Steve Carell is a little cautious to talk about his new movie. He’s not sure he’s the best person to speak on the subjects at hand, and if he’s going to, he wants to get the words just right. “Talking about the movie is almost as daunting as doing the movie,” Carell tells TIME. “You don’t want to speak as if you’re an authority.” The movie is Beautiful Boy, out Oct. 12. The film synthesizes two memoirs — one by a father, veteran journalist @_davidsheff, about trying to guide his son through a harrowing drug addiction, and one by David’s son @nic_sheff; in it, he tells the firsthand story of his descent into addiction and efforts at recovery. Released simultaneously, both books became best sellers, and rightly so: taken together, they show the full scope of how drugs affect not only the addicted but their loved ones too: a 360-degree view of addiction as a family disease. Carell plays the embattled father trying to save his son, and Timothée Chalamet (@Tchalamet) as the charismatic and manipulative young man who doesn’t know how to be saved. Addiction is very real to legions of people: approximately 20 million Americans meet the criteria for a substance-­use disorder, and an estimated 72,000 Americans died from drug overdoses in 2017, a twofold increase in a decade as the opioid epidemic worsened. From 2010 to 2015, the number of drug-overdose deaths involving psychostimulants such as methamphetamine, a drug the real Nic used along with opiates like heroin, more than doubled. The movie doesn’t try to solve the impossible why of the addiction epidemic—but it does provide a compelling snapshot of what makes it so heartbreaking and confounding. “In my understanding, that’s the reality of addiction,” @Tchalamet tells TIME. “It’s one day at a time. You’ve never really won the fight.” Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @mahaney_mark for TIME

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Steve Carell is a little cautious to talk about his new movie. He’s not sure he’s the best person to speak on the subjects at hand, and if he’s going to, he wants to get the words just right. “Talking about the movie is almost as daunting as doing the movie,” Carell tells TIME. “You don’t want to speak as if you’re an authority.” The movie is Beautiful Boy, out Oct. 12. The film synthesizes two memoirs — one by a father, veteran journalist @_davidsheff, about trying to guide his son through a harrowing drug addiction, and one by David’s son @nic_sheff; in it, he tells the firsthand story of his descent into addiction and efforts at recovery. Released simultaneously, both books became best sellers, and rightly so: taken together, they show the full scope of how drugs affect not only the addicted but their loved ones too: a 360-degree view of addiction as a family disease. Carell plays the embattled father trying to save his son, and Timothée Chalamet (@ティモシー・シャラメ) as the charismatic and manipulative young man who doesn’t know how to be saved. Addiction is very real to legions of people: approximately 20 million Americans meet the criteria for a substance-­use disorder, and an estimated 72,000 Americans died from drug overdoses in 2017, a twofold increase in a decade as the opioid epidemic worsened. From 2010 to 2015, the number of drug-overdose deaths involving psychostimulants such as methamphetamine, a drug the real Nic used along with opiates like heroin, more than doubled. The movie doesn’t try to solve the impossible why of the addiction epidemic—but it does provide a compelling snapshot of what makes it so heartbreaking and confounding. “In my understanding, that’s the reality of addiction,” @ティモシー・シャラメ tells TIME. “It’s one day at a time. You’ve never really won the fight.” Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by @mahaney_mark for TIME


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