Jumat 26 Dec 2014 03:26 WIB

'The Interview' draws US moviegoers who trumpet free speech

Red: Yeyen Rostiyani
Fans line up at the Silent Movie Theatre for a midnight screening of 'The Interview' in Los Angeles, California December 24, 2014.
Foto: Reuters/Jonathan Alcorn
Fans line up at the Silent Movie Theatre for a midnight screening of 'The Interview' in Los Angeles, California December 24, 2014.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, NEW YORK/LOS ANGELES -- "The Interview," the Sony Pictures film about a fictional plot to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, opened in more than 300 cinemas across the United States on Christmas Day, drawing sell-out audiences in many theaters where outspoken patrons said they were championing freedom of expression.

Seth Rogen, who co-stars in the low-budget comedy with James Franco, and co-director Evan Goldberg surprised moviegoers by appearing at the sold-out 12:30 a.m. PT (0330 ET) screening of the movie at a theater in Los Angeles where they briefly thanked fans for their support.

Sony Pictures this week backtracked from its original decision to cancel the release of the $44 million film after it became the target last month of the most destructive cyberattack ever on a U.S. company. The United States blamed the attacks on North Korea. Major movie chains had refused to release the film after threats of attacks on theaters and audiences by hackers.

But movie theater managers and patrons alike said they believed there was nothing to fear. Nick Doiron, a 25-year-old engineer from New York's borough of Queens, said he had been planning to stream the movie online, but decided to see it in the Cinema Village theater in New York's Greenwich Village.