The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Justice League’s’ Fisher took on Cyborg as first major movie role

- By David Betancourt

The role of Cyborg in “Justice League” is Ray Fisher’s first performanc­e in a major motion picture, but he does have experience playing legendary characters.

Before filming his first movie, Fisher was a theater actor, performing as the Duke of Burgundy in an Oregon Shakespear­e Festival production of “King Lear,” and as Muhammad Ali in New York Theater Workshop’s “Fetch Clay, Make Man.”

Soon after his performanc­e as Ali, Fisher acquired an agent and a manager and took his fifirst trip to Los Angeles. He met with Warner Bros. right around the time they were looking to cast the role of the living computer Cyborg/Victor Stone, whose attempts to reckon with his fading humanity help give “Justice League” some emotion.

He landed the role of a character he admits he was only familiar with from the original “Teen Titans” cartoon of the early 2000s. But he became a quick study of all things Cyborg by diving into comic books.

“I didn’t know too much about his comic book history. I know that in ‘Teen Tit ans’ he’s much more the comedic relief,” Fisher told the Washington Post’s Comic Riffs. “But after reading the comic book iteration of Cyborg in ‘The New Teen Titans’ from the 1980s that Marv Wolfman and George Perez had worked on, I saw that there was a lot of texture to the character. [Cyborg is] much, much deeper than I had anticipate­d.”

Fisher does know that the current animated version of his “Justice League” character is one of DC’s hottest properties, appearing on Cartoon Networks’ extremely popular “Teen Titans Go!” animated series. Fisher did manage to utter that animated version’s trademark “booyah” in “Justice League,” pointing out that it was fun to add slivers of the lighter animated version to the depth he pulled from the 1980s comic.

“That’s the thing, you can pull bits and pieces of every version of each of these characters and bring them to life,” Fisher said. “I don’t watch [“Teen Titans Go!”]. It doesn’t mean primarily as much to me as it will to [kids now], but I hope it resonates in whatever way they need to receive that message.”

Unlike his “Justice League’ co-stars, Fisher spent most of his production time in a “onesie,” because of the high-tech, met al look of Cyborg that required lots of post-production CGI, while the rest of the cast wore slickly-designed, comic bookinspir­ed super-suits. But Fisher’s faith in the visual style of “Justice League” director Zack Snyder, which he came to admire in Snyder’s previous works such as “300,” “Man of Steel” and “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,” kept him confident.

“It was sort of like my birthday when I finally got to see the final product of what the suit would be. I feel like it actually helped me play the character a little bit more truer to life because he’s the only person in the JL who can’t take off his suit and it makes him feel like an outsider,” Fisher said. “So when I’m standing there and I see everyone else in their practical costumes and I feel like an outsider because I don’t have a practical costume, it actually helps play into that just a little bit more.”

Filming “Justice League” provided Fisher with lots of acting firsts, including not finishing with the director you started with, as Snyder had to leave “Justice League” due to the death of his daughter and Joss Whedon came in to do reshoots and postproduc­tion.

“Having things unfold the way that they did was a bit of a doozy for me. Obviously, the circumstan­ces for Zack having to step away were horrific,” Fisher said. “You continue on for the people who can’t continue on for themselves. You sort of dedicate your [performanc­e], saying, ‘ Listen, I’m going to do the best job I can possibly do for Zach, for [producer] Debbie [Snyder], and making sure that the vision is realized.’”

Fisher was surprised at the calm and camaraderi­e of the “Justice League” set — the actors felt they were “working on something much larger than ourselves.” He says Jason Momoa, who stars as Aquaman in the film, came into his trailer while he was getting makeup applied and reached over with a huge bear-hug to say hello the first time they met.

“I felt this sense of calm because everybody was welcoming in a way that I didn’t expect,” Fisher said. “And that was something that trickled down with Zack and Debbie Snyder in the way that they run their sets. Zach gives the same level of respect to everyone he encounters on his set.”

Fisher hopes to be able to visit the role of Cyborg again, either in a guest-appearance in another so lo -DC hero movie or future “Justice League” films.

“I think we’ve only just scratched the surface. [ Cyborg] definitely [has] miles to go with respect to repairing the relationsh­ip with his father (played by Joe Morton), discoverin­g his powers and discoverin­g who he is,” Fisher said. “And hopefully we get the opportunit­y to explore all of those avenues.”

 ?? BY WARNER BROS.-DC ENTERTAINM­ENT CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Ray Fisher stars as Cyborg in “Justice League.”
BY WARNER BROS.-DC ENTERTAINM­ENT CONTRIBUTE­D Ray Fisher stars as Cyborg in “Justice League.”

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