Nearly 18 months after his death, Hudson Meek will appear on screen in a major studio science fiction film opposite Anne Hathaway and Ewan McGregor.
Warner Bros. will release “The End of Oak Street” on August 14, 2026, a science fiction survival film written and directed by David Robert Mitchell (“It Follows”) and produced by J.J. Abrams’ Bad Robot banner. Meek plays a character named Kaden in the film, which follows Hathaway and McGregor as parents of a suburban family transported to an unknown location by a mysterious cosmic event along with their entire neighborhood.
The young actor was 16 when he died on December 21, 2024, two days after falling from a moving vehicle near his home in Vestavia Hills, Alabama. The incident took place between Shades Crest Road and Highway 31, behind a Publix grocery store on Canyon Road. Friends and family surrounded him when he passed, and his family noted he was an organ donor.
Law enforcement sources told TMZ the death was being treated as an accident, with no signs that drugs or alcohol were involved. The Vestavia Hills Police Department continued investigating but issued no public statement with findings — the circumstances of exactly how he came to fall from the vehicle were never officially explained.
Meek completed filming on “The End of Oak Street” seven months before his death. Principal photography ran from March 22 to June 4, 2024, shooting on location in London, Atlanta, and New Orleans. His appearance in the film is a live performance, not a digital reconstruction, making the August 14 release a genuine farewell from an actor who had no idea it would be his last major role when he stepped in front of the camera.
The Warner Bros. release represents the most visible chapter yet in what has become an unexpected posthumous film career. Meek had already appeared on screen after his passing in “The School Duel,” a thriller that premiered at the 50th Deauville American Film Festival in September 2024 — just three months before he died — and took home the Canal+ 50th anniversary prize. His family’s obituary noted at the time of his death that additional projects were in the pipeline for 2025, though none beyond “The End of Oak Street” have been publicly identified.
His final red carpet appearance came on September 9, 2024, at Deauville, where he walked the premiere of “A Different Man” alongside his “School Duel” castmates. He died three months later.
“The School Duel” completed production ahead of its September 9, 2024, world premiere at the 50th Deauville American Film Festival — the same festival where Meek walked the red carpet for “A Different Man” and where “The School Duel” took home the Canal+ 50th anniversary prize. He was present for both moments, very much alive and very much in demand. What audiences will see in both films is entirely the work of a teenager who was still building his career — not a tribute manufactured after the fact, but the real thing, caught on camera while he still had everything ahead of him.
During his lifetime, Meek was best known for playing the childhood version of Ansel Elgort’s getaway driver in Edgar Wright’s Academy Award-nominated 2017 action film “Baby Driver” — a role he landed at age eight. His other credits included “90 Minutes in Heaven,” NBC’s “Found,” The CW’s “Legacies,” “MacGyver” and the 2024 series “Genius,” along with voice work as the lead character Bada in the children’s programs “Badanamu Cadets” and “Badanamu Stories.”
“The End of Oak Street” opens August 14, 2026. Meek is listed in the cast.

