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Marriage on the Rocks

  • 1965
  • A
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Deborah Kerr, Frank Sinatra, and Dean Martin in Marriage on the Rocks (1965)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer3:42
1 Video
23 Photos
Romantic ComedyComedyRomance

A businessman's neglected wife divorces her husband by mistake and marries his best friend by accident.A businessman's neglected wife divorces her husband by mistake and marries his best friend by accident.A businessman's neglected wife divorces her husband by mistake and marries his best friend by accident.

  • Director
    • Jack Donohue
  • Writer
    • Cy Howard
  • Stars
    • Frank Sinatra
    • Deborah Kerr
    • Dean Martin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Donohue
    • Writer
      • Cy Howard
    • Stars
      • Frank Sinatra
      • Deborah Kerr
      • Dean Martin
    • 28User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:42
    Trailer

    Photos23

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    Top cast61

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    Frank Sinatra
    Frank Sinatra
    • Dan Edwards
    Deborah Kerr
    Deborah Kerr
    • Valerie Edwards
    Dean Martin
    Dean Martin
    • Ernie Brewer
    Cesar Romero
    Cesar Romero
    • Miguel Santos
    Hermione Baddeley
    Hermione Baddeley
    • Jeannie MacPherson
    Tony Bill
    Tony Bill
    • Jim Blake
    John McGiver
    John McGiver
    • Shad Nathan
    Nancy Sinatra
    Nancy Sinatra
    • Tracy Edwards
    Davey Davison
    Davey Davison
    • Lisa Sterling
    Michel Petit
    • David Edwards
    Trini López
    Trini López
    • Trini Lopez
    • (as Trini Lopez)
    Joi Lansing
    Joi Lansing
    • Lola
    Darlene Lucht
    Darlene Lucht
    • Bunny
    • (as Tara Ashton)
    Kathleen Freeman
    Kathleen Freeman
    • Miss Blight
    Flip Mark
    Flip Mark
    • Rollo
    DeForest Kelley
    DeForest Kelley
    • Mr. Turner
    Sigrid Valdis
    Sigrid Valdis
    • Kitty
    Billi Adare
    • Girl in Evening Gown
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jack Donohue
    • Writer
      • Cy Howard
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    5.71.4K
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    Featured reviews

    3planktonrules

    Going through the motions.

    In recent months, I've watched quite a few films by the so-called Rat Pack. Some, such as "Oceans Eleven", were very good. However, quite a few really look like the actors were just going through the motions with substandard scripts--and "Marriage on the Rocks" is clearly one of these.

    The film is supposed to be a kooky comedy about marriage and divorce. However, comedies, unless I'm mistaken, are supposed to be funny! This one lacks humor and more importantly any charm. The characters are all unlikable and very one-dimensional. Dean Martin plays an executive who NEVER works and chases women. Frank Sinatra plays an executive who ONLY works and is humorless and annoying. And, Deborah Kerr hates his wife who hates her marriage but NEVER tells her husband. As for the kids, they're all self-absorbed jerks.

    As for the plot, it's bad but is made worse because you hate the characters. While in Mexico, Frank and Deborah ACCIDENTALLY GET DIVORCED and SHE ACCIDENTALLY MARRIES Dean!! This is pretty far-fetched and contrived. Overall, it's a tiresome film that might have worked had it been better written and had the stars (who had HUGE clout in Hollywood at the time) insisted they be given a competent plot. Tiresome.
    5atlasmb

    Frank And Dean Put In An Appearance

    This film intends to be wacky, I think, but ends up being nothing more than annoying. Where is the comedy in this comedy? Comedies should be fun. This one saunters through some boring situations, with lackluster performances, and expects laughs, apparently.

    Frank Sinatra plays the role of the married man, firmly entrenched in responsibility, with a family that doesn't appreciate him. He goes through the motions, except when it comes to his job.

    Dean Martin is best friend and bachelor--another cliché of the mid-sixties. He is constantly juggling the attentions of sexy women, providing a stark contrast to his "square" buddy, Frank.

    Deborah Kerr's talents are wasted as Frank's wife--feeling unfulfilled and starved for attention.

    The entire story revolves around a reversal that is as unfunny as it is improbable--Dean mistakenly marries Deborah. Oh, what will they do? How can they possibly extricate themselves from this situation that is filled with life lessons and comic banter?

    I cannot recommend this film to anyone. It is mirthless.
    5jayraskin1

    Musical Comedy Material Without Music or Comedy

    This movie stars Deborah Kerr, one of the greatest actresses in history. She was nominated for Academy Awards six times and should have been nominated a few more times. I just saw her in "Night of the Iguana," and I thought that was another performance she should have gotten an academy award nomination for. I have never seen her give a bad performance. She gives a charming and funny performance here, keeping the movie together. Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin are spotty, good in some scenes, not-so-good in others.Sinatra is mostly sleepwalking, with Martin occasionally giving some funny lines, but Sinatra doing one-take -- let me out of here,is it 5 o'clock yet -- readings.

    This could have been a good movie. There are a couple of ways they could have gone with it. First, they could have turned it into a real musical. They already had two of the greatest singers of the time and Deborah Kerr who had starred in "The King and I". How hard would it have been to hire a couple of songwriters to knock out eight songs and get a choreographer to stage a few numbers. This would have added some energy to the slow,plot.

    Okay, if they didn't want to turn is into a musical, they could have made it into a more realistic comedy. In the movie, Deborah is tired of her marriage to dull Frank and wants to marry swinging Dean. Fine, lets do it. Only in the movie, Deborah gets a fake divorce from Frank and a fake marriage to Dean. This is silly, not funny. In order for the movie to work, the divorce and marriage had to be real. This would, no doubt, have made Frank really sad, and not just pretend sad, as in the film, but that would have made us care about him. Because it is not a real divorce, and Frank and Deborah's marriage isn't really threatened, nor is Frank and Dean's friendship, there is no intensity to the film.

    Divorce is a painful process. The filmmakers, and, I suspect, Frank Sinatra, didn't want any of that pain in the film. They just wanted a breezy comedy. Unfortunately, fake pain from a fake divorce does not equal comedy. Slipping on a banana peel is funny, faking slipping on a banana peel is not.

    Most of the film is hit and miss. Joi Lansing as Dean's curvy secretary was funny. Having 21 year old Davey Davison as a Go-Go dancer lusting after 49 year old Frank was not.

    You know the direction is not very good when you have Nancy Sinatra playing a scene as Frank Sinatra's daughter and you're convinced by the end of the scene that they have never met each before.
    4wes-connors

    Ring-a-Ding Don't

    "Fuddy-duddy" Frank Sinatra (as Dan Edwards) runs an advertising agency, with "drinking man" Dean Martin (as Ernie Brewer) assisting. Mr. Sinatra thinks housewife Deborah Kerr (as Valerie) is happily married, but she wants a divorce "on the grounds of boredom." Sinatra thinks, "I don't have to be romantic." Ms. Kerr wonders what life would be like if she married Mr. Martin, who romances a succession of busty secretaries. Through a series of misunderstandings, Kerr gets her wish…

    Sinatra, Kerr, and Martin do not live up to the marquee value of their names. At least, Kerr seems to be alert. Teenage daughter Nancy Sinatra (as Tracy) and Honda hopping son Michael Petit (as David) are much better than the big stars. Boyfriend Tony Bill (Jim Blake) and an able supporting cast help… a little. Strangely enough, Sinatra and Martin sing no songs; instead, their "Reprise" label is represented by Trini Lopez doing "Sinner Man", a minor hit after the film's original release.

    **** Marriage on the Rocks (9/16/65) Jack Donohue ~ Frank Sinatra, Deborah Kerr, Dean Martin, Nancy Sinatra
    6sol-

    Kerr is great at least and the bachelor pad is awesome

    Complications arise after an unhappily married couple are "accidentally" divorced whilst on their second honeymoon in this amiable comedy with echoes of Hitchcock's 'Mr. & Mrs. Smith'. The film takes quite a while to build up to the "accident" and the resulting humour is hit and miss, but a perfectly cast Deborah Kerr and Frank Sinatra keep the film afloat. Both were well past 40 at the time and they capture two complete flip-sides well; Sinatra has become complacent, all too settled into life, whereas a high-strung Kerr is in the midst of a midlife crisis, worried by the very certainties that Sinatra finds comfort in. The supporting characters are not terribly interesting; as his best friend, Dean Martin is too much the polar opposite of Sinatra and while John McGiver, Cesar Romero and Hermione Baddeley have their good bits, they never register strongly. Martin's bachelor pad is something else though, and -- alongside the likes of 'Under the Yum Yum Tree' -- it is a testament to the imaginativeness of early '60s interior decoration with jutting stone walls, several indoor plants and a fireplace in the centre of the living room. The nightclub sets are nifty too. Of course, excellent sets alone are not reason enough to watch a motion picture, but they are certainly an extra delight in this big screen showcase for Kerr's comedic talents. Her very proper and refined British vocal mannerisms render her indignation all the more amusing, and imperfect as the film may well be, it certainly offers an acute look at a middle aged couple both learning to reevaluate what they want in life.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Someone in Mexico took exception to the idea of their country being a place for quickie divorces or marriages, and convinced the government to block Frank Sinatra (for a time) from entering Mexico, even though he owned property there.
    • Goofs
      The two wall calendars in Miguel's office are for December 1964 and April 1965. The calendar in his hotel lobby is for June 1965. A few weeks (at most) after the Mexico trip, it's suddenly Thanksgiving.
    • Quotes

      Ernie Brewer: Mr. Turner, if your cars are built half as good as those girls, you're home free.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sinatra: All or Nothing at All: Part 2 (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      There Was a Sinner Man
      Music by Trini López (as Trini Lopez)

      Lyrics by Bobby Weinstein, Bobby Hart, Billy Barberis and Teddy Randazzo

      Performed by Trini López (as Trini Lopez)

      Produced by Joseph C. Behm

      [Trini López performs the song at the go-go club]

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 1, 1965 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Divorcio a la americana
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • A-C Productions
      • Warner Bros.
      • Sinatra Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 49 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1
      • 1.85 : 1

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