Coming To America Review
By Eric Meyerson
As Akeem, the crown prince of the prosperous African monarchy of Zamunda, Murphy grows up ensconced in a lifestyle of extreme pampering. He grows up literally walking on rose petals, with servants happily servicing his most private bodily functions. As he approaches adulthood however, Akeem grows restless with his luxurious isolation, especially after he meets the subservient sex-bot who will be his arranged bride.
Under the pretense of "sowing his royal oats" before marriage, Akeem gains permission from his father King Jaffe (James Earl Jones) to head to New York City, where Akeem's real M.O. is to snag a wife who can stimulate more than just his loins. With his servant Semmi (Arsenio Hall) by his side, Akeem moves to Queens (get it?) and goes native with a rat-hole apartment, a sports-themed wardrobe, and a custodial job at a rip-off burger joint called McDowell's. (Proprietor Cleo McDowell (John Amos) distinguishes it from the competition as such: "The Big Mac has two all-beef patties special sauce lettuce cheese pickles onions on a sesame seed bun. My buns have no seeds.")
Needless to say, fish-out-of-water hijinks ensue, like a black Crocodile Dundee.
Akeem ends up taking a shine to Cleo's good-girl daughter Lisa (Shari Headley), who is currently involved with Darryl, both heir to and aficionado of the Soul-Glo (think Jheri curl) business empire. Akeem's pursues Lisa with nice-guy generosity and philosophical spirit, compared with the snobbish callousness of Darryl.
Most of the movie is flat-out funny, and funniest of all are the multiple roles of Murphy, who honed his comedy-in-make-up craft playing the likes of Gumby on SNL. In addition to portraying the crotchety denizens of a local barber shop, Murphy puts on one of the most hysterical characters of his film career: Randy Watson, lead singer of the lounge band Sexual Chocolate. Watson's awkward butchering of Whitney Houston's "The Greatest Love of All" at a neighborhood event is so brilliant, it almost makes up for The Golden Child.
Not everything works, of course. The movie's lengthy run time means occasional long periods without laughs, and the sweet perfection of Akeem and Lisa guarantee that the romantic scenes never exceed lukewarm. John Landis's lavish direction also makes some scenes and sections just too big for what amounts to a romantic comedy. But hey, it was the 1988. Big was big. (And for that matter, Big was big.)
King me!

Facts and Figures
Year: 1988
Run time: 116 mins
In Theaters: Wednesday 29th June 1988
Box Office Worldwide: $288.8M
Budget: $39M
Distributed by: Paramount Pictures
Production compaines: Paramount Pictures
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 4 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 68%
Fresh: 26 Rotten: 12
IMDB: 6.9 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: John Landis
Producer: Robert Wachs, George Folsey Jr.
Screenwriter: David Murphy, Barry W. Blaustein
Starring: Eddie Murphy as Prince Akeem / Clarence / Randy Watson / Saul, Arsenio Hall as Semmi / Extremely Ugly Girl / Morris / Reverend Brown, James Earl Jones as King Jaffe Joffer, John Amos as Cleo McDowell, Shari Headley as Lisa McDowell, Frankie Faison as Landlord, Louie Anderson as Maurice, Calvin Lockhart as Colonel Izzi, Samuel L. Jackson as Robber, Eriq La Salle as Darryl Jenks