Marty Supreme (soundtrack)


Marty Supreme is the film score composed by Daniel Lopatin to the sports comedy-drama film Marty Supreme directed and produced by Josh Safdie starring Timothée Chalamet. The film score was released through A24 Music day-and-date with the film on December 25, 2025. Lopatin's work has been nominated for numerous accolades including the Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Score amongst others, and it was the first Best New Music designated record given to a film score by Pitchfork.

Background

Daniel Lopatin, who worked with the Safdie brothers on their previous films, composed the score for Marty Supreme. He read the script during a flight to Los Angeles in 2023 and developed the themes of the film in his mind, both in poetic essence and the armature of the score. Safdie curated a Spotify playlist to guide Lopatin through the composition which included music from artists such as New Order, Tears for Fears, Peter Gabriel, Fats Domino and Constance Demby.
Lopatin admitted that he and Josh were open to the idea of time being "a little bit malleable, a little bit gelatinous" and that process led the score to have a life of its own. Both of them worked on the score for 10 weeks, where Lopatin insisted on renting a tiny studio space in Manhattan for scoring the film. The 1950s setting of the films had demanded the use of electronica—a combination of sequenced beats, zinged harps and treated choirs. Lopatin worked on this film, and sketch demos, while also working on his studio album Tranquilizer which had a difficult production deadline. The score's producer and mix engineer Nathan Salon mixed the score in Studio C at Electric Lady Studios in New York City.
Contributors included Laraaji, Natalie Mering, Nathan Salon, Joshua Eustis, and the Synchron Stage Choir.

Release

The soundtrack was announced on December 3, 2025, featuring 23 tracks. The album is scheduled to be released day-and-date with the film on December 25, 2025, through A24 Music.

Critical reception

Critics praised Daniel Lopatin's score in the first reactions of the premiere.
Jamie Graham of Empire praised the "shimmering, surging electro score by Daniel Lopatin that sounds part inspirational John Hughes movie, part cosmic mysticism and part John Carpenter menace." Clarisse Loughrey of The Independent wrote that "hile Marty Supreme is set in 1952, Daniel Lopatin's electronic score is distinctly Eighties in flavour – Marty's running so fast at life that he's ended up three decades in the future." Chris Evangelista of /Film wrote "Daniel Lopatin's exciting score gives everything a vibrant, thrilling aura." David Ehrlich of IndieWire wrote that "Daniel Lopatin’s synth-driven score — so intricate and voluble that it functions like a second screenplay — hurls Marty towards the horizon by tapping into an anxiety that period-appropriate music could never hope to match. Kristy Puchko of Mashable described the score as "smartly anachronistic. While the movie is set in the 1950s, the score is loaded with synth and percussion that feels more attuned to '80s sports movies like Rocky or The Karate Kid. Along with adding a pulse-pounding energy to Marty Supreme, this score also suggests that its wild anti-hero is perhaps a man before his time."
Dominic Griffin of Looper compared Lopatin's "dreamy, synth score" with "Uncut Gems if it was The Karate Kid or some other aspirational sports drama from that era." Chris Bumbray of JoBlo.com wrote " Lopatin's score is evocative of Tangerine Dream, which is appropriate as the film seems heavily influenced by Risky Business." David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter credited the film's "audacious" use of music, including Lopatin's "shimmering" score. Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com wrote "Lopatin's pulsing score, along with the crazy needle drops, becomes a character itself." In his review for Pitchfork, Sam Goldner concluded: "Lopatin's music is key to Marty Supremes emotions, and particularly its ending—his gorgeous 'Force of Life' complicates the film's commentary on ambition, evoking how limitless and meaningless our dreams can be. It's all a big swing, and it's all a big hit."
Ross Bonaime of Collider wrote "jarring score" adds to the momentum, "escalates Marty's every movement and makes us inherently uncomfortable as things go from bad to worse." Robbie Collin of The Daily Telegraph called it a "jaggedly seductive score". Marshall Shaffer of Slant Magazine wrote "pulse-pounding synth-pop score". Vikram Murthi of The Film Stage wrote "Daniel Lopatin's synth-pop score, combined with an anachronistic use of 1980s pop hits, productively clashes with Marty Supreme's Eisenhower-era setting: both sound and image encapsulate different defining eras of American conservatism where skepticism of The New runs rampant, embodying the spirit of a protagonist stuck in the wrong time." Pete Hammond of Deadline Hollywood wrote "Daniel Lopatin's swell musical score that hits all the right notes in ping-ponging from one mood to another".

Track listing

All tracks written by Daniel Lopatin, except for track 6 which is an interpolation of Constance Demby's "Novus Magnificat, Pt. 2: The Flying Bach." All tracks produced by Nathan Salon and Joshua Eustis.

Personnel

Credits adapted from film's end credits.
  • Daniel Lopatin – composition, synthesizers, keyboards
  • Nathan Salon – production, mixing, synthesizers, alto saxophone, drum and mallet programming, percussion
  • Joshua Eustis – production, string and voice orchestration, tenor saxophone, fretless bass
  • Czech National Symphony Orchestra - strings
  • Vienna Synchron Choir - voices
  • Laraaji - zither, percussion, mbira, kalimba
  • Natalie Mering - voice
  • Bryan Senti - violin
  • Izaak Mills - alto flute, flute, piccolo, alto saxophone
  • James Richardson - bass, guitar
  • Josh Safdie - snakebites, forces of nature, locomotion
  • Alex Poeppel - additional engineering
  • John Rooney - additional engineering
  • Arjan Miranda - music editor
  • Dave Kutch - mastering

    Accolades