Latest reaction from Hollywood and beyond to the Sony hacking scandal and President Obama's remarks Friday that the studio "made a mistake" in not releasing its embattled film "The Interview":
— "As the events of the past weeks have made painfully clear, we are now living in an age in which the Internet can enable a few remote cyber criminals to hold an entire industry hostage. ... We hope that instead of the "chilling effect" on controversial content, this incident becomes a rallying point for all of us who care about freedom of expression to come together and champion this inalienable right. We stand by our 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." — The Directors Guild of America in a statement.
— "The decision to pull The Interview is historic. It's a case of putting short term interests ahead of the long term. If we don't get the world on board to see that this is a game changer, if this hacking doesn't frighten the Chinese and the Russians, we're in for a very different world, a very different country, community, and a very different culture." — Sean Penn in a statement to MotherJones.com.
— "Mr. President, where was your sage counsel to Sony when the public terrorist threat was made? When the theater chains balked? 2little 2late" — Writer-director Joss Whedon on Twitter.
— "I do think it's (expletive) up how everyone is doing exactly what these criminals want." — Seth Rogen to Howard Stern earlier this week.
— "Not Sony's fault. The litigious nature of our country makes it impossible for a business to make a stand against an outward threat. Sony should have made the public aware of the hack & the threats, then released the film. Up to people to go or not. #ItsCalledFreedom." — Actor Michael Chiklis on Twitter.
— "We should look at a threat first, and worry about the movie later. The movie is irrelevant to me. We should look at the bigger picture. We should be looking at what we can do to prevent more severe breaches like this one."— Brian Mullins, a moviegoer in San Francisco.
— "The level of corporate cowardice here astonishes me...Whether it's the next CITIZEN KANE or the next PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE, it astonishes me that a major Hollywood film could be killed before release by threats from a foreign power and anonymous hackers." — "Game of Thrones" author George R. R. Martin on his blog.