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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
michael moore premiers 'sicko'
at cannes
Michael Moore is at it again, thankfully. We
all know how unhealthy our health care system
is and how it’s one of the main issues that
have been completely ignored by our administration,
it takes a filmmaker to bring things to light.
Bright, burning, blinding light.
It looks like the administration does feel pretty
strongly about squelching the movie however they
can, but alas, Moore arrived last weekend at Cannes
to premier his newest work. We won’t have
to wait long for it to arrive on our shores. June
29 to be exact.
In the meantime, here’s a message from
Moore off of his website, www.michaelmoore.com,
where you can also watch the movie’s trailer.
It's a wrap! My new film, "Sicko,"
is all done and will have its world premiere this
Saturday night at the Cannes Film Festival. As
with "Bowling for Columbine" and "Fahrenheit
9/11," we are honored to have been chosen
by this prestigious festival to screen our work
there.
My intention was to keep "Sicko"
under wraps and show it to virtually no one before
its premiere in Cannes. That is what I have done
and, as you may have noticed if you are a recipient
of my infrequent Internet letters, I have been
very silent about what I've been up to. In part,
that's because I was working very hard to complete
the film. But my silence was also because I knew
that the health care industry -- an industry which
makes up more than 15 percent of our GDP -- was
not going to like much of what they were going
to see in this movie and I thought it best not
to upset them any sooner than need be.
Well, going quietly to Cannes, I guess, was
not to be. For some strange reason, on May 2nd
the Bush administration initiated an action against
me over how I obtained some of the content they
believe is in my film. As none of them have actually
seen the film (or so I hope!), they decided, unlike
with "Fahrenheit 9/11," not to wait
until the film was out of the gate and too far
down the road to begin their attack.
Bush's Treasury Secretary, Henry Paulson,
launched an investigation of a trip I took to
Cuba to film scenes for the movie. These scenes
involve a group of 9/11 rescue workers who are
suffering from illnesses obtained from working
down at Ground Zero. They have received little
or no help with their health care from the government.
I do not want to give away what actually happens
in the movie because I don't want to spoil it
for you (although I'm sure you'll hear much about
it after it unspools Saturday). Plus, our lawyers
have advised me to say little at this point, as
the film goes somewhere far scarier than "Cuba."
Rest assured of one thing: no laws were broken.
All I've done is violate the modern-day rule of
journalism that says, "ask no questions of
those in power or your luncheon privileges will
be revoked."
This preemptive action taken by the Bush
administration on the eve of the "Sicko"
premiere in Cannes led our attorneys to fear for
the safety of our film, noting that Secretary
Paulson may try to claim that the content of the
movie was obtained through a violation of the
trade embargo…more
Another "Sicko" story: http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/05/23/business/health.php
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