Marty Supreme hereby completes the trilogy of movies starring Timothée Chalamet I’ve written about so far, in this order: Dune, A Complete Unknown, and now Marty Supreme. I was looking forward to watching Marty Supreme just as much as his earlier films, and I was worried my high expectations might dull the experience. Instead, I was surprised by how much fun I had watching it.
What impressed me most – apart from everything else that works so well (inc. performances, production, and cinematography) – is how unpredictable it is. Nearly every scene (bar one) goes somewhere you don’t quite expect. It’s a total blast, and there were moments where I felt genuinely giddy, waiting to see what would happen next. And the ending is so sublime and unexpected – true to its modus operandi – yet heart-wrenching, that it makes everything that came before it make sense.
Marty Supreme is set in the 1950s and follows Jewish-American table tennis player Marty Mauser, loosely based on Marty Reisman, in his quest to become world champion. As a sports nut – and someone who represented my high school in table tennis – the subject matter instantly piqued my interest. Ironically, the one scene that felt laboured was the table tennis tournament in England. Aside from that, I was hooked, laughing out loud often, hopefully not to the annoyance of nearby viewers.
The film is humorously dark, sometimes violent, and wildly irregular. In its chaos, I found it oddly realistic, often mirroring how life itself can feel – driven by chance, but not entirely random. Small changes can lead to wildly different outcomes, making long-term prediction impossible. Our actions clearly have consequences, and that plays out here, but exactly what those consequences will be is never certain. That uncertainty is central to Marty Supreme.
The movie is packed with confronting moments and will likely offend some viewers. It doesn’t follow, or even lean on, the familiar formulas that most films do. It’s an epic character study of a morally flawed yet insanely talented individual who will stop at nothing to get what he wants – very much in the vein of character-driven films like There Will Be Blood and Citizen Kane.
I want to single out two standout performances, aside from Timothée Chalamet. Both Gwyneth Paltrow and Odessa A’zion are excellent, especially A’zion (image inset), who plays Marty’s fiercely intelligent, emotionally complex, and strategically manipulative childhood friend and love interest. She has immense screen presence, and I found myself fully investing in her. Weirdly, she reminded me lot of seeing Amy Winehouse if she had ever acted. As for Paltrow, in her role as an aging movie star, I don’t think I’ve seen her this good since The Royal Tenenbaums.
I’ve deliberately stayed away from spoilers, because this film is best experienced knowing as little as possible. I genuinely hope Timothée Chalamet receives his first Oscar for Best Actor. He’s easily my favourite young actor working right now – there isn’t even a close second – and has been since Dune. It goes without saying, I couldn’t recommend Marty Supreme more highly. If you’ve seen it, I’d love to hear what you thought.
Cheerio, and thanks for reading.
- Timothée Chalamet had been training in table tennis since 2018 to prepare for his role. He continued his training while working on other films… by traveling with a table.
- Make-up artist Michael Fontaine applied pockmarks, freckles and nicks to Timothée Chalamet’s face to give him a more weathered, street appearance. The effect was so convincing that Gwyneth Paltrow thought it was real, privately suggesting to the actor that he try micro-needling to fix his acne scars.
- At the beginning of the movie, during the first two rounds of the tournament, Marty competes against real-life Olympic table tennis players: American Nikhil Gowda (as Nikhil Kumar) and German Timo Boll.
- Gwyneth Paltrow told Vanity Fair that when she met Timothée Chalamet, who she was going to film several sex scenes with, she joked, “Okay, great. I’m 109 years old. You’re 14.”
References:
1. Marty Supreme – Wikipedia
2. Marty Supreme – IMDB













