Martyr Supreme
Jan 12, 2026
The hosts dive into a review of Josh Safdie's Marty Supreme, debating its tone and character depth. Timothée Chalamet's performance ignites discussion about its efficacy. They tackle themes of hubris, gambling, and the film's portrayal of female characters. Transitioning to current events, they analyze the Minneapolis ICE shooting, exploring the dynamics of wokeness in Minnesota and the implications of use-of-force policies. The tragic narrative connects activism with broader social issues, revealing multifaceted perspectives on conflict and morality.
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Safdie Style Scales Into Nostalgic Spectacle
- Josh Safdie's films trade raw anxiety for stylized nostalgia and crowd-pleasing dopamine hits.
- Marty Supreme refines the Safdie formula into a grander, more mature meditation on hustle and assimilation.
Theater Smell Turned Matinee Into Panic
- Dasha recalls a matinee where smoke smells in the theater amplified the film's anxiety and made the audience palpably uneasy.
- The visceral theater moment mirrored the Safdies' knack for spiking viewers' cortisol in real time.
Hubris Reframed As Redemption
- Marty Supreme flips Uncut Gems' moral lesson by rewarding Marty’s hubris while foregrounding family as a final reckoning.
- The film functions as a personal, intimate take on legacy disguised as a period sports drama.






