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Sony cyberattack stole James Bond script for upcoming film, SPECTRE

Early villains have emerged in the next James Bond film SPECTRE: hackers who stole a version of the screenplay as part of a devastating cyberattack on Sony Pictures.

Hackers launched an attack on the Sony Corp. entertainment arm on Nov. 24

Daniel Craig as James Bond in the most recent Bond film, Skyfall. The script of the upcoming film, SPECTRE, was stolen in the recent cyberattack on Sony Pictures. (Francois Duhamel/Sony Pictures/Associated Press)

Early villains have emerged in the next James Bond film SPECTRE: hackers who stole a version of the screenplay as part of a devastating cyberattack on Sony Pictures.

Producers of the James Bond films said they learned on Saturday morning that an early version of the SPECTREscript was among material stolen and made public by hackers who infiltrated computers at the Sony studio.

"Eon Productions is concerned that third parties who have received the stolen screenplay may seek to publish it or its contents," Eon said in a statement, while warning that the script is protected by U.K. copyright laws.

SPECTRE,starring Daniel Craig as 007, is set for release on Nov. 6, 2015. Filming began this month after producer Barbara Broccoli and director Sam Mendes unveiled the title, cast and new car, but little about the plot.

Lucrative franchise

"I was so excited to tell this story but to explain why, I would have to tell you the plot and I can't do that," said Mendes at the presentation in England, a reminder of Sony's might in the movie world.

The Bond franchise is one of the most lucrative for Sony Pictures and the last instalment Skyfallbrought in $1.1 billion US worldwide, more than any other Bond film.

A Sony spokesman said news reports that the cyberattack forced the studio to stop production on films, including SPECTRE,were wrong.

"Productions are still moving forward," Robert Lawson told Reuters.

Hackers launched an attack on the Sony Corp. entertainment arm on Nov. 24, disabling the computer network and stealing and leaking a trove of sensitive information in the most severe cyberattack on a company on U.S. soil. The identity of the hackers has yet to be determined.