Assange slams Wikileaks film as 'geriatric snoozefest'

Assange says the film going to smother the truthful version of events, at a time when the truth is most in demand.


Afp October 10, 2013
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

SYDNEY: Wikileaks founder Julian Assange Thursday renewed his attack on a film about the whistleblowing website, calling it a "geriatric snoozefest" as he released a letter written to its star Benedict Cumberbatch.

The Australian hacker, who has been holed up at the Ecuadoran embassy in London after claiming asylum a year ago to avoid extradition to Sweden, has refused to meet the British actor.

Cumberbatch stars as Assange in director Bill Condon's thriller "The Fifth Estate," which won a long ovation at its world premiere during the Toronto Film Festival last month and is due for release in the United States next week.

He requested a meeting to study his subject's manner, but Assange refused as "such an interaction might appear to legitimize a film intending to mislead the public with numerous inaccuracies".

"I believe you are a good person, but I do not believe that this film is a good film," said Assange's letter to the actor, who revealed last month he considered quitting the movie after receiving it.

"Feature films are the most powerful and insidious shapers of public perception, because they fly under the radar of conscious exclusion," said the letter.

"This film is going to bury good people doing good work, at exactly the time that the state is coming down on their heads. It is going to smother the truthful version of events, at a time when the truth is most in demand.

"As justification it will claim to be fiction, but it is not fiction. It is distorted truth about living people doing battle with titanic opponents. It is a work of political opportunism, influence, revenge and, above all, cowardice."

In comments accompanying the release of the letter, he added: "The result is a geriatric snoozefest that only the US government could love."

According to Assange, Cumberbatch's reply was "courteous and considered" with the actor admitting aspects of the script troubled him.

The letter exchange took place in January.

At the Toronto Film Festival, Cumberbatch, who has won rave reviews, said he wanted to see Assange carry on his work exposing secrets.

"What I'd like to see is the man ... able to carry on his work as founder of WikiLeaks. Beyond that, due process has to take place in whatever shape or forms that happens," he said.

WikiLeaks enraged the United States in 2010 by publishing hundreds of thousands of classified documents on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as a huge cache of US diplomatic cables that embarrassed governments worldwide.

Ecuador granted Assange asylum last year but Britain refuses to grant him safe passage out of the country, leaving him stuck inside the embassy.

Britain says it is obliged to see him extradited to Sweden where he faces sex crime allegations that Assange denies and claims are politically motivated.

 

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ