Joss Whedon fires back at Ray Fisher’s Justice League accusations
JossWhedon is back in an interview after being exposed by former colleagues for his misbehaviors. Specifically, he denies claims actors Ray Fisher and Gal Gadot, made across several social posts in 2020 and 2021, about Whedon’s misogynistic and racist actions on the set of Justice League . Anonymous associates charge that the movie’s former director Zack Snyder could be at the heart of Whedon’s troubles, and that fans of Snyder’s became incensed by tribalism.
“The beginning of the internet raised me up, and the modern internet pulled me down,” Whedon says in the story. “The perfect symmetry is not lost on me.”
The cover story in the latest issue of New York Magazine describes Whedon’s journey from growing up in a “palazzo-style apartment” on the Upper West Side, to British boarding schools and Wesleyan, to writing the original Buffy To take Web 1.0 by storm with script Buffy’s cast and crew embedded within message boards. However, the main article focuses on the many abuse allegations against Whedon.
These allegations span just about every TV show in which Whedon has been involved —Buffy and Angel. Firefly. DollhousePlease see the following: SHIELD agents, which Joss co-created with his half-brother and half-brother’s wife. In some cases, Whedon reportedly abused power dynamics to start dating women on these shows, in others he grabs women’s arms and refuse to let them go even when they say they’re in pain, and in other he humiliated female writers. Unnamed writer Firefly recalls in the New York story a time when Whedon called a staff meeting for an impromptu lecture to mock a female staffer’s script. “I’ve had my share of shitty showrunners, but the intent to hurt — that’s the thing that stands out for me now.” Whedon admits to some wrongful behavior, mostly attributed to being a young person in a position of power, and denies others.
Interestingly, anonymous members of Whedon’s inner circle have an origin story for where these allegations start: the set of Justice League.
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No other movie in the decade 2010s had such turmoil. Justice League, The movie went through re-litigation to the point that it was finally edited last year. The common story goes that Whedon was tapped to direct after Zack Snyder’s daughter’s tragic death by suicide, though Whedon objects to the narrative. According to the filmmaker, Warner Bros. tapped him to take over when an early screening made executives lose faith in the Snyder’s cut. “They asked me to fix it, and I thought I could help,” Whedon says. The profile describes his gun-for-hire gig as “one of the biggest regrets of his life.”
Where did things go wrong, in Whedon’s telling? Everywhere. Warner requested him to perform 40 days of post-production reshoots. He soon realized that Snyder’s sets were very different. Snyder encouraged actors to play along with his scenes, and asked them for feedback. Whedon was a renowned writer and wanted actors to read exactly what he had put into their scenes.
“That didn’t go down well at all,” an unnamed crew member recalls.
This fundamental difference seems to have affected every interaction Whedon had of the actors Justice League. For Ray Fisher, who played Cyborg — notably, the first Black superhero in a DC movie — the differences became personal. Snyder had asked for Fisher’s help in crating Cyborg, to the extent that New York Magazine writer Lila Shapiro describes Fisher as a “writing partner” of Snyder’s and screenwriter Chris Terrio.
“With a white writer and white director, we both thought having the perspective of an actor of color was really important,” Terrio told The Hollywood Reporter in 2021.
A large part of Fisher’s perspective was a tragic backstory for Cyborg involving his parents, “two genius-level Black people,” Fisher told The Hollywood Reporter. According to the actor, when Whedon took over the director’s chair, these scenes were cut. Fisher claims that Whedon cut off his phone and that Fisher was sad but ready to go on. “It feels like I’m taking notes right now,” Fisher claims Whedon said, “and I don’t like taking notes from anybody — not even Robert Downey Jr.”
Fisher isn’t the only actor who has spoken out about Whedon’s treatment on set, with Gal Gadot also accusing the director of threatening her career. But Fisher’s many accusations, which include being pressured into reciting catchphrases and using color correction to alter his skin tone, have clearly stuck with Whedon.
Whedon claims that Fisher’s color correction was applied to Cyborg’s skin to make it appear brighter. This was done in post-production. Cyborg’s cut storyline “logically made no sense,” Whedon says now, and Fisher’s character tested terribly with audiences. They spoke a lot about their characters and became friendly. In Whedon’s world, the problem lies with Fisher’s functionality in the movie. “We’re talking about a malevolent force,” he tells New York. “We’re talking about a bad actor in both senses.”
The New York Magazine article quotes a number of unnamed allies of Whedon, who have “proposed a theory: What if Fisher had been doing Snyder’s bidding? Without furnishing proof, they speculated that Snyder had tricked Fisher into thinking Whedon was racist.” Under this theory, which Whedon declines to endorse or denounce, Snyder’s manipulation of Fisher “poisoned [Charisma Carpenter of Buffy] against Whedon, causing her to see the complicated story of their relationship as a simplistic narrative of abuse.”
There is no evidence of a conspiracy between Snyder and Fisher, nor is there evidence that Charisma Carpenter doesn’t understand her own relationship with Whedon. Whedon remains true to his personal legacy until the very end. “I think I’m one of the nicer showrunners that’s ever been,” he says.
Fisher, who apparently declined multiple requests from New York Magazine for an interview, replied to the profile by a tweet saying that it “looks like Joss Whedon got to direct an endgame after all…,” while declining to address “all of the lies and buffoonery,” instead preferring to celebrate the work of Martin Luther King on his birthday.
Looks like Joss Whedon got to direct an endgame after all…
Rather than address all of the lies and buffoonery today—I will be celebrating the legacy of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Tomorrow we will keep going.#MLKDay
A>E
— Ray Fisher (@ray8fisher) January 17, 2022
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