Saturday, January 03, 2026 |
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I hope you saw Marty Supreme over the holidays. If you haven't yet witnessed the Josh Safdie-directed thriller—which follows a sweet-talking table tennis superstar, played by Timothée Chalamet—change that right now. In the meantime, allow me to direct your attention to our updated ranking of Chalamet's increasingly impressive filmography. How does Marty Supreme stack up against the 30-year-old's turns as Bob Dylan, Paul Atreides, and that little kid from Interstellar? See for yourself below. —Brady Langmann, senior entertainment editor Plus: |
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With Marty Supreme finally in theaters, let's run down the 30-year-old actor's already stellar career.
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We're happy to report that Timothée Chalamet season—less commonly known as the winter holidays—is upon us. It seems like the perennial Oscars hopeful always stages a theatrical event around this time of year, and 2025 is no exception. Chalamet is back on the big screen in A24's Marty Supreme, which hit theaters on Christmas Day. Chalamet stars as the titular character, who is a table tennis superstar in a world that isn't quite ready for, well, a table tennis superstar.
At 30 years old, the New York City-born actor has already made a massive impact on the Hollywood landscape. An undeniable leading man for a new generation, he's also a style icon—and maybe even a rapper. In the past few years, buzzy releases have put Chalamet front and center, but he had a few roles in blockbuster films (like 2014's Interstellar) before his 2017 breakout year, which saw him in both Luca Guadagnino's Call Me By Your Name and Greta Gerwig's Lady Bird. Since then, he's worked with the biggest names in the business, from Wes Anderson in The French Dispatch to Denis Villeneuve in Dune—and he's only getting busier.
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| Dress shoes are the most fun part of a wardrobe. Or they can be—should be, even. Dress shoes match the moment. You're in a big important office meeting, going to a wedding, taking someone out on a nice date, or just making weekend chinos and a sweater look a little bit more polished. That's what we love about a dress shoe. It's not just what it is. It's who we are when we are wearing them.
As style experts, we've seen a lot of dress shoes. A lot. The best ones have some things in common. They've got to look good, first and foremost. They have to be well-made. And they have to be bearable to wear. (At least after a few initial break-in wears. Leather is tough, and we're pragmatists.) Other than that, the best dress-shoe fit needs to match the person and the moment. Some are menswear classics with prices to match. Others are more affordable. Others have edgier details that work for the edgier dude. |
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Simu Liu has a lot on his mind. The 36-year-old former accountant turned actor, whose family emigrated from Harbin, China to Ontario, Canada when he was just five years old, has starred in sitcoms like Kim's Convenience and anchored blockbusters like Marvel's Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings. (He also gave Ryan Gosling, of all people, an inferiority complex in the 2023 smash Barbie.) Between all that and a dalliance with R&B pop music–he released his debut EP, ANXIOUS-AVOIDANT, in 2023–it's tempting to hack Liu's brain and download his talent and knowledge. But even Liu says he's still got a lot to learn even now, standing under Hollywood's spotlight. "I was afraid of two scenarios, both attached to ego," he tells me about embarking on his newest project The Copenhagen Test, a sci-fi spy thriller now streaming on Peacock. "I was afraid of being a vanity producer–putting a stamp on something and didn't do any work and ride other people's coattails," he says. The other thing Liu was afraid of? Being too involved. "Being too much of a creative tyrant and inserting myself in places where I shouldn't be. Simply because of I am who I am, you have to listen to me. I wanted to avoid those situations. It took a while to find my equilibrium." |
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