I was not expecting The Boys of all shows to have an incredibly well-acted, touching, and tearjerking couple of scenes dealing with dementia and the pain of letting go. Jack Quaid, Rosemarie DeWitt, and especially the unmatched Simon Pegg were absolute gold, wow.
I'm really grateful Kripke and company didn't do any kind of swerve, or twist, or shock-for-shock's sake, but played that completely straight.
Yes i loved that conclusion to the storyline even if it included the typical Boys gore. So far it is the best element of the season and i wonder if it will have an effect on Hughie to impact the greater storyline now that he knows/experienced how to make the hard call. It's time for Hughie to step up for real and reform the Boys, who are currently falling apart at lightspeed.
Yeah, like, how the heck they have the time to do anything else?
A weak explanation would be that they already started trailer production while the movie was filming and used completed scenes. Since the actor ( A-Train) has superpowers already they don't even have to do much VFX work, so in an even more well oiled machine that is the Vought Cinematic Universe ( loved the dig at the MCU and i'm a big MCU fan) it is not unfeasible to go that route. Especially in a Blindside movie copy that is most likely not very VFX heavy.