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Marty
TrailerAlthough he is good-natured, Marty is still unmarried at the age of 34 due to his socially awkward personality. After being goaded by his mother to marry, he goes to the Stardust Ballroom one Saturday night, and lucky enough meets the lonely teacher Clara. Suddenly, he now has a chance to get out of the bachelorhood.Actors: Ernest Borgnine, Betsy Blair, Esther Minciotti, Augusta Ciolli, Joe Mantell, Karen Steele, Jerry Paris, James Bell, John Beradino, Marvin Bryan, Charles Cane, ...»Director: Delbert MannCountry: United StatesDuration: 90 minQuality: HDRelease: 1955IMDb: 7.70 CommentsSort By- Newest
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Actors of "Marty"
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Characters of "Marty"
Marty PilettiPlayed by: Ernest BorgnineClaraPlayed by: Betsy BlairMrs. PilettiPlayed by: Esther MinciottiAunt CatherinePlayed by: Augusta CiolliAngiePlayed by: Joe MantellVirginiaPlayed by: Karen SteeleTommyPlayed by: Jerry Paris -
Directors of "Marty"
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Creators of "Marty"
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Critic Reviews of "Marty"
New York Daily NewsFebruary 24, 2016It is a sentimental, heart-warming, simple story of a couple of ugly ducklings who find compensation for their lack of good looks in each other's love.
TIME MagazineFebruary 18, 2009Ernest Borgnine as Marty lives up to all the promise he showed as the sadist in From Here to Eternity, and at the same time brilliantly shatters the type-cast he molded for himself in that picture.
VarietyFebruary 19, 2008It's a warm, human, sometimes sentimental and an enjoyable experience.
Chicago ReaderDecember 12, 2006Paddy Chayevsky's script, adapted from his own TV play, shows his flair for dialogue at its best, and the film manages to be touching, if minor.
New York TimesMay 20, 2003A warm and winning film, full of the sort of candid comment on plain, drab people that seldom reaches the screen.
Radio TimesFebruary 21, 2014Audiences used to seeing Borgnine in more menacing roles in films such as From Here to Eternity and Bad Day at Black Rock warmed to his sympathetic portrayal of the Bronx butcher with low self-esteem.
Seanax.comDecember 06, 2009[Rod] Steiger's body language communicate not just his loneliness but his resignation to living out his life as "a fat, ugly little man."
Empire MagazineFebruary 20, 2008Enormously influential, it spawned Hollywood's interest in smaller scale, prosaic dramas, few of which failed to match its resonance.
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Gallery of "Marty"