Murphy’s Law

‘Harlem Nights’ Is Comedy’s Most Overrated Cult Classic

How revisionist history saved Eddie Murphy’s 1989 all-star gangster flop

Keith Murphy
LEVEL
Published in
4 min readMay 1, 2020

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Jasmine Guy And Eddie Murphy In ‘Harlem Nights’. Photo: Archive Photos/Getty Images

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A few weeks ago, I aired a few controversial takes on Twitter. Nothing crazy, but also stuff you’d imagine would meet with some pushback. Derek Jeter was overrated. Scarface is really a comedy. Steph Curry didn’t deserve two MVP Awards. Beyoncé did not have a legit across-the-board classic album until Lemonade. 1999 > Purple Rain.

Weirdly, most people just agreed or disagreed. No rage, no caps lock ranting. It was downright civil in there.

At least until I mentioned that Harlem Nights was a disappointment. You would’ve thought I said Vanilla Ice was better than Rakim.

Thing is, I pulled the punch. The truth is that Harlem Nights is unmitigated trash. Yes, Harlem Nights. The 1989 crime farce written, directed, and executive-produced by Eddie Murphy remains one of the most frustrating, monumental letdowns in Black cinematic history.

Today, Harlem Nights has a paltry 21% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. But since its…

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Keith Murphy
Keith Murphy

Written by Keith Murphy

Mr. Murphy’s work has appeared in such publications and online sites as VIBE, The New York Post, Billboard, ESPN’s The Undefeated, OZY, and Esquire.

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