Marty Supreme Soundtrack: Every Song + What Plays in the Ending
Marty Supreme Soundtrack Guide (Every Song + What Plays in the Ending)
Spoiler warning: This post discusses the final scene and the end-credits music.
Josh Safdie’s Marty Supreme is set in 1950s New York, but the soundtrack loves to “time-jump” emotionally—using bold 1980s needle drops alongside an original score by Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never). That mix is exactly why people keep leaving the theater asking the same two questions: “What was that song?” and “What was the ending track?”
Quick Answer: What song plays in the ending of Marty Supreme?
The end-credits needle drop is “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” by Tears for Fears. It’s the song most viewers clock immediately—because it lands like a thesis statement after the final shot.
What Happens in the Final Scene (Why the Ending Song Hits So Hard)
The last stretch of Marty Supreme isn’t a “championship win” kind of ending. It’s a recalibration. Marty’s obsession with becoming legendary burns through relationships, deals, and even basic responsibility—until the film corners him into a moment that’s simple and devastating: he returns to the hospital, finally claims the role of “the father,” and breaks down when he sees his newborn son.
That’s what makes “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” such a sharp choice. On paper, it’s an arena-sized anthem about ambition. In context, it becomes ironic and human: Marty wanted the world, but what he’s left with is something smaller, realer, and impossible to hustle his way out of.
What Reddit Theories Say About the Ending Song
Some viewers think the ending needle drop is doing extra wordplay beyond the obvious “ambition” theme—turning the final image into a comment on power, legacy, and the trap of always needing “one more win.”
Deeper Meaning in the final song?
Related YouTube Watch: The Score That Powers the Movie
If you’re here because the movie’s music felt like a second heartbeat under the editing, you’ll probably want the official score in your ears next.
Every Needle Drop Song in Marty Supreme (Non-Score Tracks)
These are the big, recognizable “existing songs” used in the film (often anachronistically on purpose). If you’re building a playlist, start here.
- Tears for Fears – “Change”
- Alphaville – “Forever Young”
- Peter Gabriel – “I Have the Touch”
- The Korgis – “Everybody’s Got to Learn Sometime”
- Les Paul – “How High the Moon”
- Perry Como – “Don’t Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes”
- Fats Domino – “The Fat Man”
- Public Image Ltd. – “The Order of Death”
- New Order – “The Perfect Kiss”
- Alex North – “Belle Reve”
- Paul Sikivie – “Rile’s Wiles”
- Tears for Fears – “Everybody Wants to Rule the World”
A good way to think about these picks: the 1950s tracks glue Marty to his “origin story,” while the ’80s tracks push him into myth—like the movie is scoring not the decade he lives in, but the decade his ego believes he belongs to.
Daniel Lopatin’s Original Score Tracklist (Official Album)
The official score album is credited to Daniel Lopatin and is built like a kinetic map of Marty’s momentum—short bursts, nervous percussion, neon synth runs, and a few longer tracks that feel like they’re trying to outrun time.
- The Call
- Marty’s Dream
- Endo’s Game
- The Apple
- Pure Joy
- Holocaust Honey
- The Humbling
- Motherstone
- The Scape
- Tub Falls
- F***ing Mensch
- Rockwell Ink
- Hoff’s
- Seward Park
- The Necklace
- Vampire’s Castle
- Back to Hoff’s
- Shootout
- I Love You, Tokyo
- The Real Game
- Endo’s Game (Reprise)
- Force of Life
- End Credits (I Still Love You, Tokyo)
Reddit’s Hunt for the “Missing” Song
One thing that confuses viewers: the official score release focuses on Lopatin’s original music, while some needle drops aren’t obviously represented there. A fan-favorite example is a late-film vocal track that multiple viewers have tried to identify.
Marty Supreme Track List (help identifying a song)
Instagram Posts Fans Keep Sharing About the Soundtrack
The soundtrack has become part of the movie’s identity online—especially the score rollout and the “how is this 1950s but also aggressively ’80s?” conversation.
Related Content You Can Read Next
- Ending breakdown: What the final scene is really saying about ambition vs. adulthood
- Needle drop deep-dive: Why “I Have the Touch” is such an aggressive (perfect) sports-movie flex
- Deleted ending trivia: The scrapped alternate ending idea people can’t stop talking about
- Marketing rabbit hole: How the movie’s rollout turned the title into a meme
FAQ: Marty Supreme Soundtrack Questions
Is the ending song the same as the final score track?
Not necessarily. The ending needle drop people mean is typically the famous end-credits song (“Everybody Wants to Rule the World”). The official score album also ends with an “End Credits” titled track, which is part of Lopatin’s original music.
Why does a 1950s movie use so many 1980s songs?
It’s a deliberate mismatch: the music isn’t trying to recreate a museum-perfect 1950s mood. It’s trying to make Marty feel larger than his era—like the soundtrack is scoring the hunger, not the year.
Where can I listen to the official score?
Look for Marty Supreme (Original Soundtrack) by Daniel Lopatin on major streaming services. The needle drops are separate songs by their original artists.
Sources (for your own reference)
- Wikipedia: Marty Supreme (songs listed under “Music”)
- Wikipedia: Marty Supreme (soundtrack) (Lopatin score tracklist)
- GQ: Josh Safdie interview about the ending