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Movie News

'Sicko' Stars Thank Moore for Cuba Trip

Saturday, May 19, 2007 6:34:06 AM
By JOCELYN NOVECK

Michael Moore, second from right, poses for a photograph with volunteer September 11th rescue workers Bill Maher, left, Reggie Cervantes, second from left, and John Graham following a special screening of Moore's new film "Sicko" Tuesday May 15, 2007 in New York. Maher, Cervantes and Graham are all in Moore's film. (AP Photo/Tina Fineberg)NEW YORK (AP) - It could have been a college reunion: hugs, tears, laughter, photos, and a big friendly guy in shorts and sneakers organizing it all. But the guy in shorts was Michael Moore, whose new documentary, "Sicko," takes aim at the U.S. health care industry with the same fury — laced with humor, of course, and plenty of statistics — that he directed at the Bush administration in his hit "Fahrenheit 9/11."

And the people who'd flown in for this intimate first screening, a day after the film had been shipped to the Cannes Film Festival, included grateful Sept. 11 "first responders," suffering lung problems or other ailments from their days at ground zero. In the film, Moore takes them to Cuba and tries to get them treated at the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay — where, he contends, terror suspects were getting better medical care than the heroes of 9/11.

The Cuba trip actually accounts for just a small part of "Sicko," which aims its wrath at private insurance and pharmaceutical companies and HMOs, while praising socialized medicine in countries like France and Britain. Moore fills it with stories like that of a woman whose ambulance ride after a car crash wasn't covered — because it wasn't "pre-approved."


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