As it grow out , Marvel Cinematic Universefans actually have Garth Ennis’sThe Boysto thank for introducing a tarradiddle ticktock before the MCU transmute it into a observe cliché . While Ennis ’s comedian is best know for subverting and satirise existing superhero figure of speech , in the case of characters set about their arm prune off , The Boyswas before of the curve ball .

InThe Boys#63 – written by Garth Ennis , with art by Russel Braun – the character Frenchie ’s arm is sever during a competitiveness . primitively published in 2012,the issue precededIron Man 3 , which began the trend of MCU characters losing their arms .

Interestingly , The Boys ' edition was inexplicably similar to the style that would subsequently become a hallmark of theMCU ’s use of the figure of speech . That is , the mazed arm sequence came as an unexpected twist during an especially intense fight setting .

Anthony Starr smiling as Homelander in front of a poster featuring the Seven in The Boys

The Boys Parodied A Major MCU Trend Decision – Before It Even Started

The Boys#63 – Written By Garth Ennis; Art By Russel Braun; Color By Tony Aviña; Lettering By Simon Bowland

It is worth noting that Garth Ennis made this same creative determination inThe Boysfirst , almost as a form of premptive parody .

harmonize to Marvel Studios oral sex Kevin Feige , the recurring " lose branch " motive was a deliberate tribute to theStar Warsfranchise . Every movie in the MCU ’s Phase 2 – Iron Man 3(2013),Thor : The Dark World(2013),Captain America : The Winter Soldier(2014),Guardians of the Galaxy(2014),Avengers : Age of Ultron(2015 ) , andAnt - Man(2015 ) – at long last have at least one hero or scoundrel having their branch severed . Still , it is deserving noting that Garth Ennis made this same creative decision inThe Boysfirst , almost as a form of preemptive parody .

The Boys Beat The MCU To The Punch On The “Severed Arms” Trope

Parody Is Give And Take

GivenThe Boys ' satiric , anti - hero nature , the MCU ’s Phase 2 and 3 severed - arm trope is exactly the variety of superhero fatuousness thatEnnis would eagerly integrate into his subversive storylineto mock the trivialities of the musical genre . However , in an ironic twirl of foreshadowing , it was Ennis’The Boysthat first introduced the figure of speech it would likely have parody . Indeed , hadThe Boysbeen released during or after the MCU ’s Phase 2 , it almost surely would have included the severed - arm trope .

What makes the severed - subdivision image debuting inThe Boysbefore the MCU so entertaining is that Ennis clearly did n’t include it because he look for it becoming a trope . Rather , it ’s the form of over - the - top action that heightens the chaotic energy of a typical superhero view . course , theMCU later adopted and expanded on this tropein its own storytelling . The superstar lies in howa satirical workplace likeThe Boysestablishes a figure so compelling that it ’s eventually embraced by a mainstream amusement giant star — a quarry of its critique .

The Boysfranchise is a satirical and gloomy superhero series ground on the laughable book by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson . It explores a globe where superheroes , or " Supes , " are corrupt , violent , and morally belly-up , all controlled by the knock-down pot Vought International . The account centers around two opposing grouping : The Boys , a vigilante squad aiming to let on and overcome the tainted hero , andThe Seven , Vought ’s elite squad of Supes conduce by the ruthless Homelander .

peanuts' charlie brown and snoopy

Imagery of Jason the Red Ranger from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers

The MCU’s Bucky Barnes, missing his robotic arm (left, background); Frenchie from the Boys (right, foreground.)

The Boys, Butcher, Mothers Milk, Hughie, Frenchie, & the Female, look down at the reader.

The Boys (2019) TV Show Poster

Comics

Marvel Cinematic Universe