Published Jul 10, 2026, 11:58 AM EDT
Cathal Gunning has been writing about movies, television, culture, and politics online and in print since 2017. He worked as a Senior Editor in Adbusters Media Foundation from 2018-2019 and wrote for WhatCulture in early 2020. He has been a Senior Features Writer for ScreenRant since 2020.
While The Boys might be over, the good news is that Prime Video already has a perfect successor lined up to replace its flagship series. The Boys might never have been subtle, but that doesn’t mean that Prime Video’s superhero satire wasn’t effective. Set in a world where superheroes are treated as celebrity elites, with all the amoral behavior that implies, the five-season thriller was loosely based on the comic book series of the same name by Garth Ennis.
Interestingly enough, The Boys altered a lot of details from its source material, but this was almost universally viewed as a good thing. Like Prime Video’s other R-rated superhero series, Invincible, The Boys initially gained a cult following thanks to its subversive deconstruction of superhero tropes and its jaw-dropping moments of shock value, but viewers soon gained a new appreciation for the series as it fleshed out its main characters.
Since The Boys focused on the eponymous group of vigilantes who make it their unofficial job to police amoral, corrupt “Supes,” the show was effectively a darkly comic action thriller. Thus, even lthough it’s a less comedic and satirical series, Prime Video already has an ideal critically acclaimed action thriller that can replace the show after its May 2026 finale. Reacher can also last longer than The Boys, given the nature of the source material, and this hit thriller has a spinoff now, too, much like Prime Video’s earlier flagship show.
Reacher Can Outlast The Boys As Prime Video’s New Flagship Series
Jasper Savage/PrimeThe Boys actually has more than one spinoff to date, since the series spawned 2022’s animated anthology show The Boys Presents: Diabolical, the live-action spinoff Gen V, which lasted two seasons from 2023 until2 205, and the upcoming prequel Vought Rising. However, Prime Video’s next flagship show is hot on the franchise’s tail, as Reacher’s upcoming spinoff Neagley prepares to expand the world of the series with its focus on Maria Sten’s titular heroine.
Based on the bestselling novel series of the same name by author Lee Child, Prime Video’s Reacher marks the second screen outing for the hulking drifter. A military veteran, Reacher is also a hyper-competent soldier of fortune who regularly arrives in new cities and towns, uproots criminal conspiracies, and starts cracking knuckles and necks to get to the bottom of whatever nefarious antics the locals are covering up.
Each of Child’s Reacher novels expands the title character’s backstory a little further, but also functions as a standalone story. Two earlier theatrical movies from the 2010s already brought Reacher to life, but a miscast Tom Cruise and a misguided PG-13 rating meant that these earlier adaptations never felt faithful to the beloved books. In contrast, Prime Video’s Reacher sticks closer to Child’s winning formula, and Ritchson’s casting has made the series one of the streaming service’s most popular titles with critics and viewers alike.
Reacher’s Source Material Gives Alan Ritchson’s Action Thriller An Edge Over The Boys
With an average Rotten Tomatoes rating of over 90% for all three of its seasons, Reacher can easily compete with The Boys in terms of its critical reception. However, the show has one major edge over the earlier Ennis adaptation, and that is its procedural format. Child's book series is ongoing, with more than 30 Reacher novels to date, meaning the screen adaptation of the books could last for decades.
In contrast, The Boys always had its eventual ending set in stone as, like George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire saga and its screen adaptation Game of Thrones, the show had to stick to the story of its self-contained source material. Since Prime Video’s Reacher doesn’t share this issue with The Boys, there is no need for the hit action thriller to wrap up its story after only five seasons.
Release Date February 3, 2022
Network Prime Video
Showrunner Nick Santora
Directors Omar Madha, Carol Banker, Julian Holmes, Lin Oeding, M.J. Bassett, Norberto Barba, Stephen Surjik, Thomas Vincent
Writers Cait Duffy
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Maria Sten
Frances Neagley









English (US) ·