Marty Supreme Speeds Into Theaters Early With 70MM Timothée Chalamet Showings
A24 fast-tracks the 70mm rollout of Marty Supreme, the Timothée Chalamet sports drama, landing in New York and Los Angeles on December 18, 2025.
A24 is bumping up the big-screen treatment for Marty Supreme, the Timothee Chalamet sports drama that already has awards folks buzzing. If you want the large-format version, you can see it a week early — and yes, there are freebies involved.
Dates and extras
- 70mm shows hit New York City and Los Angeles on December 18, 2025 — one week ahead of the wide release. Deadline got it first.
- Nationwide release is December 25, 2025.
- More 70mm engagements roll out in select cities on December 25, 2025.
- Tickets to the 70mm screenings come with an exclusive limited-edition Marty Supreme poster and a set of official Marty Supreme Championship table tennis balls.
Why 70mm for a 35mm movie?
Cinematographer Darius Khondji shot Marty Supreme on 35mm with Arriflex cameras and vintage anamorphic lenses. For the large-format run, A24 is doing a 70mm blow-up, which is essentially an enlargement designed to make the 35mm images play bigger and feel more immersive. It is a nerdy format flex, and with Khondji behind the camera, probably worth the effort.
What is this thing about?
"A young man with a dream no one respects goes to hell and back in pursuit of greatness."
That is Chalamet’s Marty Mauser in a nutshell. Given the merch, you can guess the sport the movie sweats over.
Cast and crew
The ensemble is a wild mix: Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A'zion, Kevin O'Leary, Tyler Okonma, Abel Ferrara, Fran Drescher, Luke Manley, and Koto Kawaguchi all show up alongside Chalamet.
Josh Safdie directs from a script he co-wrote with Ronald Bronstein. It is Safdie’s first feature without his brother Benny since 2008’s The Pleasure of Being Robbed — a notable milestone if you follow their work. Producers are Chalamet, Safdie, Bronstein, Eli Bush, and Anthony Katagas.
Big swing, big spend
Marty Supreme is A24’s priciest movie to date, with an estimated budget of $70 million. For a studio that usually stretches a dollar, that is a statement.
Festival reception and awards buzz
The film premiered at the 2025 New York Film Festival and went over well. Critics singled out Chalamet, with more than a few calling it the best work of his career. He is widely expected to land his third Best Actor nomination, and plenty of pundits have him near the front of the pack. Expect the movie to be in the mix for Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay, too.