Following its acclaimed limited release, director Josh Safdie and co-writer Ronald Bronstein discussed the inspirations behind Marty Supreme—a film starring Timothée Chalamet as post-World War II ping-pong champion Marty Reisman—in a recent podcast. The project represents Safdie's solo directorial turn after Uncut Gems and has posted impressive early box office numbers.
The film draws from Reisman's autobiography and tales of 'misfits' from Safdie's great-grandfather's post-WWII circle—high-IQ dropouts and dreamers betting on street antics like peach-pit throws. At heart, it probes a 'pathological dreamer' in a subculture echoing wider societal rejects, infused with Safdie and Bronstein's psychological insight.
Emerging post-2019's Uncut Gems (with Benny Safdie now on The Smashing Machine), the original story quells rift rumors: 'People always want drama,' Josh said, noting their dropped 48 Hrs. remake.
Casting features Chalamet channeling his Xbox modding/YouTube days for Reisman, and Kevin O’Leary (Shark Tank) as antagonist sponsor Milton Rockwell—the 'performative American dream' of 'cold, corporate capitalism.'
Characters wrestle control: 'No one is spared humility... all led by this invisible force,' Safdie said. Released in 2025, it earned $875,000 across six NYC/LA theaters—a per-theater average of nearly $146,000, tops year-to-date and post-Covid—expanding further this Christmas week.