A warm, affectionate, access-rich portrait of Martin Short that plays like a celebration of a singular comic life. The film seems to balance career highlights, private memories, and the emotional cost behind the joy, making it especially appealing for fans of showbiz history and upbeat celebrity documentaries.
76% ★★★★☆ (15,391)
Marty, Life Is Short
Where to watch: Netflix
Movie · Documentary · PG-13
2026 · 1h 42m · ★ 76% (15K)
Director: Lawrence Kasdan
Starring: Martin Short, Lawrence Kasdan, Steve Martin
Overview
Martin Short looks back on a life fueled by joy in this documentary with classic clips, fresh interviews and star-studded, never-before-seen home movies.
Director
Lawrence Kasdan
Production
Imagine Documentaries
Cast
Martin Short, Lawrence Kasdan, Steve Martin, Andrea Martin, Ron Howard, Michael Short, Eugene Levy, Paul Shaffer, Catherine O'Hara, Deborah Divine, John Mulaney, Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson, Walter F. Parkes, Laurie MacDonald, Steven Spielberg, Kate Capshaw, Oliver Short, Nancy Dolman, Dave Thomas
Where to watch
Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads
Curator Review
Verdict
A warm, affectionate, access-rich portrait of Martin Short that plays like a celebration of a singular comic life. The film seems to balance career highlights, private memories, and the emotional cost behind the joy, making it especially appealing for fans of showbiz history and upbeat celebrity documentaries.
Best for
fans of Martin Short and classic comedy
viewers who like intimate celebrity documentaries
audiences drawn to nostalgic Hollywood and TV history
people who enjoy heartfelt, feel-good profiles with some melancholy
fans of Steve Martin and ensemble comedy culture
Skip if
you want a hard-hitting investigative documentary
you prefer tightly structured, issue-driven nonfiction
you are not interested in celebrity retrospectives
you dislike affectionate, celebratory tone over critical distance
Overview
Marty, Life Is Short looks built to delight longtime fans while still giving the subject room to be more than a highlight reel. The appeal is in the access: classic clips, fresh interviews, and home movies that turn a career retrospective into something more personal and lived-in.
Worth noting
What comes through most strongly is the contrast between the chaos of show business and the steadiness of Short’s persona. The film appears to find both the jokes and the bruises, suggesting a life shaped by loss, resilience, and an almost stubborn commitment to joy.
Bottom line
This is the kind of documentary that can make you laugh, then unexpectedly get you a little emotional. If you like your celebrity docs warm, generous, and packed with memories, this should land very well.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Mary (5★) · 912 likes
I can't believe I just saw the remake of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance kid starring Ed Grimley and Forrest Gump directed by Steven Spielberg.
Kath ꒰ა❤️໒꒱ · 510 likes
so much tragedy in his life and martin short has still managed to be one of the kindest, sweetest, funniest, gentlest, most positive, and radiant souls on this earth. he deserves all the love this world can give him, and then some more.
Warrenjonhughes (4★) · 450 likes
Marty....Supreme
sela (4★) · 301 likes
i was not emotionally prepared to see steve martin cry
Moomin279 (5★) · 274 likes
Martin Short the peoples princess. This is my Marty Supreme. His profile picture for Steve got me, those old men love each other so much.