Terrorists are threatening to attack movie theaters showing The Interview. You should go see it anyway.

The latest wave of hacked data from Sony Pictures came with a disturbing threat — and the way we react is important

The Interview
(Image credit: (The Interview/Facebook.com))

The hackers behind the Sony Pictures leaks have pushed their cause to new extremes. Having spent several weeks making the lives of movie executives miserable, they're now literally threatening the lives of average moviegoers.

It's easy to imagine the executives at Sony Pictures sitting around a conference table, cursing the day they decided to greenlight The Interview. A hyper-violent comedy about the assassination of Kim Jong-un was never going to be the easiest sell, but the Seth Rogen/James Franco comedy may well go down as the biggest headache in studio history. Several weeks ago, a group of hackers, calling themselves the Guardians of Peace, responded to The Interview by releasing an enormous trove of private data stolen from Sony servers.

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Scott Meslow

Scott Meslow is the entertainment editor for TheWeek.com. He has written about film and television at publications including The Atlantic, POLITICO Magazine, and Vulture.