his rival can fly. And later, this kind of turns into a dick measuring contest
between the two. I can jump away faster than you can fly, so.
I doubt, though. I'm pretty sure flying faster.
For the record, flying is way better. In Cypher's office, Anderson tries to get Marie to trust Kate,
continuing last episode's theme of trust.
And this makes sense because the first step of forgiveness,
the theme of this episode is learning to trust someone.
Anderson is able to forgive Kate because he also has been manipulated by Vought all of his life.
Kate tells Marie that they control you by telling you that you're so strong,
and Anderson has also been led into this life of a celebrity.
Thought has told him that he is special, he's a movie star,
and that quest for fame and power made him keep his condition a secret from his son.
If you want to blame someone for Andre, blame me.
I didn't protect him the way I should have.
I knew my powers were killing me, and I didn't tell him.
I didn't tell him this fucking thing could happen to him.
So it turns out that all season long,
Anderson was also filled with self-loathing
and blamed himself for his son's death.
So he, too, has to practice a little bit of self-forgiveness.
And here again, we see the theme of trust
with Greg distrusting Sam.
Now, all throughout this season,
each character has had to use empathy to relate to other people.
Jordan forgave Kate and Sam because they were able to see things
from their points of view.
The character growth that we have seen all season long
is what now allows us.
them to work together. But Marie's character growth has not been outward, it's completely been
inward. Instead of learning to trust in others, she's been learning to trust in herself,
or she's been convincing Jordan and Emma to trust her at the start of the season. And even though
she doesn't trust Cypher, she falls into his trap. For instance, when he calls, his language is
exactly how Kate described the Vot machine earlier. You're stronger than the others. Embrace it.
It's the only road out for all of you. He is controlling her simply by telling her that she is strong.
He even admits to killing Annabeth to get her to level up, which is like another X-Men villain, Sebastian Shaw, an X-Men first class, who killed Magneto's mother to get him to use his powers.
But everything I did, I did for you to unlock your power to make you embrace it.
In the cafeteria, we see the newest student ranking behind Emma.
And this is where Sam tells Emma,
This is all new to me, okay? Like, feeling, I guess.
And this is a side effect of what Kate was doing to him at the start of the season, which is a major.
metaphor for heavy drug use. Now he's saying,
Yeah, I think I need some time. I need some time to work on it to try to be normal.
And this echoes what Annabeth and Jordan were talking about. These characters are all trying to
feel normal when they really just need to be more themselves. Emma drives home that point when she
says,
Same you're not, you're just being you. In other words, she can accept him for who he really is.
Now, when Annabeth finds Marie, she admits the truth that she had a vision of their parents' deaths
and she didn't tell anyone. She says,
It's been easier for me to hate you all this time instead of hate myself, but I hate myself anyway.
Which is just like how Jordan felt in episode two this season.
I think it's easier for me to be angry with you than to be terrified of losing you.
Again, this is rooted in this episode's theme of forgiveness. You have to forgive yourself before you can forgive others.
Because ultimately, when you hate someone else, you are the person who carries that burden and not them.
But instead of empathizing with her sister and accepting help, Marie takes the bait and falls into a machine.
similar to the characters bringing up the Vot machine.
She empathized with Annabeth but says...
I am the only one who can wake of Godalkin.
Believing that she is the strongest there is.
But then she does some real messed up shit.
She flutes Jordan, Emma, Sam, and Greg
into the air just by concentrating on their blood.
And notice the heartbeat sound effect when she does this.
It's disgusting because you can actually see them
as big bags of blood that she's holding in the air.
Now remember, this is the same thing she did to Jordan during their fight.
Notice Marie is not even using her hands at all, showing that now she's really taking on Cypher's tutelage.
Don't raise your hand.
Your hand, that doesn't do anything.
The most screwed up part was when she tells Kate...
Make them go away from here, will you do that?
So Marie is now a giant hypocrite and Cypher's perfect soldier.
But her keeping her friends away is also rooted in her own self-loathing and her lack of self-forgiveness.
She does not want them to die because she watched her parents die.
She is letting her own self-loathing control her actions.
Kate to protect them, make them go away.
So Marie has now come full circle. She has become Kate.
This is exactly what Kate thought she was doing in season one,
using her powers to protect her friends from themselves.
But Kate has shown that she can change.
Marie, I said I would never use my powers against any of you.
In the danger room, Seifer looks at a rack of weapons,
which is symbolic of how he views the soups. To him, each new super body is a new tool slash
weapon that he can jump into. But, I mean, this whack-a-mole fight was fun.
Why didn't the other guys just leave Scyt?
Pfefer and Polarity alone. I feel like it would have taken Anderson a few seconds to kill the Dean with the rack of metal weapons behind him.
Now, this fight is actually being waged on two fronts. There is the physical fight where Seifer is using his powers to control others in a fist fight, but then there's also the mental fight where Seifer doesn't have to use his powers at all.
He is controlling Marie simply by manipulating her.
And when Godalkin gets his body back, he no longer has any use for his vessel. And it turns out this guy's name is Doug.
Yes. No, Doug on the show. I'm always on the show. You're in the show?
I am? Doug is. I am dark. Well, Doug in the show, like our Doug, says he worked at a video store,
showing us just how long he's been held captive by Godalkin. And when he's healed, he says,
The pain is gone. Which is exactly what Polarity said when he was healed.
I've been sick for so long. I forgot what it's like to feel healthy.
So I'm wondering if Seifer ever wanted Marie for any other reason, or if the only reason she was even created
was so he would have a soup who was powerful enough to heal his wounds. And by the way, he is played by
Ethan Slater, who also played Bach and Wicked. Oh yeah, thank you. Jeez. And out on the quad,
he meets the pledge who is also in a diaper. And this is a brilliant little bit of storytelling.
You have the guy who is weak and submits to being a slave, and then the guy who despises the
weak and create slaves. But in this exact moment, we find them at a crossroads. They're both in diapers,
but one is on his way up and the other is on his way down. Now, the song playing here is
Young at Heart, which is fitting because Marie, not only healed Godalkin, but now he's free
to roam around a college campus like he's a young person. He can now implement his
Nazi ideology and create a bloodbath far worse than what we saw at the end of season one.
Hell, this guy's probably powerful enough to control Homelander, which means that he could
theoretically control the whole world. And I got to say, we were right about Godalkin's secretly
controlling Cypher, but we were very, very wrong about him being a secret good guy. But there were
lots of clues along the way that the Birdman was controlling Cypher. First, the show is a parody of
the X-Men, so it makes sense that the school would have a disabled telepathic leader like Charles
Xavier. But there's also the smoothies. He was having Doug eat tons of protein like chicken and peanut
so he would have a strong vessel.
Protein also keeps the brain healthy and functioning and easier to control.
Cypher's fake name was Dr. Gold, which is similar to Godalkin.
And we also saw that Gold worked at Project Odessa,
where we first met Godalkin back in episode one.
And also there's the fact that we see Thomas Godalkin in a fire,
and we see an old man covered in burns.
That one was pretty easy to put together.
We also find out that Godalkin was a friend of Frederick Vought
and also believed in his Nazi ideals,
and Cypher is constantly spouting Nazi ideology all through the series.
Humans and race traitors.
You are not students, your soldiers, and you will fight for the cause.
So my mission is to cull this herd.
And the biggest clue I thought was that he didn't have compound V in his blood.
At first, I thought that might mean that he was a natural-born soup,
and maybe he was also a product of Project Odessa.
But after Cypher's powers were revealed to be mind control,
it made way more sense that the puppeteer was actually being puppeted.
After all, his name is Cypher, which literally means a symbol that secretly means something else.
So Doug's body was actually a cypher the entire time.
Also, he has no pain response.
Whenever Cypher was taking damage, whether it be self-inflicted or someone attacking him,
it was actually Doug feeling the pain since Godalkin was piling him from miles away.
Also, Cypher is always massaging and caring for the burned body
because Godalkin wanted to keep his body functional after he was healed.
And remember that creepy Sister Sage sex scene?
Well, remember just before that, when she comes in the room,
they turn their heads at the exact same time.
That's because they are the same person.
And the reason the two of them do it in front of the burned man
is because Doug is the burned man.
And in episode six, Stan Edgar said the Godalkin was obsessed with controlling soups,
which is, of course, Cyphers Power,
foreshadowing Godalkin's soup power to be mind-controlling soups.
Hey, big shout out to Ethan Inc. who co-wrote this video.
You can find his links below,
or you can talk to either of us on our free-to-join Discord server
or on literally all of our socials.
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For Screen Crush, I'm Ryan.
Ryan Erie.
