
Marty Supreme
2025 · Directed by Josh Safdie
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Based
Critics rated this 67 points above its woke score. Among Based films, this critic score ranks #27 of 345.
Representation Casting
Score: 35/100
The cast includes some diversity with Tyler the Creator in a notable role and Géza Röhrig among the ensemble, though the lead remains a conventionally attractive white male and the film does not explicitly center diverse perspectives or experiences.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 0/100
No evidence of LGBTQ+ themes, representation, or storylines in the available plot description or casting information.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 15/100
Gwyneth Paltrow is present in the cast, but the plot centers on a male protagonist's ambitions with no indication that feminist themes or female agency drive the narrative.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 20/100
While the cast includes actors of color, there is no evidence that the film engages explicitly with racial themes or racial consciousness as a primary concern of the narrative.
Climate Crusade
Score: 0/100
No evidence of climate-related themes or environmental messaging in the film's plot or premise.
Eat the Rich
Score: 45/100
The film appears to depict a protagonist attempting to live lavishly and manipulate systems for personal gain, which could be read as satirical critique of capitalist ambition, though this remains ambiguous.
Body Positivity
Score: 0/100
No evidence of body positivity themes or critique of conventional beauty standards in the available information.
Neurodivergence
Score: 0/100
No indication of neurodivergent representation or themes in the plot description or cast information.
Revisionist History
Score: 0/100
While inspired by a real ping-pong legend, the film is not a biopic and does not appear to engage in revisionist historical narratives.
Lecture Energy
Score: 10/100
The film appears to observe its protagonist's behavior with detachment rather than preachy moralizing, suggesting minimal lecture energy or explicit messaging about correct behavior.
Synopsis
Marty Mauser, a young man with a dream no one respects, goes to hell and back in pursuit of greatness.
Consciousness Assessment
Marty Supreme arrives as a portrait of obsessive ambition filtered through the sensibilities of Josh Safdie, a director whose previous work has demonstrated a fascination with the mechanics of striving and self-delusion. The film centers on a ping-pong player of modest means and immodest dreams, a character study that resists the contemporary impulse to justify itself through some larger social commentary. Timothée Chalamet inhabits this role with the kind of commitment one might expect from an actor of his generation, though the film itself seems largely indifferent to whether we find him sympathetic or contemptible.
The supporting cast, which includes Gwyneth Paltrow, Tyler the Creator, and Fran Drescher, suggests an eclectic vision, yet the film's preoccupations remain stubbornly narrow. There are no grand gestures toward systemic critique or structural inequality. The narrative follows its protagonist through his machinations with a kind of anthropological detachment, observing his ambitions without endorsing or condemning them through any particular ideological lens. If there are moments of social consciousness embedded in the text, they remain peripheral to the central project of depicting one man's singular pursuit.
What distinguishes Marty Supreme from a more explicitly progressive work is its fundamental disinterest in the frameworks that have come to dominate contemporary cinema. The film traffics in character and circumstance rather than ideology, which is to say it operates according to an older aesthetic principle. Whether this constitutes a virtue or a limitation depends entirely on one's view of cinema's proper function in the current moment.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“Marty Supreme rapturously reprises a siren song that transcends any single American era, beckoning hustlers to heed its call. ”
“Safdie’s daring choices merge with the best performance of Timothee Chalamet’s career for a story of a man who thinks he’s the best in the world at something, and that thinking is as important as actually being it.”
“Through it all, we’re supposed to relish the emotional complexity of the story, or maybe even just its dark humor. Amorality can be fun, but Marty Supreme has no emotional core—though it does try to grab us in its final minutes, when Marty is unrealistically redeemed in a moment of mawkish sentimentality.”
Consciousness Markers
The cast includes some diversity with Tyler the Creator in a notable role and Géza Röhrig among the ensemble, though the lead remains a conventionally attractive white male and the film does not explicitly center diverse perspectives or experiences.
No evidence of LGBTQ+ themes, representation, or storylines in the available plot description or casting information.
Gwyneth Paltrow is present in the cast, but the plot centers on a male protagonist's ambitions with no indication that feminist themes or female agency drive the narrative.
While the cast includes actors of color, there is no evidence that the film engages explicitly with racial themes or racial consciousness as a primary concern of the narrative.
No evidence of climate-related themes or environmental messaging in the film's plot or premise.
The film appears to depict a protagonist attempting to live lavishly and manipulate systems for personal gain, which could be read as satirical critique of capitalist ambition, though this remains ambiguous.
No evidence of body positivity themes or critique of conventional beauty standards in the available information.
No indication of neurodivergent representation or themes in the plot description or cast information.
While inspired by a real ping-pong legend, the film is not a biopic and does not appear to engage in revisionist historical narratives.
The film appears to observe its protagonist's behavior with detachment rather than preachy moralizing, suggesting minimal lecture energy or explicit messaging about correct behavior.