via Twitter (@Kim Kardashian)Film & TVNewsTimothée Chalamet talks ‘surreal’ dinner with Kanye West and Kim KardashianThe Little Women actor says he felt like ‘too much of a fraud’ShareLink copied ✔️December 10, 2019Film & TVNewsTextGünseli Yalcinkaya Back in January, the unthinkable happened. In what resembles the beginning of an awful Christmas joke, Timothée Chalamet joined Kid Cudi, Pete Davidson, and Kanye West for Cudi’s birthday dinner in Malibu. By now, you will have seen the awkward photos (taken by none other than Kim Kardashian) from the evening, which Chalamet described as “surreal” on last night’s The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. “We’re hanging out, and then it feels like there’s an earthquake in the restaurant,” he said. “It was, like, epic. You turn around, and I was like, ‘Holy shit’.” Of course, Chalamet’s first reaction was to run into the bathroom and text his friends in a panic, naturally. The actor says he felt like “too much of a fraud”. Happy Birthday @KidCudipic.twitter.com/rPkAvTgDLE— Kim Kardashian West (@KimKardashian) January 31, 2019 “I went to the bathroom. I sent a text to two friends. I was like, ‘Am I worth…does this make sense?’,” the Little Women actor continued. “They were like, ‘Man, 16-year-old you would slap the shit out of you. You go back to the table’.” Chalamet did return to dinner, and his parting advice? “Don’t do that,” he jokingly warned. “That’s not a healthy way to deal with it.” Presumably, the interaction was a success, however, as last month, the actor took to stage to perform alongside Kid Cudi ComplexCon in Long Beach, where he recited Common’s intro from Cudi’s 2009 album Man on the Moon: The End of Day. Does this mark the beginnings of a Chalamet hip hop show? Or perhaps a role in Kanye’s opera? Only time will tell. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREIra Sachs revives a lost day in the life of Peter HujarWhere is all the good transmasculine representation?Why Julia Ducournau’s Alpha is a future cult classic Fruits of her labour: 5 cult films about women at workGeena Rocero on her Lilly Wachowski-produced trans sci-fi thriller, Dolls Dhafer L’Abidine on Palestine 36, a drama set during the British MandateThis book goes deep on cult music videos and iconic adsRonan Day-Lewis on Anemone: ‘It’s obviously nepotism’Die My Love: The story behind Lynne Ramsay’s twisted, sexual fever dreamWhat went down at the Dazed Club screening of Bugonia The story behind Bugonia, Yorgos Lanthimos’ twisted new alien comedyJosh O’Connor and Kelly Reichardt on planning the perfect art heist