July 26, 2007MICHAEL MOORE SERVED A SUBPOENA.BURBANK, Calif., July 26 (UPI) -- Michael Thursday said the Bush administration has served him with a subpoena regarding his trip to Cuba during the making of his new film, "Sicko."The Oscar-winning filmmaker, who appeared Thursday on NBC's "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno," said he was notified about the subpoena at the network's studios in Burbank, Calif."I haven't even told my own family yet," Moore said. "I was just informed when I was back there with Jay that the Bush administration has now issued a subpoena for me."Moore filmed the trip as part of his film comparing the U.S. healthcare system with government healthcare systems in other countries.He took three Sept. 11, 2001, emergency rescue workers to Guantanamo Bay "because I heard the al-Qaida terrorists we have in the camps there, detained, are receiving free dental, medical, eye care, the whole deal, and our own (Sept. 11) rescue workers can't get that in New York City."Moore said the film's distributor, the Weinstein Co., will donate 11 percent of "Sicko's" box-office receipts Aug. 11 to "help these workers and the other workers who need help."...................................................... ..........................................................MI CHAEL MOORE UNVEILS A KINDER & GENTLER "SICKO". Posted by Eugene Hernandez of IndieWIRE May 19, 2007"I decided to make a different film this time," director Michael Moore told a room full of journalists about "Sicko," his new film which screened for the first time this morning. "I wanted a different tone (and) to say things in a different way." Indeed, "Sicko" marks a distinctly different approach for a director who has been criticized for aggressive filmmaking tactics. Picking up on the more personal types of stories covered in his recent "Fahrenheit 9/11," Moore's moving new film is structured primarily around human interest tales of American's troubles with the U.S. health care system. (For AMC's interview with Moore at Cannes, in which he talks about Sicko and Hillary Clinton, click here.)"(I am) tired of all the yelling and screaming and not getting anywhere," Moore said, hours before his film would have its official world premiere, adding that he did not want to be a part of that sort of approach.In "Sicko," Moore spends a considerable amount of screen time examining the U.S. from vantage points in France, Great Britain and Canada. "Why do (Canadians), the French, the British (and the rest of) the Western World have a longer life expectancy?" Moore asked a journalist who questioned why this film overlooks some the inherent flaws in those health care systems. Moore admitted that those are not his battles to wage."The film is a call to action," Moore said, "The film is meant not for Michael Moore to go and do it, but for the American people to go and do it.""Sicko" was met with considerable applause after its first showing here in Cannes, the audience also clapping during some key moments in the movie. It opens with brief snapshots of Americans without healthcare, but as Moore quickly notes in a voiceover, this film is about the "250 million who have health insurance, those of you who are living the American dream...""It is my PROFOUND hope that people will listen this time with this film, because I don't want to ten or twenty years before we have universal health coverage in America and I don't want to wait ten or twenty years before we as Americans take a look into our soul so that we can become better citizens in this world."