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This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows the character Bad Cop/Good Cop, voiced by Liam Neeson, in a scene from "The Lego Movie." “The Lego Movie” is expected to take the top spot at the box office in its second weekend. (AP Photo/Warner Bros. Pictures, file) Image Credit: AP

Sony Pictures announced plans for an animated Spider-Man feature from the Lego Movie writing/directing team of Christopher Miller and Phil Lord on Wednesday at CinemaCon. But the beleaguered studio failed to address the elephant in the room for the audience of theatre owners at the annual conference: The Interview.

In December, amid the hack on Sony and perceived terrorist threats, the major theatre chains decided not to show The Interview in their theatres. In a statement, Regal Entertainment Group referenced the “wavering support” of Sony in Regal’s decision not to show the film. Ultimately, Sony orchestrated a day-and-date release for the film, and it maintained the position that exhibition of the film was the sole decision of the theatre owners.

Speaking publicly to theatre owners for the first time since the hack, Rory Bruer, Sony’s president of worldwide distribution, kicked off the studio’s presentation saying only that “there were a few stories written about Sony last year. A couple that I’m going to embellish for our grandchildren.”

Sony Pictures Entertainment’s new chairman, Tom Rothman, assured the theatre owners that, in the wake of the hacks, Sony has not only survived, but thrived. “Thank you for sticking with us and understanding some unique circumstances,” he said.

But nowhere in the presentation was any explicit reference made to the unprecedented situation surrounding the release of The Interview.

Instead, Sony plugged the animated Spider-Man, which will be released on July 20, 2018, and a number of other films on its slate including the 24th instalment in the James Bond saga Spectre, the Adam Sandler video-game movie Pixels, and Cameron Crowe’s Aloha.

Director Ang Lee, in a video announcement, said that he was shooting the adaptation of Ben Fountain’s novel Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk in an unprecedented 120-frames-per-second and in 3-D.

Pixels director Chris Columbus also took the stage to preview his new film, which imagines a world where classic video game characters attack earth. “It’s a big summer movie that’s not a sequel, doesn’t have anybody in spandex, and it’s not a board game,” Columbus said.

Robert Zemeckis, who came out to show footage from The Walk, said that he prefers “to see movies on a really, really big screen. The bigger the screen the better.” Starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, The Walk is a fictionalised account of Philippe Petit’s attempt to cross the Twin Towers on a high-wire.

Sony also debuted never-before-seen-footage of the YA adaptation The Fifth Wave, Will Smith’s Concussion, George Clooney’s Money Monster, and Meryl Streep’s Ricki and the Flash.

“We’re not retrenching and we’re not retreating because we believe. So believe along with us,” Rothman said.