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Timothée Chalamet, Gwyneth Paltrow’s ‘Marty Supreme’ Movie Review: This Oscar nominated film is chaotic and exhausting

Lachmi Deb Roy January 26, 2026, 12:56:39 IST

Timothée Chalamet’s ‘Marty Supreme’ is his career best performance, but how chaotic and exhausting this Oscar nominated film can get

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Timothée Chalamet & Gwyneth Paltrow’s ‘Marty Supreme’ Movie Review
Timothée Chalamet & Gwyneth Paltrow’s ‘Marty Supreme’ Movie Review

Language: English

 Director: Josh Safdie

 Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ronald Bronstein, Odessa A’zion and more

Deeply engaging, but can get deeply exhausting too. Performance wise Timothée Chalamet has killed it. But is the story of hustler ‘Marty Supreme’ worth telling is a big question mark.

 The film is about Timothée Chalamet who takes a striking turn in Marty Supreme, undergoing a dramatic physical and emotional transformation to play Marty Mauser, a fiercely driven table tennis prodigy.  No doubt about the fact that Timothée Chalamet has done a good job by keeping the character raw, compulsive and wickedly ambitious with absolutely no ethics.

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Minor details have been well taken care of including the houses shown to the costumes. Filmmaker Josh Safdie’s longtime vision for Marty involved ‘pockmarked skin, acne, and scars’ on Chalamet’s preternaturally unblemished complexion “to show a history of Marty living a rough life on the streets of the Lower East Side, and make it authentic. His raw look with lanky physique and effortless style is what makes him standout. It shows how much effort has been put in to make Timothée Chalamet look the way he does in ‘Marty Supreme’.

A still from Timothée Chalamet & Gwyneth Paltrow’s ‘Marty Supreme’ Movie Revie

Filmmaker Josh Safdie’s direction and editing, co-written with Ronald Bronstein does create an anxiety and gives you the reason to sit back, but after a point, the film becomes an overstretch and loses its direction.  The character of Marty played by Chalamet is not one to look forward to, especially when his traits show filthy ambition and lack of integrity. Glorifying an egoistic and disruptive character is not what Safdie should have done. You can show the vulnerability and the over ambition, but not glorify it.

A still from ‘Marty Supreme’

Marty Supreme, despite being a sports film, table tennis is just a backdrop, it shows human nature and the extent one can go for the sake of ambition. We all realise how obsessed Marty was in pursuing his dream, but he mostly chooses the wrong path and that can be damaging for young viewers who are trying to get inspired by him.

Gwyneth Paltrow who plays the role of Kay Stone, a woman navigating 1950s societal, emotional, and financial constraints has done a brilliant job. She I believe is the one who tries to bring some sense into the life of Marty.

The film on the whole lacked direction and a proper vision. It has been a clean sweep at several award ceremonies but is an absolute muddled up plot. Marty Supreme starts as a sports movie, but end up showing something that lacks direction and proper execution.

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Rating : 2 and half (out of 5)

WATCH the trailer of ‘Marty Supreme’ here:

Lachmi Deb Roy is the Entertainment Editor of Firstpost, Network18. She reviews films and series with a gender lens. She is a 'Rotten Tomatoes' certified critic. Her interviews are called 'Not Just Bollywood' because she takes a huge interest in world cinema. She has been the winner of the prestigious Laadli Media and Advertising Award for Gender Sensitivity for two consecutive years, 2020 and 2021. OTT over theatrical releases is her preference unless and until it's a King Khan film. She takes interest in fashion, food and art reviews too.

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