Josh Safdie’s wild sports tale with Chalamet, Paltrow, and A’zion mixes humor, emotion, and table-tennis glory for Oscar buzz
December 2025’s sleeper sensation is Marty Supreme, Josh Safdie’s ping-pong picaresque released December 25, starring Timothée Chalamet as prodigy Marty Reisman-inspired champion navigating fame, frenzy, and personal demons. Co-starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Odessa A’zion, the film blends Safdie’s chaotic energy with heartfelt underdog story, earning raves as “original humor and emotion” positioning it Oscar dark horse.
Safdie directs solo after Uncut Gems success, crafting absurd yet poignant tale of table-tennis world—warehouse tournaments, eccentric rivals, high-stakes matches. Chalamet transforms with paddle mastery, vulnerability shining in relationships and comeback arc. Paltrow mentors mysteriously; A’zion sparks romance amid chaos.
Critics hail “funny-sad triumph,” blending sports drama with Safdie signature anxiety—rapid cuts, overlapping dialogue, 1970s-80s vibe. Runtime balances laughs and tears, avoiding formula.
Box office wild: $9.5M Christmas Day, strong holds against Avatar, word-of-mouth boosting. Awards chatter: Chalamet Best Actor contender, Safdie screenplay nods.
Street buzz: Gen Z flocks for Chalamet, older audiences nostalgia. Compared Safdie previous, more accessible yet edgy.
Marty Supreme isn’t typical sports—it’s chaotic celebration of entertainment obsession. Ace served.


