☆☆☆½
Those of us of a certain age remember our friends who had a certain habit — the nice word for addiction — back in the 1980s and 1990s. "Wired," we called it, still trying to be nice, because these people tended to get a lot accomplished in a very short time. They were always on the move. They could be impressive.
Marty Supreme is wired, to use a nice term. A less nice term is exhausting. A more blunt assessment might add an extra adverb in there. One that begins with F.
Marty Supreme is that friend from 1987. There are times when it's genuinely impressive, a feat of bold and assertive filmmaking. There are a lot more times when it's just f-ing exhausting.
At the center of it is Timothée Chalamet, who also produced it, as Marty Mauser. The movie's poster says Marty is someone who knows how to DREAM BIG, a phrase that demands to be put in all-caps, because the movie itself is IN ALL CAPS. ALL THE TIME. It never lets up.
Director Josh Safdie, who wrote it with Ronald Bronstein, moves like wildfire from its first scene, which finds Marty working in a shoe store in 1952 New York City. But he cannot and will not be constrained by shoes. He is going to find a way to do what he really, really wants and needs to do, the thing he's really good at: playing table tennis. Even in a brief plot description, it sounds ludicrous. A movie about ping-pong? Maybe it's because the movie takes place in the faddish 1950s, or maybe it's just because nothing about Marty Supreme ever, not even for one second, offers room to stop and think about things, the setup doesn't seem odd. Marty Supreme just barrels ahead.
Marty himself makes the first of some terrible decisions in order to get the money he needs to make it to London, where the world table tennis championship is happening. (Honestly, this sounds much sillier than it plays.) There, he runs into wealthy stage actress Kay Stone and her even wealthier husband, writing-pen magnate (I know, I know) Milton Rockwell.
Marty will do anything to pursue his nutty dream. Anything. He is shameless. He is sort of charming — though a lot less charming, I think, than the film and Chalamet believe him to be. He is much more than determined: He is obsessive in his goal.
And this, along with the movie's non-stop forward momentum, is the biggest problem. Despite Chalamet's fundamental appeal, despite the addition of prosthetic makeup to give him a face full of acne scars, despite his presence in every single scene, there's only so much he can do with a character who has such little concern for the well-being of anyone else. After a while, Marty Mauser seems more like a sociopath than a dreamer, and it strains belief that anyone who crosses his path once would ever want to cross it again.
This is a character who begins by making some questionable choices, moves on to making bad choices, progresses to making awful choices, and ends up making breathtakingly horrifying choices — armed robbery, extortion, and worse. At first, we can forgive and even find appeal in his quirky ambition, but by the time he leaves a pregnant woman who has been shot in order to make a flight, it's hard to work up any sort of sympathy. Others may find him endlessly ingratiating, but I developed a certain antipathy toward Marty that diminished my enjoyment of the movie's strengths.
Those include a surprisingly strong performance by Gwyneth Paltrow as the actress who might relate to Marty a little more than he could ever suspect; and Odessa A'zion, who really excels despite being given the thankless task of standing by Marty no matter what. No matter what.
As it moves from its opening scenes of desire, ambition and talent into car chases, gunfights and explosions, Marty Supreme wears down the audience. Even climactic table-tennis showdown (remember what I said about sounding silly?) loses some of its tension because, by that time, the whole movie has just worn viewers down. It's like being out with that coked-up friend at 3:30 in the morning; after a while, you just want to scream, "Enough already."
Viewer note: Marty Supreme contains distressing scenes of harm to a pet.
Viewed January 6, 2026 — AMC Burbank 8
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