There’s an argument to be made that Marty Mauser (Timothée Chalamet), the protagonist of Josh Safdie’s “Marty Supreme,” could be the father of Howard Ratner (Adam Sandler), the protagonist of Josh and Benny Safdie’s 2019 cinematic panic attack “Uncut Gems.”
Marty and Howard are versions of the same character: Jewish New York City hustlers addicted to risky business; inveterate gamblers who believe that just one more bet is going to pay off.
For this solo directorial outing, Josh Safdie and his longtime collaborator Ronald Bronstein, with whom he wrote and edited “Marty Supreme,” continue to mine the same milieu. The movie is inspired by the real-life characters of the midcentury table tennis scene in New York City (specifically Marty Reisman), and it’s designed around the New York City-born and -bred movie star Chalamet.
Many will assume that Marty Mauser is the performance that is most like Chalamet. But Safdie and Bronstein have a unique ability to pair performer and role, to write to an actor’s perhaps previously untapped potential, and Chalamet does achieve greatness here, in one of the best performances of his career thus far.
“Marty Supreme” is a breathless, breakneck sprint through the Lower East Side of 1952, where Marty holds top dog position in the table tennis scene. His next stop? The world.
He steals $700 from his job at his uncle’s shoe store in order to make it to the world championships in London. That’s one of his first big risks — the other being a backroom quickie with his married childhood friend, Rachel (Odessa A’zion, who perfectly matches pitch with Chalamet).
A river of consequences and bad decisions cascade from that inciting incident, which we follow with much anxiety and amusement.
In London, Marty seduces a movie star, Kay Stone (Gwyneth Paltrow), introduces her wealthy husband Milton Rockwell (Kevin O’Leary), an ink-pen impresario, to the untapped market potential of table tennis, and is roundly beaten in the finals by Koto Endo (Koto Kawaguchi), a deaf Japanese player who displays a savant-like skill that stumps even Marty.