felt making was “more important” than anything else during the Brat Pack era. Andrew McCarthy sat down with former Brat Pack members for his documentary, set to premiere via Hulu on Thursday, June 13. Moore, 61, spoke candidly about her “beautiful” experience working on the film with director .

“He really stuck his neck out for me because it’s not like I had any box office draw; we were all just beginning,” she recalled. “They paid to have a sober companion with me 24/7 during the whole shooting. They could have easily found someone else.

” Moore, who has been candid with addiction, for . “They said, ‘Yes, what’s more important: the movie or your life?’ I said the movie,” she explained. “For me, I didn’t have any value for myself.

I think I was so fearful of failing, fearful of losing and desperate to fit in, belong and my need to please was definitely on high alert.” McCarthy, 61, spoke with exclusively about and admitted he didn’t really know what Moore was going through at the time. “When you’re in your early ‘20s, you’re pretty self-absorbed.

So the world is seen through the prism of you and these big players around you,” McCarthy shared. “I was aware that Demi was getting sober, whatever that meant — I didn’t even know what that meant at the time.” He was “vaguely aware” that Moore was “getting her act together” because that’s how it was presented.

McCarthy also spoke with each interview subject about how bei.