Arts & Entertainment
Churchville 7 Cancels Screening of The Interview Amid Threats
The operator of the movie theater—Carmike Cinemas—decided not to show controversial film about North Korean leader's assassination.
UPDATE: Sony has decided not to release The Interview in any form, according to the BBC.
The movie theater off Route 22 is one of hundreds that will not be showing The Interview, a Sony film set for release on Christmas Day.
The Interview stars Seth Rogen and James Franco as a TV show host and producer tapped by the CIA to assassinate Kim Jong Un, according to the Daily Beast. Kim Jong Un is the current leader of North Korea.
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Carmike Cinemas, which runs Churchville 7 off Route 22 in Bel Air and more than 250 theaters in the U.S., announced that it would not be screening the film in the wake of a threat issued Tuesday, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Churchville 7 is the only Carmike theater in Maryland.
The Guardians of Peace, a group believed to be behind the recent Sony cyber attacks, delivered the following message Tuesday, according to Buzzfeed: “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.”
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Sony alerted theater operators Tuesday, vowing to support each owner’s decision about whether to show the film, Fox News reported.
Carmike Cinemas decided late Tuesday to cancel screenings of The Interview at all of its theaters, according to the New York Times.
On Wednesday, the theater slated for the film’s Thursday premiere nixed the event, the BBC reported.
The Department of Homeland Security said that there was “no credible intelligence to indicate an active plot” though it was continuing to investigate, according to the BBC.
“We have been down this road before,” New York Police Department’s Deputy Commissioner of Intelligence and Counterterrorism John Miller told the New York Post, recalling threats made against movies, such as those involving Osama bin Laden.
However, a film about a leader who is still alive is a “bridge that The Interview appears to be the first to cross,” according to The Washington Post, as movies about Hitler and Osama bin Laden were released after their deaths.
North Korea has said it was not responsible for the cyber attacks on Sony but did say that the company was “abetting a terrorist act while hurting the dignity” of North Korea’s leadership in releasing The Interview, Fox News reported.
Screenshots from YouTube trailer for The Interview, by Sony Entertainment.
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