4th Wall Inward
Here is the full description with the corrected opening: Josh Safdie has spent the last decade making films with his brother Benny. Good Time. Uncut Gems. A creative partnership so specific and so singular that when it was announced he would direct Marty Supreme alone, the question was inevitable: what does a Safdie film look like when there is only one of them? The answer arrived Christmas Day 2025 via A24, starring Timothée Chalamet as Marty Mauser, a shoe salesman with a dream nobody respects and the specific arrogance of a man who has decided the world is wrong about him. This week on The Fourth Wall Inward we go deep on the most entertaining film of the awards season and ask the question nobody in the conversation seems to want to answer: is Marty Mauser someone we are supposed to root for, and does it matter? The premise is deceptively simple. Marty works in his uncle's shoe shop. He plays table tennis professionally at a level nobody takes seriously because table tennis is not serious. He wants to win the British Open. He steals seven hundred dollars, gets on a plane to London, and the film becomes something else entirely. A Safdie film through and through. Kinetic, chaotic, frequently hilarious, occasionally terrifying, and entirely unwilling to let you get comfortable. Chalamet is extraordinary here. He let his vision deteriorate for the role. He spent months training with professional table tennis players. He built an accent and a physicality and a specific brand of oblivious narcissism that is completely different from anything he has done before. Marty Mauser is not likeable. He is fascinating, which is harder and more interesting. The film watches him with the same mixture of affection and horror that Safdie brought to Howard Ratner in Uncut Gems, that specific Safdie gaze that finds the dignity inside the disaster. Gwyneth Paltrow as Kay Stone is a revelation. A faded actress in a loveless marriage, charmed by Marty's confidence and undone by his selfishness. Paltrow has not had a role this good in years and she knows exactly what to do with it. Odessa A'zion as Rachel, Marty's childhood friend and on-again affair, carries the film's emotional weight with a precision that the film's chaotic surface keeps trying to bury. She holds her ground every time. Darius Khondji shot the film mostly on 35mm using Arriflex cameras and vintage Panavision anamorphic lenses. The result is a 1950s New York that feels inhabited rather than reconstructed. The Lower East Side, the ping pong parlors, the London hotels, the Japanese tournament venues, all of it has a texture and a weight that digital cannot replicate. The film accumulates rather than resolves. Events pile on each other. Characters enter with tremendous vividness and exit without ceremony. This is Safdie's method and it is a deliberate one. Marty never learns. The world keeps moving. And somewhere in the middle of all that relentless forward motion, the film finds something genuinely moving about a man who cannot stop wanting something that keeps almost being his. Almost is the most interesting word in cinema. Marty Mauser lives there permanently. A24's highest grossing film of all time. Josh Safdie's best solo work. Timothée Chalamet's best performance. We think so. Come argue with us. Follow us on: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@4thwallinward [https://www.youtube.com/@4thwallinward] Letterboxd: https://boxd.it/4TjKf [https://boxd.it/4TjKf] Substack: https://substack.com/@thefourthwallinward [https://substack.com/@thefourthwallinward] X: https://x.com/4thwallinward [https://x.com/4thwallinward]
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