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Kevin O’Leary and Timothée ChalametIntense naked ass paddling scene Marty Supre It was just as crazy to film as it was to be on screen.
“We had a fake paddle with a hinge and foam on it. It wasn’t supposed to hurt. But it didn’t work. It broke immediately,” O’Leary, 71, exclusively told Us US Weekly ahead of Marty SuprePublished Thursday, December 25th. “So we got a real paddle, wood, like a real paddle, with grooves on the surface.”
O’Leary, who plays businessman Milton Rockwell in the biopic, explained that while Chalamet had a “butt double,” he ultimately wanted to be the one performing the scene, in which the titular character Marty (Chalamé) begs Milton’s forgiveness after missing some exhibition ping-pong matches. At Marty’s pleas, Milton made the young athlete take off his pants and bend over for a spanking.
“Timmy walked in and said, ‘No, this has to be my butt. I’m going to immortalize my butt in a movie forever.'” O’Leary recalled, adding that when he realized he was going to “hit” Chalamet with a non-prop paddle, he tried to talk Chalamet out of it. “He said, ‘I’m doing it.’ So we started tapping the cheeks left and right, trying to keep the intensity of the red the same.”
Although O’Leary “could feel the heat disappearing from Chalamet’s buttocks” after about “20 takes,” the director Josh Safdie Tell Shark Tank Star he “didn’t hit hard enough” and the scene “didn’t look real”. (“Now I know you’re a sick puppy,” O’Leary jokingly recalled.)
“I nailed him in the right cheek like a baseball bat, and I think his eyeball exploded out of his head, and that’s what you see,” O’Leary said of the footage used in the final cut. “He’s still responding well to it.”
O’Leary admitted that he was impressed by Chalamet, the “crazy soldier” on set.
“I have a newfound respect for that kid,” he said. “Without a doubt. He deserves an Oscar.”
In recent weeks, Chalamet has expressed similar sentiments about his performance, which he believed was worthy of the award. this dune eventually become a star received strong opposition Because of his confident stance, but from O’Leary’s perspective, Marty Supre Different from Chalamet’s previous roles.

“I know I’ll be across from him watching all of his stuff, dune Stuff, everything is so good. I can tell you for sure that I’m right, this is 100 percent his best performance,” O’Leary told us. “It’s beyond anything he’s ever done. And he went to a new place. He just did it. I was there too. I watched it all happen. I was in the room saying, ‘Wow, this guy is crazy. ‘”
Coming from the world of reality TV, seeing Chalamet play Marty was a whirlwind experience for O’Leary because of his ability to “wing it” and “wing it.”
“When I saw the final cut, they took script lines and merged them with improvised riffs, and that’s why the momentum was there and every scene was the best it could be. Even though that was a mistake,” he said. “Chalamed is so effective in every scene where he gets up, comes back, sits down, and he’s like Marty, like, he’s not Chalamet anymore. He’s Marty. There’s so much spark in him, and if you go past him, you’re running towards him.”
Marty Supreme follows budding table tennis star Marty Mauser on his journey to become a professional champion, following his journey from the Lower East Side to the international tournament. . This sports comedy is loosely based on the careers of real table tennis pros Marty Raisman.
O’Leary’s acting debut Marty Supre After becoming one of the iconic tycoons Shark Tank nearly twenty years. The business mogul explained that while he was excited to try acting, some of his team members weren’t sure he could make the transition.
“Look, Kevin, this is acting. This is scripted. This is scripted. You’re not a scripted guy. You’re a realistic guy. We built a big franchise with you,” O’Leary recalled someone on his team saying. “He said, ‘I have to be transparent with you … as your representatives, some of us don’t like this. We think you’re going to screw up the bed.’ Those are the words he used.”
Despite the naysayers, O’Leary insisted on trying something new.
“I said, well, how did you know I could wet the bed? How could anyone know that before I tried it? Because I think you want to keep your life interesting, you have to get out of your comfort zone,” he reflects, “so they sent over the script. “
After printing out the script, one of O’Leary’s friends saw the paper on the merchant’s deck and decided to read it while watching the sunrise. The friend, who was unfamiliar with Safdie’s work, was fascinated by the story.
“He said, Kevin, who wrote this? What sick puppy, fucked up, crazy person wrote this?” I said, “Why are you asking that?” He said, ‘This is sick. It was disgusting, but I couldn’t stop reading it, and I couldn’t stop, and you had to be this guy, Milton Rockwell,” he explained. “It was crazy… It fascinated me because here was a random guy who knew nothing about the story, but he was mesmerized, like, just fascinated. I thought, ‘S***, this would be a good movie. ‘”
Still, O’Leary didn’t make it easy for Safdie. When asked if he could meet with them in New York to discuss the project, O’Leary countered by offering to fly to his lakeside home near Toronto to meet with them.
“I said, ‘How about a new idea? I’ll send a plane. You get on the plane, fly here, and we read this together on the dock with the ducks passing by and the sun setting in the peaceful surroundings,” he recalled. “I think it’s also a test to see how serious they are because if they’re going to do it, then they have to be serious. So they do it and they come up.”
Although happy to take on Rockwell’s challenge, O’Leary admitted that he was initially “unsatisfied” with the character’s ending, but worked with Safdie to deliver something that he felt justified Milton’s journey.
“If I were really Milton Rockwell, I would never let this little bastard do this to me, I would tear his heart out,” he quipped, adding that he ultimately worked with the writing team on a different ending. “It changed my whole outlook on things because the ending was something we came up with on a collaborative basis. I wouldn’t say I wrote it, but I told them I was unhappy and they gave me a path to happiness. I’m really happy with the way it ended.”
Marty Supre In theaters Thursday 25 December.