SummaryFrom stand-up prodigy and Saturday Night Live phenom to beloved Hollywood icon, Being Eddie chronicles the extraordinary life and legacy of the genre-defying star through exclusive interviews with Murphy himself and his comedy peers, offering an intimate portrait of this once-in-a-generation talent.
Directed By:Angus Wall
Being Eddie
Metascore
Generally Favorable
62
User score
Mixed or Average
5.8
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
62
57% Positive
4 Reviews
4 Reviews
43% Mixed
3 Reviews
3 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
Nov 12, 2025
75
Murphy refuses to look back in anger. The man remains optimistic, even when discussing death. With Murphy’s 2019 return to “SNL” serving as the joyous finale, “Being Eddie” presents an Eddie Murphy who seeks to entertain (on his own terms, of course) as long as he’s still got air in his lungs.
Nov 13, 2025
70
Being Eddie is a great time. Murphy is good company, and he’s hilarious as ever.
User score
Mixed or Average
5.8
46% Positive
6 Ratings
6 Ratings
31% Mixed
4 Ratings
4 Ratings
23% Negative
3 Ratings
3 Ratings
Nov 21, 2025
9
Being Eddie is a great look behind the scenes at some of Murphy’s iconic moments in entertainment history. It might be a bit manicured for some, but he has earned his place in pop culture ****.
May 17, 2026
8
Eddie Murphy, the iconic comedian, from A to Z.Watching and listening to his story, with its high points and low points, may not be to everyone’s taste. Those who will appreciate it are his die-hard fans. For a weekend with no pretensions.
Nov 12, 2025
67
Angus Wall’s super watchable Being Eddie is among the more convincing films of its kind, because instead — or by way — of trying to show us who the real Eddie Murphy is, it commits itself to arguing that Murphy has always known.
Nov 13, 2025
62
Being Eddie is not the all-access, honest recounting of a star’s rise that some fans would no doubt like for it to be, and it may well be intended to mostly serve as a table setting for the stand-up return that Netflix will presumably announce one of these days. But despite its shortcomings, the sharp-eyed viewer will still glean some interesting tidbits about the comedy legend from what is left unsaid.
Nov 12, 2025
60
Being Eddie isn’t a great piece of documentary filmmaking, nor does its DNA include an iota of journalism. What it is, though, is consummately polished and affectionate, taking an actor who rarely seemed vulnerable or especially comfortable in the spotlight at the peak of his stardom and making him seem, for 103 minutes, thoroughly at ease.
Nov 12, 2025
60
Being Eddie, a new Netflix documentary on Eddie Murphy, isn’t his best movie. It isn’t his worst.
Nov 12, 2025
50
Even when removed from the implications of his prolific career, there isn't a ton here that gives us an unbridled look into the man's inner life.
Nov 23, 2025
6
This documentary is very much a puff piece about Eddie Murphy, presenting a sanitized history of this personal life and career. I nice treat for fans, but nothing revelatory.
Nov 12, 2025
6
"Being Eddie" is a first-person documentary tracing the meteoric rise and four-decade career of one of the most singular talents in film and comedy, reminds us how rare his ascent truly was. Yet for all its reverence and nostalgia, the film stops short of delivering the full examination Murphy deserves. It's a revealing, self-serving portrait of an entertainment icon that doesn't dive deep into his personal struggles in his inner life. The documentary begins with Murphy’s explosion onto the national stage at nineteen, when he joined Saturday Night Live and immediately became the show’s engine. Within five years, he had gone from next-big-thing to global superstar, a young Black performer navigating a landscape that had never made room for someone with his combination of fearlessness, charm, and mainstream appeal. Murphy did not simply break barriers. He erased them. At the heart of the film is the dynamic tension between Murphy and Richard Pryor. Pryor remains the greatest stand-up comedian to ever touch a microphone, but Murphy’s arrival during Pryor’s reign created an undeniable shift. Where Pryor’s genius burned hot and self-destructive, Murphy’s introverted nature allowed him to protect the parts of himself that fame often consumes. As the film notes, Murphy rose alongside a generation of Black cultural giants, including Whitney Houston, Prince, and Michael Jackson, yet unlike those icons, he managed to avoid the tragic pitfalls so many of them faced. The documentary touches on Murphy’s massive film successes, from "48 Hrs." to "Coming to America" to "Beverly Hills Cop," and acknowledges the breadth of his influence. But it rarely lingers long enough to say anything new. Instead of interrogating the impact and complexities of Murphy’s career, it slides across the surface, favoring celebrity admiration over insight. The roster of contemporary voices includes Arsenio Hall, Jerry Seinfeld, Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle, and Kevin Hart, but the film notably omits several members of Murphy’s real behind-the-scenes circle: Robert Townsend, Keenen Ivory Wayans, and the so-called Black Pack that shaped comedy in the eighties and nineties. Their absence leaves a noticeable gap. The comparison to Martin Scorsese’s recent documentary work is hard to ignore. Scorsese is unafraid to complicate legacy, to examine flaws, and to push beyond myth. "Being Eddie" is not that bold. It respects Murphy, but reverence alone cannot carry a story this large. That avoidance becomes even more glaring when compared to the treatment other comic legends have received. If documentaries can openly revisit Richard Pryor’s very public spiral, including the night he set himself on fire, or explore Bill Cosby’s tragic and irreversible downfall, then "Being Eddie" choosing to sidestep Murphy’s own controversies feels like a glaring omission. The film never addresses the 1997 incident when Murphy was stopped with a trans sex worker in his car, an event that dominated headlines at the time and complicated his public image. It is not about sensationalizing the moment. It is about acknowledging the full scope of a man’s life. Icons are not interesting because they are perfect. They are compelling because they live, stumble, and rebuild in ways that reflect something larger about the culture around them. By refusing to explore any of Murphy’s missteps, the documentary reduces him to a legend rather than a human being. For an icon whose career reshaped mainstream Hollywood’s perception of Black ****, this film needed more than two hours. Murphy’s impact deserves a multi-part deep dive built on candor, contradictions, and context, not just celebration. Still, for those of us who grew up staying awake on Saturday nights just to see what Murphy would do next, the footage is a warm return to a time when he felt untouchable. His SNL sketches remain part of our cultural DNA, the kind of comedy that generations quote without even realizing it. While he may never surpass Pryor’s mythic brilliance, Murphy altered Hollywood’s financial imagination. Studios saw that his persona could make millions, and the doors that swung open changed the careers of every Black comedian and actor who followed. "Being Eddie" is not a bad documentary. It is simply an incomplete one. There is a foundation for something great inside it, but the film never commits to showing Murphy from all angles. We see the icon, but not the man. We hear the legends, but not the uncomfortable truths. Eddie Murphy is a once-in-a-lifetime talent with stories that reach across four decades of fame, achievement, reinvention, and survival. This documentary needed more of them, and more of him. There is a masterpiece waiting to be told about Eddie Murphy. "Being Eddie" is not it, but it reminds us why that story matters, and why we need the unfiltered version someday.
Nov 20, 2025
4
O tom complacente de homenagem é muito acentuado aqui, além de colocá-lo como o "artista negro" mais influente. Salvo pelo carisma do ator e pela nostalgia de seus filmes, mas a estrutura irregular e o discurso simplista fazem desse documentário um tanto genérico mesmo.




























