Sony’s hackers — gloating after the studio caved in to their threats and canceled distribution of the movie “The Interview” — have issued a new ultimatum.

Calling the company’s response to their threats “very wise” so far, the hackers are now demanding that the company destroy every single pixel related to the flick or risk more stolen studio data being leaked.

“Now we want you never let the movie released, distributed or leaked in any form of, for instance, DVD or piracy,” the group, calling itself the Guardians of Peace, told Sony’s top executives in an email message obtained by CNN.

“And we want everything related to the movie, including its trailers, as well as its full version down from any website hosting them immediately,” the hackers thundered.

“We still have your private and sensitive data,” they added, promising to “ensure the security of your data unless you make additional trouble.”

The Guardians of Peace hackers are continuing their bossy, broken-English taunts even two days after the studio’s capitulation.

“The Interview,” a screwball political comedy, was to be released in thousands of theaters on Christmas Day. The Seth Rogen-James Franco two-hander has drawn the fury of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un because it depicts the despotic leader being assassinated in a CIA plot.

The FBI and Sony’s own investigators believe Kim is behind the hackers’ month-long campaign of terror threats and embarrassing corporate data leaks, an attack which could cost the studio hundreds of millions of dollars in security overhauls, lawsuit payouts and lost box office and streaming revenue.