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Old December 17th, 2014 #1
JamesHarrison
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Default North Korea owned Hollywitz

Federal government confirms that North Korea was behind hacking of Sony and terrorist threats as movie studio cancels the release of Kim Jong-un assassination film

The federal government confirmed on Wednesday that North Korea was behind the massive hack that saw the release of thousands of internal emails from Sony over the past two weeks.

This as Sony Pictures Entertainment pulled the planned Christmas Day release of The Interview after hackers threatened 9/11-like terror attacks on cinemas showing its North Korea comedy.

What's more, the film may never be released at all.

'Sony Pictures has no further release plans for the film,' said a spokesperson for the studio Wednesday evening.

This despite the fact that the film cost $42million to make and tens of millions to market.

Almost immediately, many in Hollywood voiced their concern, with writer Aaron Sorkin saying how upset he was that 'the U.S. succumbed to an unprecedented attack on our most cherished, bedrock principle of free speech by a group of North Korean terrorists,' and director Judd Apatow explaining the many problems this means for films moving forward.



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...-not-show.html
 
Old December 17th, 2014 #2
StanSikorski
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JamesHarrison View Post
Almost immediately, many in Hollywood voiced their concern, with writer Aaron Sorkin saying how upset he was that 'the U.S. succumbed to an unprecedented attack on our most cherished, bedrock principle of free speech by a group of North Korean terrorists,' and director Judd Apatow explaining the many problems this means for films moving forward.
Oh for fucks sake! Nothing funnier and pathetic than a kike spouting about "ar 'murkin freedumbs". Total chutzpah when connected to the jewy garbage that oozes from that shithole, Holloweird.

Having to suffer through "trends" like Howeird Stern, Borerat, and endless jew-pack buddy films and romantic "comedies" is one thing. Totally insulting the leader and people of another nation while hiding behind the protections of American rights is another thing.

I think the North Koreans know what jews are, and what they do when you allow them to flourish. The jews took a stab at them and NK kicked 'em right in the sack, not only crippling their industry, but also unmasking them even more in all their racist, megalomaniacal existence.

I love when that happens.
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Old December 17th, 2014 #3
Frank Toliver
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What will we do if we can't have films about assassination of foreign leaders? Can you imagine if this had happened in 1940?
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Old December 17th, 2014 #4
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Hollywitz? Hmm, I prefer Hymiewood. Sounds more termitical.

Great title though. And a good one for NK.
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Old December 18th, 2014 #5
Ray Allan
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North Korea can do us all a favor and drop one of their nukes on Hymiewood.
 
Old December 18th, 2014 #6
Sean Gruber
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"Federal government confirms"

Uh-huh. if you consider the principle of cui bono? (who benefits?) and the record of ZOG, you can see that this is very possibly a lie. So why would ZOG lie about NK being the source of the hacking? Because that stirs up the patriotards. As Thomas Paine put it, "[A]ny war is harvest to such Governments, however ruinous it may be to a nation. It serves to keep up deceitful expectations, which prevent a people looking into the defects and abuses of Government. It is the 'lo here!' and the 'lo there!' that amuses and cheats the multitude." (from Rights of Man, bolding added)

"the fact that the film cost $42 million"

Uh-huh. Do you believe this is "a fact"? What is the source? The source is Hollywood studio jewish accountants. I'm going to say that again. Hollywood studio jewish accountants. The people whom these operators have swindled would, if placed end to end, wrap clear around the equator.

So here we have a story built on info from 1) ZOG and 2) Hollywood studio jewish accountants, in highly self-interested contexts for both of them. And remember how much jews are connected, how Hollywood and ZOG cooperate (you can Google that yourself). The story looks suspect.

As a result of it, though, sheeple everywhere will "know" that heroic flag-waving jews have nothing to do with censorship or media control, that they merely are innocent victims of sinister gooks whom ZOG needs a bigger $tronger military to handle, etc....
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Last edited by Sean Gruber; December 18th, 2014 at 05:47 AM.
 
Old December 18th, 2014 #7
Patrick Bateman
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Quote:
Originally Posted by StanSikorski View Post
I think the North Koreans know what jews are, and what they do when you allow them to flourish. The jews took a stab at them and NK kicked 'em right in the sack, not only crippling their industry, but also unmasking them even more in all their racist, megalomaniacal existence.

I love when that happens.

If there is any truth to this story you may be right!

Quote:

Kim Jong Un hands out copies of Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf to senior North Korean officials to see what lessons can be learned from it


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...earned-it.html
 
Old December 18th, 2014 #8
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Quote:
Kim Jong Un hands out copies of Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf to senior North Korean officials
This was obviously fake.
 
Old December 18th, 2014 #9
John Evans
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I can't stand those slant-eyed bastards, but I love it when they stick it to the kikes.
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Old December 18th, 2014 #10
JamesHarrison
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Patrick Bateman View Post
If there is any truth to this story you may be right!





http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...earned-it.html
The Daily HitlerMail
 
Old December 19th, 2014 #11
StanSikorski
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Default And the kvetching intensifies...

Movie world fears for freedom of speech as N.Korea parody pulled

Sony Pictures' decision to cancel the release of its madcap comedy about North Korea after threats from hackers has caused consternation in the movie world and triggered concerns about freedom of expression.

"The Interview", starring James Franco and Seth Rogen and depicting a fictional plot to assassinate North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un, had been due to hit US cinemas on December 25.

But after warnings from the so-called GOP (Guardians of Peace) hacking group -- invoking the September 11, 2001 attacks -- a number of US cinema chains cancelled plans to screen the film.

As more chains confirmed they would follow suit, Sony on Wednesday threw in the towel and pulled the film, in a decision described by former long-time Cannes Film Festival president Gilles Jacob as "onerous... both for the studio and freedom of expression".

Movie world figures said the fate of "The Interview" was unparalleled and set a dangerous precedent, pointing out that even Martin Scorsese's "The Last Temptation of Christ" (1988), which sparked demonstrations in the US, was still shown.

"It is very rare that a planned release is cancelled. And in general it's because of a conflict between the director, the producer and the studio," Marc Missonnier, president of the French Association of Cinema Producers, said.

Sony's decision came hard on the heels of an embarrassing November 24 cyber-attack that saw hackers gain access to a trove of internal Sony documents and unreleased movies.

Investigators reportedly believe the attack was masterminded by North Korea.

The country's top military body has denied this but added that it might have been a "righteous deed" carried out by supporters.

Best-selling writer Stephen King and Hollywood actors and directors reacted with dismay at Sony's decision, with some accusing Sony of caving in.

"Sony's decision to pull 'The Interview' is unsettling in so many ways. Good thing they don't publish the Satanic Verses," King wrote on Twitter.

"Will they pull any movie that gets an anonymous threat now?" tweeted "Bridesmaids" producer Judd Apatow.

- 'Everyone caved' -

"Wow. Everyone caved. The hackers won. An utter and complete victory for them. Wow," actor Rob Lowe, who has a small cameo role in the film, said.

Others said the decision had important implications for freedom of speech.

"I am sympathetic with Sony and I am sympathetic with any theatre that worries about damage and injury and worse involving its staff and its customers," Richard Walter of the UCLA Film School told AFP.

"But on the other hand I have to say there is something, for an American and for anybody who loves freedom, that viscerally rebels against surrendering to terror this way," he added.

"The single most disturbing aspect of this whole case it the notion that studios might cave, might surrender to lunatics of the political fringe in terms of what movies they make and what movies they release."

The US State Department meanwhile sought to distance itself from the film, while defending the right to free expression.

"We're not in the business of signing off on the content of movies or things along those lines," spokeswoman Jen Psaki said, while President Barack Obama said there was "no credible evidence" of any threats linked to movie theatres.

"For now, my recommendation would be: Go to the movies," Obama told ABC News.

Missonnier, however, was more sympathetic to Sony's dilemma.

"A US studio, it's a commercial business, which is not there to defend the grand principles of freedom. They believe that the cost will be too high," he said.

As for the film, according to Jacob anyone wishing to see it is not likely to be disappointed as it "will probably come out on the Internet" sooner or later.

And while that might satisfy some concerned about freedom of speech, it is unlikely to compensate Sony for its costs.

https://sg.news.yahoo.com/movie-worl...032803890.html
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Old December 19th, 2014 #12
procopius
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My guess is that the gov is going with the North Korea narrative to push through some cyber security laws, and possibly cover up the real culprits. Basically this is an internet 911. I'm not saying it isn't possibly North Korea, or someone connected somehow, but I wouldn't be surprised if this came from within the US or from our allies in Israel. I can honestly imagine that someone in the state department got a whiff that the hackers were connected to Israel, so they needed to go with it being North Korea hard. Even if the idea was comical to begin with.
 
Old December 19th, 2014 #13
Cale Sparks
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(from the article, below)

Obama told ABC News in an interview Wednesday that the administration will be "vigilant" and will alert the public if there is evidence of a "serious and credible" threat.

But for now, Obama says: "My recommendation would be that people go to the movies."

http://www.businessinsider.com/obama...movies-2014-12

Naturally. Especially white people. If it wasn't for the Jew-controlled film industry in the United States, especially for the last 80 years, what chance would there have been for a nigger-faggot like Barack Obola to become president?

I'd really like to see a madcap comedy about a holoco$t "survivor" exposed as a fraud and righteously held up to ridicule.
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Old December 19th, 2014 #14
procopius
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http://antiwar.com/blog/2014/12/18/s...the-interview/

Emails Reveal US State Department Influenced Sony’s “The Interview” so as to Encourage Assassination and Regime Change in North Korea

Quote:
The Daily Beast reported yesterday on leaked emails from the Sony hack which show that the United States government was involved at high levels with the content development of The Interview, especially its controversial ending depicting the assassination of North Korean ruler Kim Jong-Un. As the report’s headline states, “Sony Emails Say State Department Blessed Kim Jong-Un Assassination in ‘The Interview.’” The emails also reveal that a RAND corporation senior defense analyst who consulted on the film went beyond “blessing” and outright influenced the end of the film, encouraging the CEO of Sony Entertainment to leave the assassination scene as it was (in spite of misgivings at Sony) for the sake of encouraging North Koreans to actually assassinate Kim Jong-Un and depose his regime when the movie eventually leaks into that country. According to the Sony CEO, a senior US State Department official emphatically and personally seconded that advice and reasoning in a separate correspondence. The emails also reveal that the U.S. special envoy for North Korean human-rights issues also consulted with Sony on the film.
So looks like some people in US gov wanted the assassination scene to stir shit up.
 
Old December 19th, 2014 #15
Patrick Bateman
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Comments on dailymail are disgusting.

If the situation was reversed and north Korea made a big budget block buster movie of Obongo getting assassinated, America would be calling for an all out war and everyone would be outraged. North Korea hasn't done a DAMN thing to America, yet most of these morons on the dailymail think its okay to make a movie about a leader than hasn't done anything to harm their country or people. So much hypocrisy its incredible.
 
Old December 19th, 2014 #16
StanSikorski
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Default If Sony was really concerned about bombs in theaters than why are they still releasing 'Annie?'

This nigrofied mess is getting horrible reviews. The only reason for its existence is to perpetuate the "nigger is better than you whitey" jew narrative...

‘Annie’ another hard knock for Sony



Leapin’ lizards! The evergreen Broadway musical “Annie’’ strays far from its Depression-era roots with truly dismaying results in this crass, charmless, tin-eared and lead-footed update. The worst Hollywood musical so far this century, it’s another misstep for Sony Pictures, which also sponsored the abortive ‘‘The Interview.’’

Minus her trademark red hair and no longer technically an orphan, this still-spunky 21st-century Annie (Quvenzhané Wallis) was abandoned as a baby in a Greenwich Village restaurant. Her latest of many homes is a Harlem apartment where mean Miss Hannigan (Cameron Diaz), a failed pop diva, keeps Annie and three other foster children busy tidying up while they all live on the $157 a week she collects for each of them.

This film’s version of “Daddy” Warbucks is called Will Stacks (Jamie Foxx), a billionaire cellphone magnate who is running for mayor for no apparent reason other than that the plot calls for it. He is so cold, uncomfortable with the public and germophobic that he goes viral on YouTube after spitting out mashed potatoes he is supposed to be serving to a homeless man. When Will saves Annie from being run over by a car, his unctuous campaign manager, Guy (Bobby Cannavale), sees an opportunity for his candidate to catch up in the polls to incumbent Mayor Harold Gray (Peter Van Wagner, as a character who is barely seen even though he shares a name with the cartoonist who created Annie in 1924).
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Annie (Quvenzhane Wallis) and Will Stacks (Jamie Foxx) take Sandy (rescue dog Marti) for a walk.Photo: Barry Wetcher/Sony pictures

Annie is delighted when Will invites her to come share his luxe penthouse (filmed at the 4 World Trade Center office tower) — and for the next hour, the film drops all pretense of a plot and turns into heavy-duty real estate porn, accompanied by hideously percussion-heavy arrangements (with tweaked music and lyrics) of the original Broadway songs by Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin.

As in the original, Hannigan — this time in cahoots with Guy (her brother Rooster has disappeared) — eventually tries to cash in by producing a couple who pose as Annie’s “real” parents. But they’re no match for Will, who has grown to love Annie, as well as his “vice president,” Grace (Rose Byrne), who still acts like a secretary despite the title.

There’s no FDR in this version — except for a token mention in the opening scene — and Annie’s famous dog Sandy barely figures in the action, but there is a very awkwardly staged climactic helicopter ride to Jersey City, where NYPD patrol cars mysteriously show up.
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Stacks listens as Annie sings “Opportunity” at a black tie event at the Guggenheim Museum.Photo: Barry Wetcher/Sony pictures

John Huston’s 1982 “Annie’’ isn’t great, but at least it had a young star (Aileen Quinn) who could dance and sing with authority. The charismatic Wallis, who received an Oscar nod for the gritty indie “Beasts of the Southern Wild,” barely passes muster in either category. The other girls in “It’s the Hard-Knock Life” dance rings around her, and it seems downright cruel to require Wallis to perform with a 25-piece orchestra at the Guggenheim Museum in one of many pointless scenes.

Foxx hasn’t seemed so utterly disinterested in a role since his last major musical, “Dreamgirls” (2006) — and Byrne, while perky, is certainly no threat to Ann Reinking (Grace in ’82) in the dancing department.

But the real lump of coal in this threadbare Christmas stocking is Diaz, who is at her scenery-swallowing worst as Hannigan — outdoing even Carol Burnett’s ghastly performance from 32 years ago. Cover your ears during her duet with Cannavale, who, unlike Diaz, can actually sing.

Director Will Gluck did a fine job with “Easy A’’ and “Friends With Benefits,’’ but this much larger production — produced by Will Smith and an assortment of friends (like Jay Z) — is one runaway train wreck of an “Annie’’ remake. Here’s one “Tomorrow’’ when the sun never does come out.

http://nypost.com/2014/12/18/annie-a...nock-for-sony/
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Old December 19th, 2014 #17
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This is how corporations react to even a little pushback. Of course Sony has no skin in the game of NK vs. USA. If this had been a pro-Zionist film being attacked by Hamas Sony would have shown a bit more backbone.
 
Old December 21st, 2014 #18
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It couldn't be the jews/isntreal, could it?

North Korea proposes joint investigation with US into Sony cyber attack

orth Korea called Saturday for a joint investigation with the US into a crippling cyber attack on Sony Pictures, denouncing Washington’s “slandering” after President Barack Obama warned Pyongyang of retaliation.

The US blames the isolated state for the hacking which prompted the cancellation of the Christmas Day release of “The Interview”, a madcap romp about a CIA plot to kill leader Kim Jong-Un which infuriated the North.

“As the United States is spreading groundless allegations and slandering us, we propose a joint investigation with it into this incident,” a foreign ministry spokesman in Pyongyang said.

“Without resorting to such tortures as were used by the US CIA, we have means to prove that this incident has nothing to do with us,” the spokesman was quoted as saying by the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

Pyongyang has repeatedly denied the secretive state was behind the hacking, which led to the release of a trove of embarrassing emails, scripts and other internal communications, including information about salaries and employee health records.

Pyongyang warned the United States of “grave consequences” if its proposal for a joint investigation was rejected.

Addressing reporters after the FBI said Pyongyang was to blame, Obama said Washington would never bow to “some dictator”.

“We can confirm that North Korea engaged in this attack,” Obama said.

“We will respond. We will respond proportionately and we’ll respond in a place and time and manner that we choose.”

While the president said he was sympathetic to Sony’s plight, he also said the movie giant had “made a mistake” in cancelling “The Interview” Christmas release.

Sony defended its decision, made after anonymous hackers invoked the 9/11 attacks in threatening cinemas screening the film, prompting theatre chains to say they would not risk showing it.

- ‘Acts of intimidation’ -

Just before Obama took the podium, the Federal Bureau of Investigation explained how it had concluded that North Korea was to blame.

The attackers used malware to break into the studio and render thousands of Sony Pictures computers inoperable, forcing the company to take its entire network offline, the FBI said.

It said analysis of the software tools used revealed links to other malware known to have been developed by “North Korean actors”.

The FBI also cited “significant overlap” between the attack and other “malicious cyber-activity” with direct links to Pyongyang, including an attack on South Korean banks carried out by North Korea.

“Such acts of intimidation fall outside the bounds of acceptable state behavior,” the agency said in a statement.

There was “no evidence” that North Korea had acted in concert with another country, Obama said, after reports that China — Pyongyang’s only ally — had possibly provided assistance.

Chinese state newspaper the Global Times lashed out at “The Interview” on Saturday as “senseless cultural arrogance” in an editorial.

South Korea meanwhile said it noted “the similarities”, with the attack bearing all the hallmarks of the onslaught on its soil last year.

- ‘Costs and consequences’ -

Though denying involvement in the brazen November 24 cyber attack, Pyongyang has hailed it as a “righteous deed.”

The North’s top military body, the National Defense Commission, slammed Sony for “abetting a terrorist act while hurting the dignity of the supreme leadership,” according to state news agency KCNA.

Hollywood filmmakers urged US authorities to do more to protect them against future cyber attacks, as experts estimated the attack could cost Sony Pictures hundreds of millions of dollars.

“We stand by our (‘The Interview’) director members Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg and hope that a way can be found to distribute the film by some means, to demonstrate that our industry is not cowed by extremists of any type,” said Directors Guild of America chief Paris Barclay.

Free speech advocates and foreign policy hawks have slammed Sony’s decision to pull “The Interview” as cowardice in the face of a hidden enemy.

But Sony vigorously defended the move, and said it still hoped to release “The Interview” on a different platform — perhaps on demand or even online for free.

“We have not caved, we have not given in, we have persevered and we have not backed down,” studio boss Michael Lynton told CNN.

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/12/n...-cyber-attack/
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Old December 21st, 2014 #19
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Whenever I hear people say freedom, it's always hypocritical (since no matter what "Freedom" will always have double standards and hence doesn't exist) and thus infuriating. What a stupid, meaningless word, but i guess it will always stir imbeciles and mental midgets. Where are the movies about assassinating Netanyahu? And unlike Kim Jong Un who is mostly irrelevant, most people in the world would love to see a movie about Netanyahu getting Holoacausted.

America doesn't play by the rules, nor show any respect by restricting movies depicting foreign leaders being murdered. I hope this magnificent success will encourage more hackers to start fucking with Hollywood. I would die a happy man if I never had to see a trailer with the unfunny jews Seth Rogan or Jonah Hill ever again.

Jews hate the DPRK because it is helping Iran and Syria's nuclear programs (North Korea already has all the logistics researched and refined), that's why they lie about North Korea and target it incessantly.
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Old December 21st, 2014 #20
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Sony pictures likely realized what a collosal waste of money this film was and pre release reviews were less than stellar so they created this charade to drum up publicity to recover at least some of their JOO bucks.

How these 2 kike clowns even have careers just baffles me to no end, completely juvenile humor so unfunny one wants to turn off the JOO box every time they appear on the screen, just show how far the average IQ has fallen in the west
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