Sony
Pictures has cancelled the planned US release on 25 December of the film The
Interview, after major cinema chains decided not to screen it.
The
film is about a fictional plot to kill North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.
Hackers
have already carried out a cyber attack on Sony and warned the public to stay
away from cinemas screening the film.
The
US government said it was considering a "range of options" on how to respond
to the attack.
"We
know that criminals and foreign countries regularly seek to
gain access to
government and private sector networks - both in the United States and
elsewhere," a National Security Council statement said, adding that the
FBI was leading the investigation.
"We
take very seriously any attempt to threaten or limit artists' freedom of speech
or of expression."
The
statement came after US media quoted anonymous officials as saying that the FBI
had linked North Korea to the attacks.
'Deeply saddened'
Earlier
on Wednesday, the New York premiere of The Interview was cancelled. Sony says
it understands its partners' decision.
However,
in a statement it said it was "deeply saddened at this brazen effort to
suppress the distribution of a movie".
"In
light of the decision by the majority of our exhibitors not to show the film
The Interview, we have decided not to move forward with the planned December 25
theatrical release," it said.
"We
respect and understand our partners' decision and, of course, completely share
their paramount interest in the safety of employees and theatre-goers."
It
added: "We stand by our film makers and their right to free expression and
are extremely disappointed by this outcome."
Hackers
calling themselves Guardians of Peace have released emails and data stolen from
Sony in late November.
In a
recent warning they mentioned the 9/11 attacks, claiming "the world will
be full of fear".
"Remember
the 11th of September 2001. We recommend you to keep yourself distant from the
places at that time," the hacker group wrote in a message on Tuesday.
"Whatever
comes in the coming days is called by the greed of Sony Pictures
Entertainment."
'Un-American'
Earlier,
Sony had given theatres in the US and Canada the option to bow out of showing
The Interview in the wake of the threats.
Regal
Cinemas, AMC Entertainment and Cinemark Theatres - the top three theatre chains
in North America - subsequently announced they were postponing screenings, and
Canada's biggest theatre firms also pulled out, leaving Sony seemingly no
choice but to postpone the film.
Comedian
Jimmy Kimmel tweeted that the decision by theatres to refuse to show the film
was "an un-American act of cowardice that validates terrorist actions and
sets a terrifying precedent."
The
Interview cost Sony an estimated $42m (£27m) to produce - not nearly as much as
action films like The Hunger Games or the X-Men films - but still a significant
amount for a comedy film.
So
far, however, investors have not been too concerned about the potential hit to
Sony's bottom line. Sony's share price has declined by just over 5% since the
hack was revealed.
An
effort by activist shareholder Daniel Loeb to get Sony to spin off its entertainment
arm was thwarted in 2013, but the hacking revelations and their subsequent hit
to Sony's reputation could renew calls to reconsider the structure of the firm.
BBC
Business
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