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1/15/2015

Coming to America (1988) - Landis and Murphy's second, amusing but less well-constructed collaboration



The beautifully painted poster for John Landis' Coming to America

QUICK REVIEW:

An African prince is not satisfied with an arranged marriage at home in his kingdom and instead travels to America to fall in love with a woman who thinks for herself.

The first half of Coming to America is totally gaga in Africa with a high-spirited James Earl Jones (The Lion King (1994), voice) as the king. Eddie Murphy (Trading Places (1983)) lands fresh in the US with his beautiful traveling companion Arsenio Hall (Black Dynamite (2009)). The movie is silly and funny for a while.
But then the plot grows increasingly illogical; plot points get delayed (something has to fill out those excessive 117 minutes...), and the phony romance booms... The last 20 minutes of the film are downright embarrassingly poorly written (by screenwriters David Sheffield and Barry W. Blaustein (The Nutty Professor (1996)), following a story synopsis by Murphy.)
Coming to America was the second Murphy-starring comedy by master director John Landis (The Blues Brothers (1980)) after the much better Trading Places. They would work together again, despite Landis' complaining that Murphy was a "pig of the world" on the America set, in Beverly Hills Cop III (1994).

Related reviews:

John LandisThe Twilight Zone (1983) - Fear takes many forms in tragedy-struck anthology
An American Werewolf in London (1981) - Landis' great, funny, scary wolf
The Blues Brothers (1980) - Try to sit still to this one!


Arsenio Hall and Eddie Murphy in John Landis' Coming to America

Watch the funny trailer for the film here

Cost: 39 mil. $
Box office: 288.7 mil. $
= Huge hit
[The movie was the 3rd biggest hit at the US box office that year, and Paramount's biggest hit of the year. It was both big in the US (128.1 mil. $/44% of the total gross), where it was released without press screenings (due to negative reactions in a local New York press screening) and internationally (160.6 mil. $/56 %). In 1988, Eddie Murphy was hot!]

What do you think of Coming to America?
What's your favorite Eddie Murphy movie and why?

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