Interview poster
© AFP Photo / Christopher Polk
In the wake of a massive cyberattack and diplomatic furor, Sony Pictures has released 'The Interview' online after many cinema's opted not to show the film. The reaction to the irreverent flick has been equal parts critical, funny and even patriotic.

The brazen comedy, revolving around a farcical plot to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, is now available through online video portals like Google's YouTube and Microsoft's Xbox Video.

The film's theatrical release had been bumped up from October to Christmas Day, though last week Sony opted to cancel the film's nationwide premier after movie theater chains said they would not run it because of security concerns.

After all the wait and controversy, reaction to the film has ranged from effusive praise to mockery and everything in between.

Some theaters which have not been dissuaded in screening the film have used the outrage as a marketing ploy to demonstrate their first amendment bona fides. On theater, for example, has promised to give away free popcorn to anyone who brings a copy of the constitution to screenings of the film.

Actor Jonah Hill, a long-time friend and collaborator of The Interview star, co-director and producer Seth Rogen, tweeted to his more than 4.5 million followers a link to where they could watch the film. He of course, also remembered to tweet "Free Speech" after the link.

Others have stressed that as Americans, they have an equal right not to watch The Interview, be it for matters of taste or PR burnout.


Comment: It is amazing how people invoke the mantra of 'rights' over a silly factious movie. What about the right to truth, real freedom, and our very lives, as citizens are gunned down in the streets?


In one instance, it elicited a less than diplomatic rebuttal from Rogen.
chrisperson_interview_tweet
© Unknown
Speaking of PR, some on social media have come to say the circus surrounding the Sony hack feels like one big stunt.


All of which leads to the question: was it all worth it in the end?

Bloomberg Businessweek, saying the uproar over 'The Interview' is "utterly astounding" given how "stupid the film is," said it is "far less compelling than the events it inspired."

The more youth-oriented Rolling Stone had a different take, saying the films mission "is merely to make audiences p**s themselves laughing. At that it succeeds."


Comment: Will the audience laugh if they have to swallow the fact that their own government tortures people in violation of human rights?


Iran's Press TV took a far more serious tone, saying 'The Interview' isn't a movie at all; it's a "propaganda tool."

The Washington Post took the other side of the coin, saying the film was surprisingly perceptive in relaying certain realities of North Korean life, despite all of its flaws.


Comment: North Korea's leader is another boogeyman like Osama Bin Laden. We know nothing about him except what mainstream media wants us to believe.


Perhaps the biggest takeaway from the film is that is a pilot study in a digital model in releasing films which could potentially revolutionize the industry.

"I can't say that this is the future," Jeff Bock, senior box office analyst for Exhibitor Relations Co, told AP. "For this film, in particular, it works because of the saga that goes along with it. But it's nice to have a film we can actually use as a guinea pig for a video-on-demand release."

The Los Angeles Times was more optimistic, saying it will likely be "remembered as much for being a watershed moment in on-demand viewing as it is for any White House press conference or embarrassing emails."

That would be quite the feat for a film crafted not by digital pioneers or political activists, but rather the world's premier 'bromance' auteurs.

The entire furor erupted in November, after hackers broke into Sony's computer systems, dumping hundreds of sensitive internal documents onto the Internet and warning the company against showing the film.

The FBI has officially pinned the hack on North Korea, saying the breach involved lines of code, methods, and encryption algorithms previously developed by the country.

North Korea has denied involvement, although months before the cyberattack, Pyongyang warned that the film was "a wanton act of terror and act of war" which would be met with a "merciless response."


A North Korean envoy to the United Nations scaled down the rhetoric regarding the film's limited release, saying the country will condemn the decision, but will not have any "physical reaction." He added that the movie is an "unpardonable mockery of our sovereignty and dignity of our supreme leader."

He reiterated previous claims that his country was not involved in the hack.