How ‘Marty Supreme’ Production Designer Jack Fisk Recreated a Legendary Table Tennis Parlor That No Longer Exists
#MovieNews #Movies #Awards #JackFisk #MartySupreme

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/marty-supreme-jack-fisk-production-design-1236502631/

How ‘Marty Supreme’ Production Designer Jack Fisk Recreated a Legendary Table Tennis Parlor That No Longer Exists

Fisk also describes how the shoe store and the ping-pong match in Japan came to be.

The Hollywood Reporter
‘Awards Chatter’ Pod: Legendary Production Designer Jack Fisk on ‘Marty Supreme,’ Malick and 50-Plus Years of Making Movies

Arguably the greatest of all living film craftsmen, the 80-year-old — whose credits also include 'Badlands,' 'Carrie,' 'Days of Heaven,' 'Mulholland Drive,' 'There Will Be Blood,' 'The Revenant' and 'Killers of the Flower Moon' — is Oscar-nominated for the fourth time — and poised to win for the first.

The Hollywood Reporter
Production Designer Jack Fisk on 'Marty Supreme' and Josh Safdie

The production designer of 'Days of Heaven,' 'Killers of the Flower Moon' and other classics talks about recreating 1950s New York for his latest.

IndieWire

‘Marty Supreme’: How Production Designer Jack Fisk Worked With Josh Safdie to Recreate 1950s New York: ‘He Was Always Ahead of Me’

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://variety.com/2025/film/news/marty-supreme-jack-fisk-production-designer-1950s-new-york-1236616927/

‘Marty Supreme’: How Production Designer Jack Fisk Worked With Josh Safdie to Recreate 1950s New York: ‘He Was Always Ahead of Me’
#Variety #News #JackFisk #JoshSafdie #MartySupreme #TimotheeChalamet

https://variety.com/2025/film/news/marty-supreme-jack-fisk-production-designer-1950s-new-york-1236616927/

'Marty Supreme': How Jack Fisk Recreated 1950s New York

'Marty Supreme' production designer Jack Fisk reveals how he and Josh Safdie recreated the vibe of 1950s New York.

Variety
Killers of the Flower Moon Production Design Recreates 20s Osage World

The production designer who brought to life Terrence Malick, Paul Thomas Anderson, and David Lynch’s most ambitious visions talks about his first collaboration with Martin Scorsese.

IndieWire