Box office Harlem Nights was released in the United States and Canada on November 17, 1989. During its opening weekend it grossed a total of $16.1million from 2,180 theaters—an average of $7,383 per theater—making it the highest-grossing film of the weekend, ahead of ''
Look Who's Talking ($8.5million) in its sixth week of release, and the debuting The Little Mermaid ($6million). This broke the record for an opening three-day gross during the pre-Christmas end of year period. In its second weekend, Harlem Nights
fell to the number 2 position with a $11.1million gross—a 30.8% drop from the previous week—placing it behind the debut of Back to the Future Part II ($27.8million) and ahead of The Little Mermaid
($8.4million). By its third weekend, Harlem Nights
fell to the number 3 position with a $5.2million gross, placing it behind Back to the Future Part II
($12.1million) and the debut of National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation'' ($11.8million). In total,
Harlem Nights grossed $60.9million, making it only the 21st-highest-grossing film of 1989 in the United States and Canada. The film's gross outside of these countries is unknown.
Movie theater shooting controversy On November 17, 1989, two men were shot in the parking lot outside of the
AMC Americana 8 theater in the
Detroit suburb of
Southfield, Michigan. According to witnesses quoted in the
Detroit Free Press, the shooting happened on opening night taking place during a shooting spree in the film's opening. A 22-year-old woman, who panicked and ran into traffic, was in critical condition two days later at the city's
Providence Hospital; her name was withheld by police. Less than an hour after the shooting, police arrived at the theater to find a 24-year-old Detroit man who had shot at an officer. The gunman was wounded when the officer shot him back in the theater parking lot. The incident caused the theater chain to cancel showings of
Harlem Nights and install metal detectors. One resident of the area, D'Shanna Watson, said: Later that night, brawlers were ejected from a
Sacramento theater showing
Harlem Nights. Their feud continued in a parking lot and ended with gunshots. Two 24-year-old men were seriously injured. An hour later, Marcel Thompson, 17, was fatally shot in a similar fight at a theater in
Richmond, California. When police stopped the projection of
Harlem Nights to find suspects, an hour-long riot erupted. In
Boston, two separate stabbings left two injured outside Loew’s Cinema 7 and Mayor
Raymond Flynn saw so many fistfights taking place in a crowd leaving
Harlem Nights that he at first threatened to close the theater down but decided to tighten police security at the theater. Flynn blamed the film for the riot, stating that it "glorifies violence." However, Raymond Howard, a lieutenant of the Richmond police department, defended the film, saying, "There's nothing wrong with the show. But this tells me something about the nature of kids who are going to see these shows." ==Reception==