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Coming to America
Overlook Pick

Coming to America

This summer, Prince Akeem discovers America.
69
User Score4,765 ratings
TMDB 6.916+19881h 57mEnglish
ComedyRomance

Synopsis

An African prince decides it’s time for him to find a princess... and his mission leads him and his most loyal friend to Queens, New York. In disguise as an impoverished immigrant, the pampered prince quickly finds himself a new job, new friends, new digs, new enemies and lots of trouble.

Director
John LandisFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Eddie Murphy Productions2 production companies
Release
June 29, 1988Released
Box Office
$289MBudget $30M

Top Cast

8 of 82
Eddie Murphy
Eddie Murphy
Prince Akeem / Clarence / Randy Watson / Saul
Arsenio Hall
Arsenio Hall
Semmi / Extremely Ugly Girl / Morris / Reverend Brown
Shari Headley
Shari Headley
Lisa McDowell
John Amos
John Amos
Cleo McDowell
James Earl Jones
James Earl Jones
King Jaffe Joffer
Madge Sinclair
Madge Sinclair
Queen Aoleon
Eriq La Salle
Eriq La Salle
Darryl Jenks
Allison Dean
Allison Dean
Patrice McDowell

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
Gimly
Apr 12, 2019

Hasn't aged flawlessly, made some stylistic decisions that probably would have come across as weird even at the time, and not the sort of thing (American comedy) that typically appeals to me. But I can still absolutely see why _Coming to America_ is remembered as fondly as it is. I liked it by and large more than the most similar offerings of today. _Final rating:★★½ - Not quite for me, but I definitely get the appeal._

r96sk
Mar 5, 2021

I didn't enjoy it as much as expected, but <em>'Coming to America'</em> is nevertheless still good. Eddie Murphy is unsurprisingly the star of the film. Any notable scenes include him, which isn't a shock given the obvious and the fact he plays a number of characters; on that note, only Akeem amused me - the barber shop guys... not so much, to be honest. James Earl Jones (Jaffe), John Amos (Cleo) and Frankie Faison (landlord) are the most noteworthy in terms of those away from the lead, while there is even an appearance from someone named Samuel L. Jackson - what ever happened to that guy?! I wanted/anticipated much stronger humour, if only due to Murphy's presence. I can't say I laughed that much, which is disappointing. The romance parts are probably more memorable to me, even if it's kinda familiar in those regards. With all that said, I can see why loads thoroughly enjoy this - it just didn't fully land on me, personally. Still worth viewing and I'm very much up to see the sequel.

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