'The Boys' Casts Tomer Capon as Frenchie

The quintet of Amazon's The Boys has found its final member.Tomer Capon has been cast as Frenchie [...]

The quintet of Amazon's The Boys has found its final member.

Tomer Capon has been cast as Frenchie in the upcoming live-action television adaptation, according to Deadline. Capon will be joining Karl Urban as Billy Butcher, Jack Quaid as Wee Hughie, Karen Fukuhara as Female, and Laz Alonso as Mother's Milk.

Frenchie is described as "the unpredictable wild card of the Boys, a brutal warrior when the situation calls for it, he's living a life of no attachments or responsibilities."

Capon is an Israeli actor, whose filmography includes One Week and a Day, A Tale of Love and Darkness, and Fauda.

The Boys is based on the Dynamite Entertainment series of the same name, which is created by Preacher creator Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson. The television adaptation will be created by Rogen, Goldberg, and Supernatural and Timeless alum Eric Kripke, with the pilot episode directed by 10 Cloverfield Lane's Dan Trachtenberg.

"Without the success of Preacher I can't imagine they ever would have considered it for a minute." Goldberg recently told reporters. "Even though Preacher is by far the craziest most reality-bending, genre-bending thing, The Boys is much more grounded in reality but it is equally insane in its own unbelievably gritty, unforgiving analysis of like societal flaws through this very different story. Without any doubt, there's no chance they would have even considered letting us do this, nor would they consider anyone doing it I would imagine without Preacher, because it just proved this crazy can happen."

The cast of The Boys will also include Elisabeth Shue as Madelyn Sitwell, Erin Moriarty as Starlight, a character tied to the superhero group The Seven, alongside Antony Starr as Homelander, Dominique McElligott as Queen Maeve, Jesse T. User as A-Train, Chase Crawford as The Deep, and Nathan Mitchell as Black Noir.

A live-action take on the comic book series has been in development for a long time. Adam McKay, who directed Anchorman and The Big Short, first developed a film adaptation of The Boys in 2010 and shopped it around from Columbia to Paramount. But the project needed to find the right place in terms of budget, and it appears to have finally found its place for television audiences, partially with the help of Preacher.

Are you excited to see Capon join The Boys? Let us know what you think in the comments below.

The Boys is set to begin production soon, and will be released sometime in 2019 on Amazon.

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