Will Poulter and Noah Centineo Drug Recovery Drama ‘Union County’ Lands Extended Sundance Standing Ovation

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Park City had another crowd-pleasing premiere with Adam Meeks’ “Union County,” which earned a lengthy standing ovation at its Sunday screening at the Eccles Theater.

The drama, which stars Will Poulter and Noah Centineo as brothers who are in drug recovery together, was shot in a real-life drug court in Ohio, and many of their co-stars were non-actors who were working the program itself.

The biggest cheers came for Annette Deao, who works as a therapist helping people navigate addiction recovery and has several key, emotional moments opposite Poulter.

At the Q&A following the screening, Meeks described how he became interested in the project.

“I’m from central Ohio, in the area where this film is set, but my immediate family and I left when I was 6,” he says. “And it wasn’t until 2016 that I started spending a lot of time there as an adult. My grandmother was sick, and I came back to spend time there. And I think it was because I had been away for so long, but I was falling in love with Ohio and seeing the place differently and seeing different people differently. And around the same time, my, extended family was telling me about the way that the opiod epidemic at that time was impacting friends and loved ones. And it was it was intense, and my uncle actually introduced me to the drug court judge at the time, the previous judge, and he invited me to sit in on a meeting. I have been hearing about, and what I think most of us were hearing about, in terms of the bleakness and tragedy of the overdose statistics. I was immediately seeing people getting better and getting back on their feet, and I was also seeing the incredible work that Annette and her team and everybody were doing.”

Prior to the screening, Meeks spoke to Variety on the red carpet about how Poulter got involved with the project.

“He actually read the script through his agent and reached out to us,” Meeks says. “I got on a Zoom with him and fell in love immediately. We did the kind of coy thing at the end of a call where you’re like, ‘Alright, I’ll talk to my people, and you talk to your people.’ And then five minutes later, we had offered him the role, and he had accepted it. It was just a really organic, beautiful, mutual connection.”

Deao also spoke to Variety on the carpet about how the opioid epidemic is evolving in the Midwest.

“I believe the opioid epidemic is changing,” Deao says. “Part of that is education. People are understanding — even our medical professionals understand much better — you cannot keep prescribing that and expect people not to get addicted. We are seeing improvement. Also, medication-assisted treatment has been an amazing part of how people are recovering from substance use disorder.”

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