Actor-director Seth Rogen defended the choice to parody North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in the comedy The Interview, the movie that sparked a real-life threat from the country and is suspected as the possible cause of a damaging cyberattack on Sony Pictures Entertainment.
Rogen, who wrote, produced and directed The Interview with filmmaking partner Evan Goldberg, told ABC show Good Morning America on Monday that he had not anticipated the media storm surrounding the film.
“I don’t know if the hacking honestly is because of our movie, definitively or not. I know that it has been the center of a lot of media attention lately,” Rogen said. “The movie itself is very silly and wasn’t meant to be controversial in any way.”
Photo: Reuters
Last month, Sony Pictures’ computer network was crippled by an attack by hackers who stole and released five films, employee data and internal e-mails.
People close to the investigation have told reporters that North Korea is a principal suspect, but a North Korean diplomat has denied his country was involved.
Pyongyang denounced The Interview in June as “undisguised sponsoring of terrorism, as well as an act of war.”
E-mails released by the hackers shed light on Sony’s internal debate about the film, showing that Sony Corp chief executive officer Kazuo Hirai ordered that the movie be toned down after North Korea complained. Rogen objected, but complied before the cyberattack.
“With every movie we do, there’s a conversation creatively about what happens, but ultimately I’m 100 percent behind the finished product of the movie,” Rogen said, when asked about the changes he made.
A Sony spokeswoman could not be immediately reached for comment, but last week a Sony Corp official said that Hirai rarely reviews specific scenes in films.
The Interview, scheduled for release on Thursday next week, follows flamboyant TV host Dave Skylark, played by James Franco, and his hapless producer Aaron Rapaport (Rogen), who score an interview with the elusive Kim. The duo are recruited by the CIA to assassinate Kim, but not without a series of comic obstacles filled with crude humor.
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