Coming To America (1988)

Director: John Landis  Starring: Eddie Murphy  
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Product Summary
Publisher: Paramount
Format: DVD
UPC: 00097361383644
Buy.com Sku: 210411673
Item#: V2TH9R
Buy.com Sales Rank: 26208
Category Keywords: Adventure  Blockbuster  Love Story  Recommended  Switching Roles  Theatrical Release 
Rating: 
 
A Royal Blast!
 
 
Features: DVD, English
 
Join Eddie Murphy (Norbit, Dreamgirls) on an unforgettable comic quest to the New World. As an African prince, it's time for him to find a princess...and the mission leads him and his most loyal friend (Arsenio Hall) to Queens, New York. In disguise as an impoverished immigrant, the pampered prince relishes the chance to test his mettle in the urban wilderness. Keep an eye out for both Murphy and Hall in some unforgettable cameo roles!
 
"Eddie Murphy does everything in this movie successfully."  Brad Laidman, Film.com
"...a sweet, oft-told story, and Murphy and Hall add a number of very sharp supporting roles..."  Gene Siskel, Chicago Tribune
"...an impressive comedic effort...Eddie Murphy gives one of his most charming performances..."  Jamie S. Rich, DVD Talk
"Murphy's most hilarious performance!"  Peter Travers, People Magazine
"Landis' last great comedy is a true Eddie Murphy-fest."  Scott Weinberg, eFilmCritic.com

 


Editor's Note

In this modern-day fairy tale, Eddie Murphy stars as a wealthy and pampered African prince who comes to America in search of a bride. His destination, of course, is Queens, New York. Accompanied by his closest companion (Arsenio Hall), the Prince quickly finds a job, new friends, new digs, new enemies, and more trouble than he ever imagined. COMING TO AMERICA is a hysterical fable with Murphy and Hall playing hilarious multiple roles with the help of astounding makeup effects.


Plot Summary

This fantastical fairy tale stars Eddie Murphy as Prince Akeem, a pampered African prince who is yearning to be self-sufficient in his extremely opulent society, where his every whim is catered to. When Akeem turns 21 he defies the wishes of his kingdom and refuses to marry the beautiful bride who has been chosen for him. Instead, he sets out for America to find true love with his trusty sidekick, Semmi (Arsenio Hall). Determined to appear common, the pair arrive in Queens, New York, and quickly have to adapt to a world where they are no longer royalty and can't seem to find a modern woman who suits the prince's tastes--until he meets Lisa McDowell (Shari Headley), the lovely daughter of Cleo McDowell (John Amos), who owns McDowell's restaurant, a fast-food restaurant suspiciously like McDonald's. Akeem and Semmi get jobs at McDowell's and set about charming the unsuspecting Lisa. As the romance blossoms, Akeem has an increasingly difficult time hiding his true identity, especially when his royal parents (James Earl Jones and Madge Sinclair) and their entourage arrive in New York, eager to return their only heir to Africa. John Landis's comedy is an intelligent, funny movie that shows off the myriad talent of Murphy and Hall.

 
Features
A Vintage Sit-Down With Eddie & Arsenio
Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound, Dolby Digital Stereo
Audio: French Dolby Digital Stereo
Dubbed: French
Featurettes: Prince-ipal Photography - The Coming Together Of America, Fit For Akeem - The Costumes Of Coming To America, Character Building - The Many Faces Of Rick Baker, & Composing America - The Musical Talents Of Nile Rodgers
Interactive Menus
Original Theatrical Trailer
Photo Gallery
Scene Selection
Subtitles: English, Spanish, Portuguese
 
Entertainment Reviews
Coming To America (I Love the 80's) - DVD Review
By: El Bicho - Blogcritics.org Reviews
Published on: 2/16/2009 9:50 AM
Coming To America is a romantic comedy starring Eddie Murphy. He plays Akeem, an African prince from the fictional country of Zamunda. On his twenty-first birthday, as is tradition, he is presented with a beautiful woman who has been raised to be his bride and serve him. Akeem rejects this because he wants to meet a woman, who is her own person, and fall in love with her. With his companion Semmi (Arsenio Hall) in tow, they head to America, selecting what they believe is the appropriately titled Queens, NY....read the full review

 
Technical Info

Release Information
Studio: Paramount
Release Date: 2/3/2009
Running Time: 116 minutes
Original Release Date: 1988
Catalog ID: 138364
UPC: 00097361383644
Number of Discs: 1

Audio & Video
Original Language: English
Available Audio Tracks: English, French Dubbed
Available Subtitles: English, Portuguese, Spanish
Video: Color

Aspect Ratio
Anamorphic Widescreen  1.85:1

 
Cast & Crew
Arsenio Hall
James Earl Jones
Madge Sinclair
Eddie Murphy
John Amos
Shari Headley
John Landis - Director

 
Awards

Image Award (1990)
Arsenio Hall, Winner, Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture
Coming to America, Winner, Outstanding Motion Picture

Oscar (1989)
   Deborah Nadoolman, Nominee, Best Costume Design
   Rick Baker, Nominee, Best Makeup

 
Professional Reviews
Ultimate DVD
4 stars out of 5 -- "Sharply scripted....It's still laughter-packed almost 20 years on, and Murphy and co-star Arsenio Hall are a hoot in multiple cameo roles." 08/01/2007 p.85

The Washington Post 6 of 10
You won't believe it: Eddie Murphy, King of the Expletive, playing a good-natured, romantic lead and African king of the jungle...Confined to being a nice guy, a royal nice guy, he precludes himself from the kind of comedy his fans would expect. What you get instead is a light, slow-moving love story only scantly peppered with laughs...In "Eddie Murphy Raw," the comedian's misogynic and remarkably unfunny concert movie, Murphy expressed a desire to meet a woman who knew nothing of his millions and who wouldn't take up the lifestyles of the rich and famous as soon as he married her. He figured only an African tribal woman would fit the bill...Well, here he acts out that fantasy, only in slightly altered form: Murphy is the African, and the Ideal Murphy Woman, he figures, is American. He's Prince Akeem, sole heir to the rich, fictional kingdom of Zamunda -- a soundstage Busch Gardens: The Dark Continent, where benevolent wild animals roam and where Prince Eddie, er, Akeem, basks in the extravagant attention of his slaves. They serenade him when he awakes, sponge him (all over) in the bath and strew petals in his path. But now that he's 21, it's time for an arranged bride, say his sovereign parents...This lightweight vehicle spends most of its time lugging exposition; and the main lugger is romantic lead Murphy, whose comic energies are thus wasted. Hall, former nutty-witty host of Fox Television's "The Late Show," is not allowed to strut his stuff or play off Murphy. Most of the laughs are invested in the subsidiary (and broader) characters, some of them played by Murphy and Hall in disguise. The main pleasure in "America" comes in the romancing of prince and pauper. But the comedy is a mere handmaiden. - Desson Howe
 
The Onion A.V. Club 8 of 10
In 1983's Trading Places, Eddie Murphy plays a pauper who becomes a prince of finance. In 1988's Coming To America, he plays a prince who masquerades as a pauper to find his ideal wife. Both films cleaned up at the box office during Murphy's Reagan-era heyday, and both let director John Landis channel Frank Capra. Trading Places taps into the farcical prankster side of Capra's persona--Landis describes it as his version of a '30s-style "social comedy"--in its irreverent tale of a small-time con man (Murphy) who trades places with stuffy uber-WASP Dan Aykroyd at the whim of playfully perverse tycoon brothers Ralph Bellamy and Don Ameche. America, meanwhile, shares Capra's fondness for moral comedies about pure-hearted innocents who'd rather make their own way in the world than blindly follow tradition...Bellamy and Ameche reprise their battling-brothers characters for a goofy in-joke cameo in Coming To America, a disarmingly sweet fish-out-of-water comedy in which Murphy's good-natured African prince toils as a janitor at a fast-food restaurant in Queens while wooing the pretty daughter of owner John Amos. Murphy and sidekick Arsenio Hall--whose scene-stealing performance here seemed to promise a dazzling film career that never materialized--famously donned Rick Baker's makeup to play multiple characters, but unlike in Norbit, the effect is sweet and affectionate rather than grotesque and scatological. Murphy would soon exhaust the comic possibilities inherent in donning layers of latex to become a one-man lowbrow vaudeville extravaganza, but his shtick still felt fresh here, probably because there's an awful lot of heart hiding under all the prosthetics. - Nathan Rabin
 

  
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