WikiLeaks said it had not participated in the making of "We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks," a film by Alex Gibney that focuses on the website's controversial founder Julian Assange and its chief informant Bradley Manning.
Manning, a US Army intelligence analyst who admitted to leaking hundreds of thousands of secret military logs and confidential embassy cables to WikiLeaks, faces possible life imprisonment in a military trial to resume June 3.
WikiLeaks said late yesterday that the film "portrays Manning's alleged acts as a failure of character rather than a triumph of conscience," and said the film's portrayal of his relationship with Assange was "grossly irresponsible."
The portrayal "suggests -- erroneously and when evidence is to the contrary -- that Assange may be guilty of conspiring with Bradley Manning to commit espionage or similar offences."
It then posted what appeared to be a full transcript of the documentary with copious notes alleging factual errors and misrepresentations.
Gibney could not immediately be reached for comment.
But in a recent interview with CBS news, the American director said the film is concerned with "both the abuse of power and hubris on the part of the US government, but certainly also on the part of Julian Assange."
"At his moment of greatest fame, (Assange) ends up becoming all too much like the enemies he sought to take out or expose," Gibney said.
He was also unable to interview Manning, who has been in military detention since his arrest in 2010.
