The Interview
Still of Randall Park in ‘The Interview.’ Photo credit: Ed Araquel/CTMG, Inc/Sony Pictures

With multiple theater chains announcing they will not show the film “The Interview” in response to an online threat, Sony Pictures Entertainment on Wednesday canceled the movie’s planned Christmas Day release.

Meanwhile, several news sources reported that the U.S. Justice Department have linked the Sony cyber attacks to North Korea.

In a statement, Sony says it respects its partners’ decision to no screen the film in the interest of “the safety of employees and theater-goers.”

“Sony Pictures has been the victim of an unprecedented criminal assault against our employees, our customers and our business,” according to the company. “Those who attacked us stole our intellectual property, private emails and sensitive and proprietary material, and sought to destroy our spirit and our morale — all apparently to thwart the release of a movie they did not like.

“We are deeply saddened at this brazen effort to suppress the distribution of a movie, and in the process do damage to our company, our employees and the American public. We stand by our filmmakers and their right to free expression and are extremely disappointed by this outcome.”

The studio’s announcement came as major theater chains decided not to show the film following a threat posted online Tuesday by a group claiming responsibility for the cyberattack on Sony Pictures — the “Guardians of Peace.”

Georgia-based Carmike Cinemas announced Tuesday it would not show the film, and East Coast theater chain Bow Tie Cinemas posted a message on its website saying it also would not show it.

The entertainment trade publications The Hollywood Reporter and The Wrap reported that AMC, Regal, Cinemark and Cineplex theaters had all also decided not to show the film.

“The Interview,” a dark comedy starring Seth Rogen and James Franco, focuses on an assassination attempt of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. The film has been the center of speculation about motives behind the sweeping cyberattack on Sony. North Korea has denied any involvement in the attack.

In its online threat, the Guardians of Peace wrote, “We will clearly show it to you at the very time and places ‘The Interview’ be shown, including the premiere, how bitter fate those who seek fun in terror should be doomed to. Soon all the world will see what an awful movie Sony Pictures Entertainment has made. The world will be full of fear. Remember the 11th of September 2001.”

The threat went on to warn potential moviegoers to “keep yourself distant from the places at that time. If your house is nearby, you’d better leave.”

Writer-director Judd Apatow, who was not involved in the making of “The Interview,” took to Twitter to blast the decision by theater chains to drop the film.

“Will they pull any movie that gets an anonymous threat now?” he asked. “What if an anonymous person got offended by something an executive at Coke said. Will we all have to stop drinking Coke? We also don’t know that it isn’t a disgruntled employee or a hacker. Do we think North Korea has troops on the ground in the U.S.? Ridiculous.

“This only guarantees that this movie will be seen by more people on Earth than it would have before,” he wrote. “Legally or illegally all will see it.”

Talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel responded to Apatow on Twitter, saying he agrees with his sentiments “wholeheartedly.”

“An un-American act of cowardice that validates terrorist actions and sets a terrifying precedent,” Kimmel wrote.

Locally, Lee Ann Kim, executive director of Pacific Arts Movement, the host organization for the San Diego Asian Film Festival, said on her Facebook that she is saddened for Randall Park, who plays Kim Jong-un in the film.

“[W]hat horrible luck for our dear friend, Randall Park, one of the funniest and hardest working actors I know,” she said.

A formal announcement by the Department of Justice  linking the cyber attacks on Sony Pictures Entertainment to North Korea could be made as early as Thursday, according to media reports Wednesday out of Washington, D.C.

CNN cited an unnamed source who said the cyberattack that struck the studio last month — compromising personal information of employees, publicizing scripts of films in development and exposing sometimes-embarrassing internal emails — was carried out by hackers working at the behest of North Korea.

A host of other media outlets, including NBC, ABC and USA Today, quickly filed similar reports, all citing unnamed sources.

North Korea has been a focal point of speculation about the attack in light of the studio’s planned release of the film.

— City News Service