- Marty (film) - Wikipedia
Marty Piletti is an Italian-American butcher who lives in The Bronx with his mother Unmarried at 34, the good-natured but socially awkward Marty faces constant badgering from customers, family and friends to settle down ("You ought to be ashamed of yourself") as they point out all his brothers and sisters are married, most of them with children
- Marty (1955) - IMDb
Marty: Directed by Delbert Mann With Ernest Borgnine, Betsy Blair, Esther Minciotti, Augusta Ciolli A middle-aged butcher and a school teacher who have given up on the idea of love meet at a dance and fall for each other
- Marty (1955) - Turner Classic Movies
Based on the teleplay "Marty" by Paddy Chayefsky on Goodyear Television Playhouse (NBC, 24 May 1952) A lonely butcher finds love despite the opposition of his friends and family
- Marty (1955) - Greatest Films
Marty (1955) is the poignant, simple character study of a lonely, unmarried, lovelorn middle-aged, 34 year old son who works as a Bronx butcher and still lives with his love-smothering mother
- Marty | Rotten Tomatoes
This acclaimed romantic drama follows the life of Marty Piletti (Ernest Borgnine), a stout bachelor butcher who lives with his mother (Esther Minciotti) in the Bronx
- Watch Marty (1955) - Free Movies | Tubi
Ernest Borgnine stars as Marty, a lonely Bronx butcher who gives up on love -- until he meets an equally lonely school teacher in this charming story
- MARTY, 1955, Ernest Borgnine, Betsy Blair, Delbert Mann, Paddy . . .
Set in an era when Pork Tenderloin cost 59¢ a pound and it was a crime not to be married, “Marty” examines a weekend in the life of “Marty Piletti”, an Italian-American butcher in the Bronx, New York
- Why Marty (1955) Remains a Timeless Classic: Unveiling the Heartwarming . . .
"Marty" stands as a timeless classic, not because it offers grandiosity, but because it champions the extraordinary within the ordinary It remains a testament to the power of sincere storytelling, a legacy that endures in the hearts of viewers and the foundations of cinema today
|