
I guess this is just who he is. Can’t wait for three more months of this

They’re doing alright if the crimes of their Sean Penn top out at “bragging about themselves like a pro athlete”.
Let's hope he draws the line at being self-aggrandizing. I think anybody who lets themselves pulled into the orbit of the Kardashians probably has some issues they most likely need to work through. I won't post his orange outfit, there is enough of that out there, but I might have given him a tip of the hat had they done orange & teal.cantinflas wrote: Wed Dec 10, 2025 12:55 pm It's been uploaded again, you can watch it here while it lasts.
When I watched it the other day I just thought he was being hyperbolic and having fun with the interviewer, but people seem to be saying he's doing it in character. I'm not so sure, maybe some of it, but maybe he doesn't even know himself anymore? He's going a bit Shia isn't he.
So it’s probably one of those cases where a writer has a particular track or song in mind when writing a scene and then eventually they get lucky and are able to license it.Informing the music was a huge Spotify playlist, culled by Safdie over years. “I think it was called ‘Score Supreme,’” Lopatin recalls. “So many pieces of music, a vast world of sound that he was working from, and I never really pressed him on it because I didn’t think he knew yet.” The tracks included everything from New Order, Tears for Fears and Peter Gabriel’s robotic-sounding “I Have the Touch” to Fats Domino and New Age material like Constance Demby.
“I think that’s what makes it so fun because we’re really open to this idea of time being a little bit malleable, a little bit gelatinous,” Lopatin says. “And I don’t think we really knew until we were about halfway through that process that — oh my God, the score is alive and it’s ticking and it’s doing things.”
I was pretty bummed there was no swag at Boston's 70mm showings. Would've loved an orange ping pong ball or twoyoloswegmaster wrote: Thu Dec 04, 2025 1:39 am According to this article from Deadline, they will be giving out limited edition posters and Marty Supreme ping pong balls out to people who buy tickets for the 70mm engagement.
I don't think the film champions or particularly validates Marty's earlier behavior at all, nor do I think this film's approach to its antihero is any different really than Safdie's previous works. What makes you think so - specifically differentiating this from Uncut Gems? If Howard Ratner can have addiction help explain - not excuse - part of his behavior into a more sympathetic space, surely the inherent narcissistic folly of youth can for Marty Mauser? This is also a manchild who has been shaped by his world, someone who has watched everyone in his life 'compromise' and wind up in undesirable situations because of those compromises. Surely his close friend from childhood, A'zion, but also a new figure, Paltrow - perfect mirror images of one another on that front, showing how compromises can suck the life out of life, for women in particular. And yet, the movie is ultimately about how compromise is necessary in some form to become an adult. Marty gradually begins making compromises as the narrative progresses, and finally surrenders in a way that I felt was beautiful and earned (not just the very end, but how he moves from refusing to settle for anything short of being The Greatest to settling for personal self-respect in the final game). I don't think the film likes Marty until the end, and even there it's only giving him the benefit of the doubt in allotting him the 'second chance' ("there are no second chances" as O'Leary states - maybe in one sense, but there are in another where Marty hasn't been looking) that Ratner wasn't afforded, to perhaps become better after the final frame.mfunk9786 wrote: Wed Dec 31, 2025 11:49 am Really an abysmal step down from Uncut Gems here. My primary issue comes from the film being about a guy who is constantly lying and stealing and mistreating people, but the film seeing that as simply being what a hustler does - grindset culture run amok.