Alex Gibney's documentary, We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks, opened with a limited release on Friday. And in an all-too-appropriate response, WikiLeaks leaked an annotated transcript of the documentary late Thursday. The information organization disputes much of what they read in the film—an important distinction because Gibney still insists Julian Assange and key supporters haven't seen it. The main issue Gibney has with the released transcript? The documentarian says WikiLeaks is working off a non-final version that doesn't include any of the film's non-spoken text related to Bradley Manning.

Ars on We Steal Secrets Ars caught an early screening of We Steal Secrets and Ars caught an early screening of We Steal Secrets and reviewed the film. Filmmaker Alex Gibney was also kind enough to do a Q&A . Read up, see the film, and then decide for yourself where everything stands.

"I suspect that the transcript is based on a bootleg audio recording at a recent screening," Gibney told Buzzfeed on Friday, insisting that information missing from the transcript discredits WikiLeaks' effort here. "And because Manning’s chats are seen not heard, they’re all eliminated. Either Assange edited them out, which would seem pretty pernicious, or it belies the sort of secret hacking capability of WikiLeaks, and that’s a big deal. This whole press release is a glimpse of the way Julian Assange really operates. It’s in a very tendentious, sneaky manner.”

The WikiLeaks annotations take issue with a number of the film's most interesting reveals. The organization writes "James Ball is lying" in regards to their former collaborator discussing a non-disclosure agreement Ball claims he was asked to sign. And the release states that Assange did not decline Gibney's interview requests on the basis of money. Rather, Assange passed due to potential problems with four factors: security, financing, information, and impact. (The transcript does not, however, dispute Gibney's statements about Assange asking him to spy on other sources used in the documentary.)

According to the Buzzfeed interview, Gibney has not been in touch with Assange at all since post-production on the film (specifically since forwarding fact-checking questions to Assange through his associates). However, WikiLeaks responded to Gibney (and a Flavorwire writer) on Twitter after a post earlier this week: "Stop spinning. It is the version you have been showing to reviewers this week. Own it. Own your film. Own it." So far this weekend, WikiLeaks has repeatedly sent out links to its press release and film transcript on Twitter without addressing Gibney's claims. Gibney remains relatively quiet after pointing out the omissions he sees in the transcript.

Currently, box office estimate sites show We Steal Secrets grossing less than $50,000 in its opening weekend. However, the film is in just four theaters (Hollywood, Santa Monica, and two in New York City). The film's release will expand further on May 31, June 7, and June 14.