Harlem Nights Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

25 =
Based upon 8 Critic Reviews
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Boston Globe | Jay CarrAdd Critic to Favorites

The best thing about the film is the way it allows Richard Pryor to rise above the demeaning buffoon roles he's been playing for the last few years and finally play a character with dignity and style. [17 Nov 1989, p.89]Read the full review

Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

People may go to see Eddie Murphy once, twice, three or even six times in disposable movies like Harlem Nights, but if he wants to realize his potential he needs to work with a better writer and director than himself.Read the full review

USA Today | Mike ClarkAdd Critic to Favorites

I don't mind that Nights is a potty-mouth benchmark; crude verbiage is appropriate to the leads, as well as the film's subject matter. This is, however, an amazingly mean two hours. Even the funniest gag involves Murphy's fatal shooting of three men. [17 Nov 1989, p.6D]Read the full review

The New York Times | Vincent CanbyAdd Critic to Favorites

Harlem Nights is not the disaster some people might have been expecting. Mr. Murphy has appeared in far worse films written and directed by people much more experienced.Read the full review

Washington Post | Hal HinsonAdd Critic to Favorites

Eddie Murphy's directorial work is amateurish at best. And as a performer he looks as if he is in agony, as if his mother made him stand in front of the camera for punishment.Read the full review

Washington Post | Desson HoweAdd Critic to Favorites

Unfortunately, entertainer-for-life Murphy, directing for the first time, seems to have spent his energies on topping the bill rather than on the bill itself.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Michael WilmingtonAdd Critic to Favorites

The movie is full of phallic gags about little-bitty guns and crude jokes at physical or emotional infirmities. [17 Nov 1989, p.6]Read the full review

Variety | Staff (Not Credited)Add Critic to Favorites

This blatantly excessive directorial debut for Eddie Murphy is overdone, too rarely funny and, worst of all, boring.Read the full review

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