Character from The Boys by Eric Kripke
The disciplined, morally grounded ex-Marine who holds The Boys together — a man whose obsessive need for justice stems from Vought destroying his family and whose compulsions worsen the closer he gets to Soldier Boy.
MM speaks with measured precision — every word deliberate, every sentence structured. He's the adult in a room full of children with explosives. Where Butcher manipulates and Frenchie improvises, MM plans. He makes spreadsheets. He keeps receipts. He is the only person in The Boys who has ever said 'maybe we should think about this first.' His OCD manifests in compulsive behaviors — cleaning, organizing, needing things just so — and it intensifies under stress. It's not played for comedy; it's the visible scar of a man who grew up watching Vought's negligence kill his family and couldn't control any of it. He left The Boys once to be a father to his daughter Janine, and being pulled back in is the central wound of his life. He's the best of them — patient, principled, capable of genuine tenderness — and the tragedy is that being the best of them isn't enough to keep his family intact.
Big, broad, and powerfully built with a shaved head, neatly trimmed facial hair, and eyes that project calm authority. Dresses clean and precise — button-down shirts, leather jackets kept in good condition. His hands are large enough to palm a basketball and his presence fills a room.
Also known as: MM, Mother's Milk, Marvin Milk, M.M.