Silas Stone | |
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![]() Silas Stone | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | DC Comics Presents #26 (Oct. 1980) |
Created by | Marv Wolfman George Pérez |
In-story information | |
Species | Human |
Team affiliations | S.T.A.R. Labs Teen Titans |
Abilities | Genius-level intellect |
Silas Stone is a character appearing in the comics that are published by DC Comics. He is the father of Cyborg and the creator of Titans Tower. Silas Stone first appeared in DC Comics Presents #26 and was created by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez.
Silas Stone has been featured in several adaptations, first appearing in animated form in several cartoons. Actor Joe Morton portrayed the character in the DC Extended Universe films Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, the theatrical cut of Justice League and Zack Snyder's Justice League (original director's cut of the 2017 film). Phil Morris portrays the character in the Doom Patrol television series on DC Universe.
Fictional character biography[]
Silas Stone is a scientist who formerly worked at S.T.A.R. Labs and is the father of Victor Stone. Blaming himself for the accident that damaged 90% of his son's body during his high school days, Silas Stone had to turn his son into a cyborg which led to Victor Stone taking the name Cyborg. As Victor blamed his father for the accident, Silas attempted to heal his son's hatred of him by helping to build Titans Tower for the Teen Titans.[1]
While on his deathbed after years of failing to make it up to his son due to him dying from radiation poisoning caused by a monster the Teen Titans were fighting, Silas finally reconciled with Cyborg as he passes away.[2]
In The New 52, Silas Stone is a scientist at S.T.A.R. Labs Super-Human Study building in Detroit studying a mysterious box when he is informed of the arrival of his son Victor. While Silas was annoyed that Victor showed up at his place of work, Victor talks to him about the scholarships that he received. Silas states that he doesn't need a scholarship as he is already paying for his school which leads to the two of them arguing about it. When the box in the Justice League's possession and the box at S.T.A.R. Labs activate, Parademons come out and Victor is torn apart.[3] Silas cradles his son's damaged body and vows not to lose him like he lost his wife. With help from some co-workers, Silas takes his son to a secured room while telling him to hang in there. Following Victor's brief cardiac arrest while his body is being outfitted with experimental technology, Silas starts hearing Cyborg quote the binary code indicating that his repaired body is now online.[4] When Victor comes out of the room in his Cyborg body, he defends his father from the invading Parademons.[5]
During the "Forever Evil" storyline, Batman and Catwoman arrive at S.T.A.R. Labs' Detroit Branch carrying Cyborg's body. Upon bring it to Silas Stone and T.O. Morrow, they inform him that his cybernetic support system was ripped off him by Grid when the Crime Syndicate of America arrived.[6] After explaining how he and Catwoman evaded being trapped inside Firestorm where the rest of the Justice League and the Justice League of America became trapped, Batman tells Silas to save Victor.[7]
In other media[]
Television[]
- Silas Stone is alluded to in The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians. In the episode "The Seeds of Doom", Martin Stein tells Ronnie Raymond about Cyborg's history which included that Silas having saved his son from an accident.
- Silas Stone appears in season three of the Young Justice animated series, voiced by Khary Payton.
- Silas Stone appears in Doom Patrol, portrayed by Phil Morris. He first appears in the episode "Donkey Patrol" where he contacts his son asking him to come home. Cyborg declines and states that he has joined the Doom Patrol. In the episode "Doom Patrol Patrol", Silas appears at the Doom Patrol's headquarters to fix Cyborg following a battle with the Cult of the Unwritten Book that also involved Mr. Nobody self-destructing Cyborg's arm cannon. In "Cyborg Patrol", Victor is captured by the Bureau of Normalcy. Silas leads the remainder of the Doom Patrol in a plan to release him, but upon reaching his son, Cyborg is led to believe by Mr. Nobody that Silas did not care about his son. Cyborg seemingly kills Silas, before Mr. Nobody appears to taunt him over murdering his father for no reason. However, in "Flex Patrol", it was revealed that Silas is still alive and in critical condition. After Elasti-Girl helps to reinstall Grid, Cyborg stays by his father's side. In the episode "Penultimate Patrol", Cyborg apologizes to his father for attacking him. Silas admits to altering Cyborg's memories, specifically his mother's death and that she was still alive after the explosion. He reveals she actually died at S.T.A.R. Labs after Silas chose to save their son's life over hers at Chief's suggestion.
Film[]
- Silas Stone appears in Justice League: War, voiced by Rocky Carroll.
- An alternate reality version of Silas Stone appears in Justice League: Gods and Monsters, voiced by Carl Lumbly. This version is a member of Project Fair Play alongside John Henry Irons, Karen Beecher, Kimiyo Hoshi, Michael Holt, Pat Dugan, Professor Hamilton, Ray Palmer, Stephen Shin, T.O. Morrow, Thaddeus Sivana, Victor Fries and Will Magnus. Superman enlisted him to unlock the seemingly-missing data from Superman's Kryptonian spaceship. Later that night, Silas was attacked by a Metal Man that was in Superman's form as part of a plot to frame Superman. The Superdroid burned Silas and his son Victor Stone alive.
- Silas Stone appears in Batman Unlimited: Monster Mayhem, voiced by Cedric Yarbrough.
- Silas Stone appears in The Death of Superman, voiced again by Rocky Carroll.
- Silas Stone appears in the films set in the DC Extended Universe portrayed by Joe Morton.[8]
- Stone first appears in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. He is shown experimenting on his son to be Cyborg.
- Stone again appears in Justice League. He was among the scientists that were captured by Steppenwolf due to him having come in contact with the Mother Box. While Batman and Wonder Woman were fighting Steppenwolf, Flash rescued Stone and the other scientists. Following Steppenwolf's defeat, he is seen bonding with Cyborg as they both make improvements to his son's body. Stone was originally meant to die in the original cut from Zack Snyder, but that idea got scrapped until the original cut was released. Snyder's original vision which sees Stone die due to being disintegrated after remotely activating a Mother Box was released on March 18, 2021 on HBO Max in the US and various other platforms worldwide.
References[]
- ↑ DC Comics Presents #26. DC Comics.
- ↑ New Teen Titans #7. DC Comics.
- ↑ Justice League Vol. 2 #2. DC Comics.
- ↑ Justice League Vol. 2 #3. DC Comics.
- ↑ Justice League Vol. 3 #4. DC Comics.
- ↑ Forever Evil #2. DC Comics.
- ↑ Forever Evil #3. DC Comics.
- ↑ Burlingame, Russ (March 25, 2016). "Batman v Superman Reveals Who Plays Cyborg's Dad". comicbook.com. Retrieved April 3, 2016.
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External links[]
- Silas Stone at DC Comics Wiki
- Silas Stone at Comic Vine
Template:Cyborg (DC Comics)
Teen Titans | ||
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Creators | Bob Haney • Bruno Premiani | |
Founding members | Aqualad/Garth • Kid Flash/Wally West • Robin/Dick Grayson • Wonder Girl/Donna Troy • Speedy/Roy Harper | |
Current members | Teen Titans | Robin/Damian Wayne • Kid Flash/Wallace West • Red Arrow/Emiko Queen |
Titans | Donna Troy • Beast Boy/Garfield Logan • Raven/Rachel Roth • Steel/Natasha Irons • Miss Martian/M'gann M'orzz • Green Lantern/Kyle Rayner | |
Notable members | Aqualad (Jackson Hyde) • Arsenal • Argent • Atom (Ray Palmer • Ryan Choi) • Baby Wildebeest • Blue Beetle/Jaime Reyes • Bombshell • Bumblebee • Bunker • Bushido • Captain Marvel Jr. • Cyborg • Damage • Duela Dent • Mal Duncan • Gnarrk • Hawk and Dove • Impulse/Kid Flash/Bart Allen • Hot Spot • Jericho • Kid Devil/Red Devil • Kole • Minion • Nightwing/Dick Grayson • Omen • Osiris • Pantha • Phantasm • Prysm • Ravager/Rose Wilson • Red Star • Risk • Robin/Red Robin/Tim Drake • Speedy/Mia Dearden • Solstice • Starfire/Koriand'r • Static • Superboy (Kon-El • Jonathan Samuel Kent) • Supergirl (Kara Zor-El • Matrix • Linda Danvers) • Tempest • Terra • Wonder Girl/Cassie Sandsmark | |
Supporting characters | Dubbilex • Justice League • Mento • Sarge Steel • Silas Stone • Thunder and Lightning • Wendy, Marvin and Wonder Dog | |
Enemies | Antagonists | Blackfire • Brain • Brother Blood • Cheshire • Cinderblock • Clock King • Copperhead • Deathstroke the Terminator • Ding Dong Daddy • Disruptor • Disruptor II • Doctor Light • Dreadbolt • General Immortus • Gizmo • Gorilla Grodd • H'San Natall • Hybrid • Jericho • Jinx • Lady Vic • Mad Mod • Madame Rouge • Mammoth • Mister Twister • Mongul • Monsieur Mallah • Persuader • Phobia • Plasmus • Psimon • Ravager • The Reach • Red Panzer • Shimmer • Siren • Superboy-Prime • Terra I • Trident • Trigon • Vandal Savage • Warp • Wintergreen • Zookeeper |
Organizations | Brotherhood of Evil • Dark Nemesis • Fearsome Five • H.I.V.E. • Tartarus • Terror Titans • Wildebeest Society | |
Locations | S.T.A.R. Labs • Tamaran • Titans Tower | |
Publications and storylines | "Superboy and the Legion" • Team Titans • Teen Titans Go! • Teen Titans: The Lost Annual • Tiny Titans • Titans Tomorrow • Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day • The Uncanny X-Men and The New Teen Titans | |
Affiliated teams | Doom Patrol • Legion of Super-Heroes • Titans East • Young Justice | |
In other media | Films | Trouble in Tokyo • Justice League vs. Teen Titans • The Judas Contract • Go! To the Movies • Go! vs. Teen Titans • Justice League Dark: Apokolips War |
Television | Teen Titans (episodes • characters • Red X) • Teen Titans Go! (episodes • characters • "The Night Begins to Shine") • Titans | |
Video games | Teen Titans (2005) • Teen Titans (2006) |