Jungle Fever

    Jungle Fever
    1991

    Synopsis

    A successful and married black man contemplates having an affair with a white girl from work. He's quite rightly worried that the racial difference would make an already taboo relationship even worse.

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    Cast

    • Wesley SnipesFlipper Purify
    • Annabella SciorraAngie Tucci
    • Spike LeeCyrus
    • Ossie DavisReverend Purify
    • Ruby DeeLucinda Purify
    • Samuel L. JacksonGator Purify
    • Lonette McKeeDrew
    • John TurturroPauline Carbone
    • Frank VincentMike Tucci
    • Anthony QuinnLou Carbone

    Recommendations

    • 90

      Los Angeles Times

      [Lee's] work is less strident here, more controlled, less in-your-face explosive than for instance “Do the Right Thing,” but for all of that, no less penetrating, no less troubling. Given his passion, there’s no way it could be otherwise.
    • 88

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Jungle Fever contains two sequences - the girl talk and the crackhouse visit - of amazing power. It contains humor and insight and canny psychology, strong performances, and the fearless discussion of things both races would rather not face.
    • 88

      Baltimore Sun

      Jungle Fever is so many graceful things, so many angry things, so many truly moving things that its occasional faults are the faults of excess passion, not failure of imagination. Most importantly, it seethes with life, unlike nearly every other movie out of Hollywood these days.
    • 80

      Empire

      Not quite the classic that Spike Lee had been threatening to make for so long, but, after a return to form after Mo' Better Blues which proved a huge disappointment.
    • 78

      Austin Chronicle

      There are two powerful movies here, unfortunately, they don't coexist easily. Lee has to fight his way out and he opts for narrative stopping violence when perhaps he should have continued the dialogue. He's a man on a tightrope and it's hard not to watch him without worrying about him.
    • 70

      Variety

      Performances are all pointed and emotionally edgy. Film feels too long, but it ends powerfully, as the audience exits with the view that both the white and black communities are deeply troubled and have a very long way to go to resolve their differences.
    • 70

      Washington Post

      The most obvious problem occurs between Snipes and Sciorra. Lee's so interested in the ripple effect they cause, he almost forgets the affair itself. We see anger all over Harlem and Bensonhurst, but we're barely allowed into the main bedroom, where the real hell must be taking place.
    • 67

      Entertainment Weekly

      What’s missing from Jungle Fever, I think, is a vision of the positive. By that, I don’t mean some shallow ”optimistic” message but, rather, an organic and casual sense of pleasure as one of the sustaining currents of everyday life — even in a country as mired in racism as this one.