Critical Critics gave the film lukewarm reviews.
The New York Times critic
Roger Greenspun wrote, "It is still quite good — fairly violent and very sexy. But it is less daring, less ethnically sophisticated, more antiseptic, more comfortably middle-class." Arthur D. Murphy of
Variety wrote, "Sterling Silliphant's script, from the Ernest Tidyman character trove, is surprisingly good, and holds up despite the inherent episodic perambulation of the plot."
Gene Siskel of the
Chicago Tribune gave the film 2.5 stars out of 4 and called it "a curiously schizoid movie: On one hand, a solid streak of '70s kinky sex; on the other, a mess of '40s white dialog placed in the mouth of, on surface appearance, a contemporary black dude."
Kevin Thomas of the
Los Angeles Times wrote that "in addition to being fine escapist fare ... it offers pungent, pertinent observations of white exploitation of blacks outside the United States and suggests a need for international black solidarity." Gary Arnold of
The Washington Post wrote that "the latest
Shaft episode does not find any more inspiration in Africa than it found in
Harlem. Screenwriter Stirling Silliphant and director John Guillermin certainly cannot be accused of developing the undercover premise with any conviction, excitement or humor." Review aggregation website critic Dennis Schwartz gave the film a B−, describing it as "crude and slight but simplistically made entertaining adventure story" that resembles a
James Bond thriller. On the
review aggregation site
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a "fresh" rating of 60% based on reviews collected from 10 critics.
Box office Shaft in Africa failed to approximate the financial success of the two hit films which preceded it, in large part because in 1973 theatres were heavily saturated with
blaxploitation films (particularly that genre's most mainstream release, the
James Bond smash,
Live and Let Die, which premiered to big box office only one week after
Shaft in Africa), as opposed to how the first two
Shaft films had debuted with virtually no competition in the genre. Prior to the film's release, there were hopes for more
Shaft movies. Lewis said during filming, "You could literally take Shaft anywhere, almost like a James Bond, but everything in the future depends very much on this one. We couldn't have said 'no' to another one based on the contract we had, but now that Metro is going into the TV show, it could satiate the market to a degree. Nevertheless, if this one is really successful, I guess we'll have Shaft with us for a time to come." However, there would be no more sequels until
Shaft in 2000. ==See also==