UPDATE: Over the weekend, the account known as @TheAnonMessage was suspended. Anonymous reached out and made it clear they have no connection with the person behind the string of messages laid out below.

It was only a matter of time before the hacker collective Anonymous put their two cents in regarding the Sony hack. Early on Friday, one of Anon’s many Twitter accounts set their sights on North Korea, the hacker group known as #GOP (aka Guardians of Peace) and Sony Pictures regarding the decision to pull The Interview from theaters. From the looks of things, they are planning on releasing the movie to the world themselves. From Twitter:

About the @SonyPictures hack by North Korea, well let’s just say that— Oh hold on, popcorn’s ready. — TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) December 19, 2014

Okay, for real though. @SonyPictures is a little bitch for giving in so easily. Then again, what do you expect from Sony other than that? — TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) December 19, 2014

You’re gonna let Kim Junk Uno and his minions boss you, a multimillion dollar corporation responsible for billions of dollars in revenue? — TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) December 19, 2014

Seriously @Sony we warned you. We infiltrated your systems long before North Korea. We thought you’d take it as a warning and fix your shit. — TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) December 19, 2014

If North Korea can do this to Sony, a “credible” and “legitimate” conglomerate, who’s to say they can’t do it to their next major target? — TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) December 19, 2014

Why are people asking us to leak the movie? — TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) December 19, 2014

We’re saving it as a Christmas present for you.. #winkwink — TheAnonMessage (@TheAnonMessage) December 19, 2014