Marty Supreme: Triumph and Tragedy – Why Timothée Chalamet's Masterpiece Went Home Empty-Handed from the 2026 Oscars
Picture this: you step onto the stage of the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, your heart pounding in your chest. Your name has been called out nine times throughout the night – and each time, you go home empty-handed. That's exactly what happened to Timothée Chalamet with his film Marty Supreme at the 98th Academy Awards. What sounds like the plot of yet another drama was the brutal reality of Oscar night 2026.
The Favourite That Wasn't
It was supposed to be the big night for Josh Safdie's table tennis epic. Nine nominations – including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Actor – spoke volumes. The reviews were rapturous, the box office was booming worldwide, and Timothée Chalamet delivered the performance of a lifetime as eccentric ping-pong hustler Marty Mauser. But then came the ceremony on March 15th, and for the A24 masterpiece, it brought nothing but frustration.
While One Battle After Another went home with six golden statuettes and Sinners managed to scoop four, Marty Supreme ended the night with zero. A historic shutout, placing the film in an unenviable league with heavyweights like Gangs of New York or The Irishman, which also went home empty-handed despite double-digit nominations.
The Man Behind the Myth
What many don't know: the film that has now so spectacularly stumbled is loosely based on one of the most colourful figures in sports history. Marty Supreme is freely adapted from the life of Martin "Marty" Reisman (1930–2012), a New York legend who dominated table tennis in the 40s and 50s.
Reisman, known to friends as "The Needle," wasn't just a champion with over 20 major titles. He was a hustler, showman, and dandy who refused to bow to society's rules. With his elegant attire, his ever-present Borsalino hat, and his razor-sharp wit, he roamed the smoky table tennis halls of Manhattan, where high-stakes gambling was the name of the game.
The anecdotes are legendary:
- He measured the net height with $100 bills – "Why be stingy?" he later asked an American newspaper.
- He toured for three years with the Harlem Globetrotters, wowing 75,000 spectators in Berlin by playing "Mary Had a Little Lamb" on frying pans.
- At 67, he became the oldest national champion in any racket sport – and he did it using the old "hardbat" paddle, long after everyone else had switched to sponge rubber. "Sponge rubber insults my dignity," he said at the time.
The Big Disappointment
So, what exactly did Marty Supreme lose out on during that memorable night? The list of missed opportunities reads like a who's who of the Academy Awards:
- Best Actor: The golden statuette went to a surprising newcomer, while insiders had fully expected Chalamet's intense portrayal to finally bring him the long-awaited recognition.
- Best Adapted Screenplay: The Safdie brothers, known for their electrifying dialogue, had to concede defeat to a more conventional love story.
- Best Production Design: The lovingly detailed reconstruction of 1950s New York lost out to the evening's opulent period drama.
Tempers flared on social media. "Timothée Chalamet went too deep into method acting – what happened in the film has now happened to him on the Oscar stage," joked one user on X. Another was pessimistic about the future: "He's going to lose to Tom Cruise next year too."
The bitter icing on the cake: the defeat came just weeks after Chalamet made some ill-advised remarks about ballet and opera in an interview. "I don't want to work in areas where you say, 'Hey, keep this thing alive, even if no one's really interested in it anymore'," he had said. It didn't go down well everywhere – and after the Oscars debacle, he had to face questions about whether it had cost him the support of Academy members.
A Film Like Its Hero
Perhaps it's paradoxical, but somehow this defeat feels strangely fitting for Marty Supreme. Marty Reisman, the real one, was also a man who always swam against the current. He refused to take an office job ("No one was ever less suited for a permanent position than me"), preferring to smuggle (nylon stockings into England, 400% profit) and bet rather than conform.
In his autobiography, The Money Player, he wrote that the best table tennis players had to be either "players or smugglers." He was both. And at the end of his life, at 82, after lung and heart problems, he left behind a daughter who was proud of him.
Whether Marty Supreme has an Oscar or not – the story of the man who could slice a cigarette in half with a ping-pong ball and played against 75,000 people in Berlin, that story remains. And maybe, in the end, that's worth more than any golden statuette.