Marty Supreme Surpasses Everything Everywhere All at Once to Become A24’s Highest-Grossing Film Ever

A24 has a new box office champion. The indie studio, known for producing critically acclaimed films like Everything Everywhere All at Once and Moonlight, has just seen Marty Supreme climb to the top of its all-time earnings chart. Directed by Josh Safdie and starring Timothée Chalamet, the sports dramedy has officially become A24’s highest-grossing film, surpassing the previous record-holder, Everything Everywhere All at Once.

Released in early 2026, Marty Supreme quickly captured the attention of both audiences and critics. The film follows the story of a young athlete navigating ambition, fame, and personal struggles, with Chalamet delivering what many call a career-defining performance. Its unique blend of humor, drama, and sports action created broad appeal beyond traditional indie filmgoers, contributing to its rapid box office climb.

Marty Supreme has grossed approximately $147–148 million worldwide, overtaking Everything Everywhere All at Once, which had previously earned around $142–143 million globally. This milestone is particularly significant for A24, a studio celebrated for taking risks on bold, unconventional projects that often defy mainstream expectations.

The film’s success can be attributed to several factors:

  • Star Power: Timothée Chalamet continues to be a major draw, bringing in fans across demographics.
  • Critical Acclaim: Early reviews praised the Safdie brothers’ direction and the film’s emotional depth.
  • Wide Release Strategy: Unlike some indie releases, Marty Supreme saw a broad theatrical rollout, maximizing its box office potential.

This achievement marks a new era for A24, showing that independent studios can compete with Hollywood giants in terms of global revenue. While the studio has long been celebrated for its awards-worthy films, this success demonstrates that indie cinema can also achieve mainstream commercial impact.

In comparison, Everything Everywhere All at Once remains a cultural milestone for the studio, known for its genre-bending storytelling and historic Oscar wins. However, Marty Supreme’s broader audience appeal and box office strategy allowed it to edge past the 2022 hit, solidifying A24’s reputation as a powerhouse for both critical acclaim and financial success.

31st Critics Choice Awards: Full Winners and Nominees List

The 31st Annual Critics Choice Awards, held on January 4, 2026, delivered one of the clearest awards-season statements yet. Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another emerged as the night’s biggest winner, taking home Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay.

The ceremony honoured the best films and television series of 2025, with strong showings from Sinners, Marty Supreme, Hamnet, The Pitt, and Adolescence.

Below is a full breakdown of the major categories, winners, and nominees.

FILM CATEGORIES

Best Picture

Winner: One Battle After Another

Nominees:

  • Bugonia
  • Frankenstein
  • Hamnet
  • Jay Kelly
  • Marty Supreme
  • Sentimental Value
  • Sinners
  • Train Dreams
  • Wicked: For Good

Best Director

Winner: Paul Thomas Anderson — One Battle After Another

Nominees:

  • Ryan Coogler — Sinners
  • Guillermo del Toro — Frankenstein
  • Josh Safdie — Marty Supreme
  • Joachim Trier — Sentimental Value
  • Chloé Zhao — Hamnet

Best Actor

Winner: Timothée Chalamet — Marty Supreme

Nominees:

  • Leonardo DiCaprio — One Battle After Another
  • Joel Edgerton — Train Dreams
  • Ethan Hawke — Blue Moon
  • Michael B. Jordan — Sinners
  • Wagner Moura — The Secret Agent

Best Actress

Winner: Jessie Buckley — Hamnet

Nominees:

  • Rose Byrne — If I Had Legs I’d Kick You
  • Chase Infiniti — One Battle After Another
  • Renate Reinsve — Sentimental Value
  • Amanda Seyfried — The Testament of Ann Lee
  • Emma Stone — Bugonia

Best Supporting Actor

Winner: Jacob Elordi — Frankenstein

Nominees:

  • Benicio del Toro — One Battle After Another
  • Paul Mescal — Hamnet
  • Sean Penn — One Battle After Another
  • Adam Sandler — Jay Kelly
  • Stellan Skarsgård — Sentimental Value

Best Supporting Actress

Winner: Amy Madigan — Weapons

Nominees:

  • Elle Fanning — Sentimental Value
  • Ariana Grande — Wicked: For Good
  • Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas — Sentimental Value
  • Wunmi Mosaku — Sinners
  • Teyana Taylor — One Battle After Another

Best Original Screenplay

Winner: Ryan Coogler — Sinners

Nominees:

  • Jay Kelly — Noah Baumbach & Emily Mortimer
  • Marty Supreme — Josh Safdie & Ronald Bronstein
  • Weapons — Zach Cregger
  • Sorry, Baby — Eva Victor
  • Sentimental Value — Eskil Vogt & Joachim Trier

Best Adapted Screenplay

Winner: Paul Thomas Anderson — One Battle After Another

Nominees:

  • Train Dreams — Clint Bentley & Greg Kwedar
  • No Other Choice — Park Chan-wook et al.
  • Frankenstein — Guillermo del Toro
  • Bugonia — Will Tracy
  • Hamnet — Chloé Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell

Best Young Actor / Actress

Winner: Miles Caton — Sinners

Nominees:

  • Everett Blunck — The Plague
  • Cary Christopher — Weapons
  • Shannon Mahina Gorman — Rental Family
  • Jacobi Jupe — Hamnet
  • Nina Ye — Left-Handed Girl

Best Animated Feature

Winner: KPop Demon Hunters

Nominees:

  • Flowervale Street
  • Inside Out 2
  • The Magnificent Life of Marcel Pagnol
  • Orion and the Dark

TELEVISION CATEGORIES

Best Drama Series

Winner: The Pitt

Nominees:

  • The Diplomat
  • Severance
  • All Her Fault
  • Ghosts
  • Slow Horses

Best Comedy Series

Winner: The Studio

Nominees:

  • Nobody Wants This
  • A Man on the Inside
  • The Righteous Gemstones
  • Murderbot
  • St. Denis Medical

Best Limited Series

Winner: Adolescence

Nominees:

  • Death by Lightning
  • Hacks
  • The Sympathizer
  • Ripley

Acting Categories (Television)

Best Actor in a Drama Series; Noah Wyle — The Pitt

Nominees:

  • Kieran Culkin — All Her Fault
  • Pedro Pascal — The Diplomat
  • Adam Scott — Severance

Best Actress in a Comedy Series; Jean Smart — Hacks

Nominees:

  • Quinta Brunson — Abbott Elementary
  • Maya Rudolph — Loot
  • Natasha Lyonne — Poker Face

Other TV Winners

  • Best Animated Series: South Park
  • Best Foreign Language Series: Squid Game
  • Best Variety Series: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
  • Best Comedy Special: SNL50: The Anniversary Special

One Battle After Another leaves the Critics Choice Awards as the clear film frontrunner of the season. On television, The Pitt and Adolescence solidified their status as prestige favourites heading into the remaining awards circuit.

Top 5 Domestic Box Office Results – Weekend

The domestic box office had a competitive weekend as big-budget sequels, fresh originals, and revived franchises battled for audience attention. Here’s how the Top 5 films performed in their opening weekend, based on early box office estimates.

1. Avatar: Fire and Ash — $40M

James Cameron’s Avatar franchise continues its box office dominance. Fire and Ash opens comfortably at number one with $40 million, reaffirming the brand’s strong pull with premium formats and franchise-loyal audiences. While not an explosive debut by Avatar standards, the opening positions the film well for a steady theatrical run.

2. Zootopia 2 — $19M

Disney’s long-awaited sequel lands in second place with $19 million. Zootopia 2 benefits from family appeal and nostalgia from the original film, though its opening suggests a more gradual rollout rather than a front-loaded debut. Expect stronger weekday and long-term performance driven by younger audiences.

3. The Housemaid — $14.8M

The psychological thriller The Housemaid surprises with a solid $14.8 million opening. In a weekend dominated by franchises, its performance shows there’s still strong demand for mid-budget adult-oriented films when the marketing connects with viewers.

4. Marty Supreme — $12.5M

Marty Supreme debuts with $12.5 million, a respectable result that reflects moderate audience interest. While it doesn’t break out immediately, its placement in the Top 5 suggests potential for word-of-mouth growth depending on audience reception in the coming weeks.

5. Anaconda — $10M

Rounding out the list is Anaconda with $10 million. The reboot leans heavily on brand recognition, and while its opening isn’t massive, cracking the Top 5 indicates enough curiosity to give the film a chance at staying power if international numbers and secondary markets perform well.

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