
Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet swiftly dispelled any breakup rumors with a head-turning red-carpet appearance at the Los Angeles premiere of Marty Supreme. Wearing coordinated neon orange outfits—Chalamet rocked a head-to-toe Chrome Hearts ensemble aptly accessorized with a ping-pong paddle—the couple didn’t shy away from PDA as they posed for photos at the glitzy event.
As Marie Claire points out, speculation that the Hollywood power couple had split was fueled by a lack of public appearances, including Chalamet’s absence from Kris Jenner’s birthday party at Jeff Bezos’ mansion in November. More separation talk surfaced when, in aVogue cover interview published around that time, the sought-after actor declined to comment on his relationship with Jenner, saying, “I don’t say that with any fear, I just don’t have anything to say.”
Evidently, the relationship worries were pure conjecture. In fact, the couple’s fans can look forward to many more red carpet appearances, as Marty Supreme is expected to contend many major categories at the Oscars, having already been nominated for three Golden Globes and several other awards.
A24’s sports drama following Marty Mauser, a young table tennis hustler loosely based on real-life U.S. Men’s singles champion Marty Reisman, has already collected several rave reviews, culminating in a 97 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes. The New York Post declared it the “best movie of the year,” and Roger Ebert‘s perfect four-star review called it “unlike anything released this year” while likening the flick to “Uncut Gems with ping-pong”—a reference to director-writer Josh Safdie’s 2019 A24 drama starring Adam Sandler, which also received a four-star review from the film-critiquing outlet. Empire Magazine, the Daily Telegraph, and the Guardian also gave it perfect scores.
In contrast to the vast majority of positive reviews, Time pulled no punches in describing Chalamet’s performance: “…as flat as a ping-pong ball is round, and just as hollow, an empty sound bouncing nowhere and everywhere in the entropic movie around it.” Meanwhile, The Wrap called the movie’s narrative—or lack thereof—”shallow self-congratulation for American moxie at the expense of everyone and everything around us.”
Marty Supreme arrives in theaters on December 25, 2025.