Following the attacks in Paris last week, an Eagles of Death Metal documentary has been pulled from Amsterdam's International Documentary Festival.
The documentary, The Redemption of the Devil, has been removed from the film festival line-up due to "inappropriate timing".
The rock band were performing at La Bataclan in Paris last Friday (November 13) when gunmen attacked the venue as part of co-ordinated assaults across the city which led to 129 people losing their lives and many more injured.
The band managed to escape unharmed, however among those killed was their British merchandise seller Nick Alexander.
The film, which was released earlier this year, follows lead singer Jesse Hughes in the build up to the release of their latest album Zipper Down, as he becomes ordained as a Catholic minister and turns 40.
Eagles of Death Metal released a statement this week following the attacks, declaring that they were "horrified and still trying to come to terms with what happened in France".
"Our thoughts and hearts are first and foremost with our brother Nick Alexander, our record company comrades Thomas Ayad, Marie Mosser, and Manu Perez, and all the friends and fans whose lives were taken in Paris, as well as their friends, families, and loved ones.
"Although bonded in grief with the victims, the fans, the families, the citizens of Paris, and all those affected by terrorism, we are proud to stand together, with our new family, now united by a common goal of love and compassion.
"We would like to thank the French police, the FBI, the U.S. and French State Departments, and especially all those at ground zero with us who helped each other as best they could during this unimaginable ordeal, proving once again that love overshadows evil," they said.