The Interview, the Sony Pictures comedy believed to have triggered a cyberattack on the studio, has gained over $40 million in sales from 5.8 million digital downloads, the studio said.

Michael Lynton, chief executive of Sony Corp’s entertainment arm, called the $40 million mark “a significant milestone” for the studio’s unprecedented online and pay television release, on platforms such as Google Inc.’s Google Play, Apple Inc.’s iTunes and Time Warner Cable.

The film’s digital release on December 24 was cobbled together a week after Sony Pictures shelved a wide release when major theatre chains refused to screen the movie due to unspecified threats of violence from hackers. President Barack Obama called the decision to scrap the theatrical release a “mistake” akin to self-censorship.

The film starring Seth Rogen and James Franco, which depicts the fictional assassination of North Korea leader Kim Jong-un, has also earned $6 million at the box office after independent theatres pushed for a limited release on Christmas Day.

It was unclear if Sony Pictures would recoup its investment in the comedy, which cost $44 million to make and tens of millions more to market.

The US government has blamed North Korea for the most devastating cyberattack on a private company on US soil. The North Korean government called The Interview an “act of war”, but denies it is behind the hacking.

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