NEW YORK — Timothée Chalamet squints as he gazes out at the Manhattan shoreline. It's a few hours before the premiere of his new movie, ''Marty Supreme,'' but at this moment, he's sitting on a quiet bench at the end of a West Side pier.
It's brisk and there's snow on the ground, but it's sunny and Chalamet, dressed warmly in a parka, is enjoying the perspective looking back at the city. For him, it's like looking back on himself.
''Now in my late 20s, there should be every reason to go, ‘All right, career's good. Let me start shilling out,''' says Chalamet, who turns 30 just after Christmas. ''But it's like I've quadrupled down on the original pursuit of my life. I've gotten out of the pool and redived from a higher board.''
That high dive is ''Marty Supreme,'' Josh Safdie's hyperkinetic 1950s-set New York tale of a singular striver. Chalamet plays Marty Mauser, a Jewish kid working at a shoe store who aspires to be the best table tennis pro in the world. The character is loosely based on a real-life player, Marty Reisman, but the movie is just as much a reflection of Chalamet and Safdie's own whatever-it-takes ambitions.
''The gift of my life is this work,'' Chalamet says while seagulls fly overhead. ''You want to honor it. Not in some Keynesian way — I don't know if that's the right economist to cite. Capitalistic is not what I mean. I mean: If you're not going up, you're kind of going down. ‘He not busy being born is busy dying,' the great Dylan quote. Ooh, is that on the money.''
Since his breakthrough performance in 2017's ''Call Me By Your Name,'' Chalamet has been on an ever-ascending path that seemed to reach a culmination when he, soon after finishing shooting on ''Marty Supreme,'' declared that he's ''in pursuit of greatness'' while accepting the best actor award from the Screen Actors Guild for his performance as Bob Dylan in ''A Complete Unknown.''
But ''Marty Supreme'' is yet another new level for Chalamet. His Marty, far from a period-piece study, is a blur of forward motion. (To shoot the film's sprinting poster, Safdie closed down two blocks, so Chalamet would be up to full speed.) To make his dreams a reality, Marty uses every desperate scheme and every bit of grandiose swagger. He's a quintessentially American hustler, and it's probably the defining performance of Chalamet's young career. A year after he came so close, it may win him his first Academy Award.
''It's not like a long arc thing for me,'' he says. ''It's like I'm chasing a feeling.''