Weapons Training, Fan Pressure & Final‑Season Chaos

Badass and enigmatic actor Karl Urban side‑stepped onto Late Night with Seth Meyers to talk all things Mortal Kombat II, stepping into the sunglasses‑and‑swagger of Johnny Cage — a role his sons immediately warned him not to “mess up,” given the franchise’s intense, lifelong fanbase. Urban laughs about it, but the message was clear: this one mattered.
Karl Urban knows The Boys is heading into bloody endgame mode
Butcher, Homelander, Vought, and one last round of superhero carnage — this is the kind of finale tease that makes late-night promo feel dangerous.
He dove into the wild prep process, revealing he underwent the most exhaustive physical exam of his career before filming even began. Heart checks, renal checks, bloodwork — the whole thing. And once he passed, production sent him home with actual weapons to practice, which led to the now‑infamous moment where he accidentally launched a staff across the kitchen and destroyed dinner. Classic Karl.

Credit: Late Night with Seth Meyers / NBC / YouTube
Urban admits he still catches himself flipping random objects around the house — even a broken rake while gardening — much to the horror of his kids, who have become the responsible ones in the household. And yes, he confirms he does the splits in the movie… with a little help from movie magic and his stunt double Gareth, whom he jokes makes him “suddenly flexible.”
But Seth eventually got to the real question: What can fans expect from the final season of The Boys?
Urban stays tight‑lipped but promises that episodes seven and eight are massive — even by The Boys standards. He hints at emotional detonations, shocking turns, and the kind of chaos that has defined the series since day one. It’s the tease of all teases, enough to send the fandom spiraling without giving anything away.
He closed the interview with a hilarious story about visiting the U.S. consulate for his visa, where the supervisor recognized him instantly as Johnny Cage and fast‑tracked him with “two stamps.” Even before the movie hits theaters, the character is already opening doors.
A perfect Karl Urban appearance: funny, chaotic, self‑deprecating, and just dangerous enough — with a side of The Boys‑level anticipation.






