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NÃO PERCA: ‘Marty Supreme’ Ending Explained: The Meaning Behind Timothée Chalamet’s Movie, Now Streaming on HBO Max 🍿

Marty Supreme is now streaming on HBO Max, so if you didn’t catch this Oscar-losing movie in theaters, now is your chance to watch it at home.

Directed by Josh Safdie—a director known for his unsettling movies made with his brother, Benny, like Good Time and Uncut Gems—with a script co-written by Safdie his frequent collaborator Ronald Bronstein, Marty Supreme is a dark sports comedy, loosely based on the real-life champion American table tennis player Marty Reisman. Chalamet stars as Marty, a rising table tennis star living in New York City in the 1950s, who is determined to become the best.

Also starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’zion, Kevin O’Leary, Tyler Okonma, Abel Ferrara and Fran Drescher, Marty Supreme received rave reviews from critics and earned nine nominations at the 2026 Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director for Safdie, and Best Actor for Chalamet. (Unfortunately, it didn’t take home wins in any of those categories.)

Marty Supreme is fast-paced and chaotic, and it’s not always clear what the movie is trying to say. If you got lost along the way, don’t worry, Decider is here to help. Read on for a breakdown of the Marty Supreme plot summary, the Marty Supreme ending explained, and the Marty Supreme movie meaning.

Marty Supreme - Timothee Chalamet
Photo Credit; A24

Marty Supreme plot summary:

It’s 1952 in New York City, and Marty Mauser (Chalamet) has a job selling shoes at his uncle Murray’s (Larry “Ratso” Sloman) shoe store. Uncle Murray wants to make Marty a manager, but Marty insists he has bigger and better things to worry about, like becoming the greatest table tennis player of all time. He has what he believes is a revolutionary idea for his own line of ping pong balls, which will feature a bright orange ball, rather than white, making them easier to see. He’s also having an illicit affair with his childhood friend Rachel (Odessa A’zion), who is dealing with an abusive husband. After Marty and Rachel have sex in the back room of the shoe shop, we see montage sequence of sperm traveling in Rachel’s body. Pretty gross stuff!

Marty steals money from his uncle’s shop in order to buy a plane ticket to a ping pong tournament in London. He insists on staying at the Ritz Hotel, even though this isn’t where the other players are staying. But he believes he is the best, and should be treated as such. At the hotel, he manages to seduce a famous aging actress named Kay Stone (Gwyneth Paltrow) and gets to know her wealthy businessman husband, Milton Rockwell (Kevin O’Leary). In the tournament, Marty loses the championship match to Japan’s Koto Endo (played by real-life Japanese table tennis player Koto Kawaguchi).

Milton Rockwell offers Marty a pretty sweet deal to play a sponsored rematch game against Endo, which would pay him a good chunk of change. The catch: Rockwell wants Marty to lose on purpose, as the rematch would be in Japan, and Rockwell wants a happy Japanese crowd to buy his pens. Marty angrily refuses, too proud to lose on purpose, despite the fact that he could really use the money.

MARTY SUPREME, Kevin O'Leary, 2025.
Photo: Courtesy Everett Collection

Instead, Marty tours with the Harlem Globetrotters, performing ping pong tricks for the half-time show. After the tour, Marty returns to New York City, where his uncle has him arrested for stealing from him—but it turns Uncle Murray paid the cop just to put on a show, and releases him, on the condition that Marty has dinner with his Uncle to discuss his future. Marty is once again being offered a lifeline that he refuse to take. Instead, he flees from his fire escape and goes to meet up with Rachel. Rachel informs Marty that she is pregnant, and the baby is his. Marty denies that the baby is his—he thinks the pull out method is fool proof, apparently—and is convinced that Rachel is trying to use him to get out of her marriage.

Marty buys a room at a run down hotel with his buddy Wally (Tyler Okonma), a cab driver and fellow ping pong player. While Marty is taking a bath, the bathroom floor collapses, and Marty and the tub go crashing into the room below, injuring a mobster named Ezra Mishkin (Abel Ferrara) and Ezra’s dog. Ezra pays Marty to take his dog to the vet for him, but instead Marty and Wally use the money to hustle amateur ping pong players at the local bowling alley. Marty wants to raise money to pay for the $1,500 fraud fine he’s been hit with, after he pulled that Ritz hotel stunt in London. If he doesn’t pay the fine, he will be banned from the World Championships.

After losing the amateur players realize they’ve been hustled, they track down Marty and Wally at a gas station and attack them, getting their money back. Marty and Wally escape, but barely, and they lose the dog Moses—who runs away—in the process.

MARTY SUPREME, from left: Timothee Chalamet, Tyler the Creator, 2025.
Photo: Courtesy Everett Collection

Marty pays a visit to Kay Stone at the theater where she is rehearsing for a play. Marty appeals to Kay’s ego by praising her performance and insulting her co-star, and later has sex with her in her hotel room. He steals a necklace from her that he tries to sell for money, only to learn that it’s costume jewelry worth nothing. Desperate for money, Marty begs Milton Rockwell to let him take original deal offered: That he plays Endo in an exposition, and loses. Rockwell tells him he’s already made other plans, and declines.

Meanwhile, Rachel comes to Marty with a black eye that she says is from her husband. Marty beats up the husband in response, and takes Rachel to his friend Dion’s house. Dion reluctantly gives them a place to stay for the night, and Marty repays his kindness by stealing Dion’s car. Marty’s new plan to get money: Find that mobster’s lost dog Moses, and collect the reward. And they do find Moses, with an aggressive farmer who has taken the dog in. But the farmer shoot at them when they try to take him, and they flee, damaging Dion’s car.

It’s revealed Rachel’s “black eye” is really just make-up that she draw on to manipulate Marty. Incensed, Marty spits at her that he has a purpose, and “you don’t.” “I have an obligation to see a very specific thing through,” Marty tells her. With that, he abandons her and his unborn child, still determined to make the $1500 so he can play ping pong in the World Championship. Rachel returns to her abusive husband, violently screams at her and breaks her things.

MARTY SUPREME NYFF MOVIE REVIEW
Photo: A24

Marty attends the premiere of Kay’s play, where he returns the necklace and apologizes to her for stealing from her. He explains his situation and Kay is, for some reason, sympathetic. Later that night, on a walk in Central Park, Kay offers him a real necklace for him to sell, that is actually worth money. Marty kisses her, and they have sex in the grass, where they are caught by a police man. They manage to bribe the police man into letting them go by offering him the necklace. Outside Kay’s apartment, Marty asks if she can go get another necklace (the nerve!) and she reluctantly agrees. But once inside, at the opening night party at her place, Kay hears a bad review criticizing her performance. She breaks down in tears, and doesn’t come back downstairs to give Marty a necklace.

Marty crashes the party, and once again begs Rockwell to reconsider his offer to play in the Tokyo exhibition game. Milton agrees, on the condition that Marty humiliate himself by letting Rockwell spank his bare bottom with a ping pong paddle, in front of everyone. For once, Marty swallows his pride, and agrees.

But before Marty can leave for Tokyo, he and Rachel are kidnapped by the mobster Mishkin. Rachel attempted to con Mishkin on her own, by having a friend offer a different dog (not Moses) to collect the reward money. Marty and Rachel direct Mishkin to the farmhouse where the real Moses is being held. A violent shout-out between the farmer and Mishkin ensues, and Rachel is severely injured in the crossfire. Marty drives Rachel to the hospital, where she goes into premature labor. Marty leaves for Japan.

MARTY SUPREME, Timothee Chalamet (center), 2025.
Photo: Courtesy Everett Collection

While in Japan, Marty attempts to weasel his way into the World Championship bracket, but the officials flatly refuse. Marty is devastated to realize everything he did—all the people he conned and hurt, all the lives he risked and laws he broke—was for nothing.

But he still has to lose the match to Endo at the sponsored exhibition match. At first, Marty plays along, putting on an air of a villain in a wrestling match. He lets Endo win the game, and is told he has to kiss a pig on stage to add further humiliation to his watch. Marty can’t bring himself to do it. He insists on playing a “real game” against Endo, revealing to the audience the first game was nothing more than a show. The Japanese audience gets on his side, also calling for a real game. Marty appeals to Endo’s ego, insisting he deserves a real game, while also begging for a chance, as he won’t be able to compete in the championship. Endo agrees. Under the pressure of the audience and Endo, the officials agree to a rematch.

MARTY SUPREME, Koto Kawaguchi, 2025
Photo: Atsushi Nishijima / © A24 / Courtesy Everett Collection

It’s a very close game, but Marty wins the rematch. Rockwell is furious, and tells Marty not only is not getting paid, he’s not getting a ride home, either. Right before Marty wins the match, Rockwell tells him, “I was born in 1601. I’m a vampire. I’ve been around forever. I’ve met many Marty Mausers over the centuries. Some of them crossed me, they weren’t straight, they weren’t honest. And those are the ones that are still here. You go out and win that game, and you’re gonna be here forever too. You’ll never be happy. You will never be happy.”

It’s a bizarre speech that Marty laughs off.

Marty Supreme vampire ending explained:

Apparently, that speech was leftover from an alternate Marty Supreme vampire ending, in which an early draft of the script ended with Rockwell literally being a vampire who bites Marty in the neck in the final scene, after Marty lived out a life of “success”—a successful shoe store business and a family—but not the life he wanted.

“He has this success, but he’s not doing the thing that he believed he was born on the planet to do,” writer-director Josh Safdie said, while describing the alternate ending on the A24 podcast. “You’re on his eyes, we built the prosthetics for Timmy and everything, and Mr. Wonderful shows up behind him and takes a bite out of his neck, and that was the last image. And he hasn’t aged.”

O’Leary told Variety he was on board with the vampire ending. “I know that sounds nuts, but to me that would be the right punishment,” he said. “I told them I was really unsatisfied with the ending, for my character to get fucked over like that. This kumbaya ending is absurd. [Marty] fucked everybody. Why should he not live a life in misery in perpetuity after that?”

Unfortunately for O’Leary, the studio nixed the vampire ending idea.

Marty Supreme ending explained:

Instead of growing old and getting bit by a vampire, Marty returns to NYC via a military plane. He visits Rachel at the hospital, at the maternity ward. He sees Rachel is healthy, tells her he loves her, and promises to stay. He watches his newborn son through the viewing window, and is moved to tears, accepting that this is his son. With that, “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” cues up, and the movie ends.

Marty Supreme movie meaning:

Despite the fact that he didn’t actually win the World Championship, the victory over Endo is the one that Marty has been looking for and chasing after his whole life. He feels he’s finally proved, at least to himself, that he is the best. He can finally stop screwing over everyone in his life to achieve this arbitrary goal he’s set for himself, and focus on other people, like Rachel and his son.

I’m not going to lie, like Kevin O’Leary, the Marty Supreme ending left me unsatisfied. After two hours of watching this guy be the most selfish, narcissistic man on the planet, we have to watch him win the game and experience the joys of fatherhood? C’mon. There’s no way this guy is going to be a good dad!

But perhaps Marty Supreme isn’t a movie about punishment or reward for bad or good behavior. Maybe it’s just an observation on a type of person, like Marty, who lets an obsession with greatness “rule his world,” so to speak. Maybe Marty is telling himself that beating Endo is reason enough to let go of his ping pong obsession, because he was too proud to let it go any other way. But deep down, he knows he will never achieve the success— his “purpose”— that he was so certain he would.

Hey, that’s just my interpretation of the movie. If you have a different take, let me know in the comments.


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