[Quick Summary A table tennis player is thwarted as he schemes, cons, and hustles friends and strangers to finance a trip to the World Championship.]
TWO THOUGHTS:
1) PROS:
- This is a well written, script and reads fast.
- The script attempts to capture a bold, foolhardy emotional roller coaster.
- The protagonist is an audacious, confident, unpleasantly selfish young man.
CONS:
- I appreciate the criticism that the story seems to be a scatter shot of events that aren't cohesive and build to something (episodic?).
- Though life is very episodic, trying to connect events that are not "one of a whole" is distracting. Also, the start-stop-start-stop rhythm is distracting.
- You'll either love its truthfulness, or hate the jerkiness of the flow.
2) ALWAYS EMOTIONALLY TRUTHFUL. Like its protagonist, the script takes big swings that may/may not work. For the most part, it works.
Why? I think it's because the writers were careful to be truthful with emotions, especially in the big moments.
For example, in the scene below:
- This is a hair pin, "reversal of fortune" moment.
- Milton Rockwell, a rich guy, offered to sponsor Marty in Japan.
- Marty turned Rockwell down because he had principles.
- Marty has slept with Milton's actress wife. Milton doesn't know.
- Now Marty is begging for that job back because he has no other options.
- Why would we believe Marty would change his mind now? Earlier, it was setup that there isn't anything he won't do - steal, bargain, con, etc.
- Then in this scene, emotions flip flop quickly between hope and fear, desperation and bravado.
- Note that the audience can stick to these hair pin emotional turns because they're always truthful. Marty is really that fast - a fast speaker, a fast hustler, a fast opportunist.
EXT. MOROSCO THEATER - CONTINUOUS
...MILTON steps into the car. The Chauffeur heads around to the driver's side. MARTY raps his knuckles on the window.
MARTY: Mr. Rockwell...(knock knock) Please.... (knock knock) Mr. Rockwell... [Fear. Descending. Desperation. He's at rock bottom.]
MILTON (voice muffled through the glass): What!
MARTY: Look, let's be pragmatists for a second. Put your personal feelings about me aside. You and I both know the kind of value I'd bring to an event with Endo on his home turf. You said so yourself. I'm like a stick of dynamite over there. Whatever other plans you've made, they're going to pale in comparison... [Hope. Ascending. There's hope, a crack in the door.]
A pause.
MARTY (CONT'D): Can we just sit and talk about this reasonably for 2 minutes? There's more than enough common ground here. [Hope. Ascending. He's widening the door.]
Another pause.
MILTON: Fine, get in the car.
MARTY: Thank you!
MARTY runs around to the passenger side. MILTON motions to the driver and the car takes off. MARTY runs alongside it, banging on the window, until he can't keep up. [Fear. Descending. The door is slammed.]
MARTY (CONT'D): SON OF A BITCH! YOU WOULDN'T EVEN HAVE THE IDEA IF IT WASN'T FOR ME!! [Fear. Descending fast into the ground.]
The car continues down the street. [Fear. Hits rock bottom again.]
Hold a few beats on MARTY, stewing. He steps back on the curb and realizes that Kay's ASSISTANT has been standing there, uncomfortable, waiting to speak to him. [Hair pin turn into hope. Ascending.]
MARTY (CONT'D): What!
ASSISTANT: Um, Ms. Stone would like to have lunch with you. [Hope. Ascending fast.]
WHAT I'VE LEARNED: One key to staying on the rails, even in a hair pin "reversal of fortune" moment, is staying emotionally true to the character.
I would've been pulled out of the story if Marty, who is a self-absorbed, fast talking, opportunistic person, suddenly grew a conscience, or slowed down to think.
Marty Supreme (2025)(dated 2/2/25)
by Ronald Bronstein & Josh Safdie