A riveting turn as a vicious criminal in Fritz Lang's 1953 film noir classic #The Big Heat brought Marvin considerable notice, and subsequent performances opposite #Marlon Brando in the 1954 perennial #The Wild One and in John Sturges' #Bad Day at Black Rock cemented his reputation as a leading screen villain. He remained a heavy in B-movies like 1955's #I Died a Thousand Times and #Violent Saturday, but despite starring roles in the 1956 Western #Seven Men from Now and the smash #Raintree County, he grew unhappy with studio typecasting and moved to television in 1957 to star as a heroic police lieutenant in the series #M Squad. As a result, Marvin was rarely seen in films during the late '50s, with only a performance in 1958's #The Missouri Traveler squeezed into his busy TV schedule. He returned to cinemas in 1961 opposite John Wayne in #The Comancheros, and starred again with the Duke in the John Ford classic #The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance a year later. Marvin, Wayne, and Ford reunited in 1963 for #Donovan's Reef; a role in Don Siegel's 1964 crime drama #The Killers followed, and proved to be Marvin's final performance on the wrong side of the law.
Under Stanley Kramer, Marvin delivered a warm, comic turn in 1965's Ship of Fools, then appeared in a dual role as fraternal gunfighters in the charming Western spoof #Cat Ballou, a performance which won him an Academy Award. His next performance, as the leader of #The Dirty Dozen, made him a superstar as the film went on to become one of the year's biggest hits. Marvin's box-office stature had grown so significantly that his next picture, 1968's #Sergeant Ryker, was originally a TV movie re-released for theaters; his next regular feature, the John Boorman thriller #Point Blank, was another major hit. In 1969, Marvin starred with Clint Eastwood in the musical comedy #Paint Your Wagon, one of the most expensive films made to date; it too was a success, as was 1970's #Monte Walsh. Considering retirement, he did not reappear on screen for two years, but finally returned in 1972 with Paul Newman in the caper film #Pocket Money; after turning down the lead in #Deliverance, Marvin then starred in #Prime Cut, followed in 1973 by #Emperor of the North Pole and #The Iceman Cometh.
Poor reviews killed the majority of Marvin's films during the mid-'70s; when #The Great Scout and #Cathouse Thursday -- the last of three pictures he released during 1976 -- failed to connect with critics or audiences, he went into semi-retirement, and did not resurface prior to 1979's #Avalanche Express. However, his return to films was overshadowed by a high-profile court case filed against him by Michelle Triola, his girlfriend for six years; when they separated, she sued him for "palimony" -- $1,800,000, one half of his earnings during the span of their relationship. The landmark trial, much watched and discussed by Marvin's fellow celebrities, ended with Triola awarded only $104,000; in its wake he starred in Samuel Fuller's 1980 war drama The #Big Red One, which was drastically edited prior to its U.S. release. After 1981's #Death Hunt, Marvin did not make another film before 1983's #Gorky Park; the French thriller #Canicule followed, and in 1985, he returned to television to reprise his role as Major Reisman in #The Dirty Dozen: The Next Mission. The 1986 action tale #The Delta Force was Marvin's final film; he died of a heart attack on August 29, 1987 in Tucson, AZ and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery next to the remains of his fellow veteran (and boxing legend) Joe Louis, Rovi