
Cheech & Chong talk about their 'last' road trip — though it probably isn't
Over time, the 1978 movie "Up in Smoke" became a cult classic that transformed the two comedians and actors from hippie outsiders to comedy icons.
Now, longtime Cheech and Chong fans or those who want to know more about them can see Marin and Chong reunite on screen in ' Cheech & Chong's Last Movie,' released nationwide Friday. Directed by David Bushell, the documentary weaves never-before-seen footage from Marin and Chong as the two take another road trip — this time spanning five decades of their ultimately widely successful careers spanning platinum albums and box-office fame.
'They found the essence of Cheech and Chong. And that itself is worth exploring, because there's a Cheech and Chong in everybody,' Chong said about the documentary in a joint video interview with Marin. "That's who we are; we're everybody out there. And that's why people can relate to us.'
For many fans today, stoner comedy invites them into playful spaces that use humor to blur or soften social boundaries. "Up in Smoke" helped create and popularize a subgenre of later hits like 'Fast Times at Ridgemont High,' 'Friday,' 'Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle' and 'Pineapple Express,' among many others.
But when it first came out, Cheech and Chong's "Up in Smoke" was certainly not a hit with everyone.
'Any film that asks you to go smashed before you see it must have something really bad to hide,' the late Chicago-based film critic Gene Siskel said on his award-winning movie review TV show 'Siskel & Ebert.'
Siskel picked 'Up in Smoke' as a 'Dog of the Week' — his choice for worst film — and criticized its dialogue, saying it was "80 minutes of two jerks saying nothing but 'hey man.''
Yet those two casual words, 'hey man,' would nevertheless resonate with many fans and signal a generational change in mainstream culture.
'In their sleepy, unshaven way, Cheech and Chong constitute a visual affront to the straight world just by walking down Main Street,' a 1978 New York Times review said. 'It's a revolution without danger, however, because, as the movie's popularity shows, this particular revolution has already been won. The true eccentrics are no longer Cheech and Chong but the clean‐shaven nitwits, like the cops in 'Up in Smoke,' who persist in their attempts to uphold repressive traditions.'
Frederick Luis Aldama, a pop and Latino culture scholar who is the Jacob & Frances Sanger Mossiker Chair in the Humanities at the University of Texas, Austin, said in a phone interview that 'if you really distill it, stoner comedy is a great equalizer. It puts the doormat out for everyone to generally enter that place. And it's a reminder for a time and space where you can be yourself, let yourself go.'
Aldama remembers seeing 'Up in Smoke' with his maternal 'abuelita' (grandmother). He remembers her 'laughing uproariously' throughout the film, which made him laugh, too.
It also gave him a sense of pride as a Latino, he said. Marin grew up in East Los Angeles, the son of Mexican American parents; his father was a World War II Navy veteran and a Los Angeles policeman. Chong grew up in Calgary, the son of a Canadian mother with Scottish and Irish roots and a Chinese father.
The comedians, Aldama said, brought elements such as Mexican American lowrider culture into the mainstream, for example, but 'they did it in a way where you weren't asked to judge or laugh at it, but simply enjoy it and laugh with it. And this put a positive spotlight on our communities, our neighborhoods.'
Marin's and Chong's childhoods were separated by more than 1,500 miles, and different circumstances would ultimately bring them together in an unexpected way.
Marin dodged the Vietnam War by moving to Canada. And Chong, who had been a guitarist for Bobby Taylor & the Vancouvers, said he lost his job in Motown.
'I was just trying to get my life back together. And Cheech was trying to live with the fact that he had to live in Canada. And then we met,' said Chong, 86. 'We realized that we had this understanding.'
The seed for their understanding was planted at a Vancouver topless nightclub where Chong was a part-owner and had formed a hippie-burlesque comedy troupe. Marin would join the group as a writer. And then, the duo continued to develop their stoner act even after the troupe folded.
After years of success, the two went their own ways, and they have some frank discussions in the documentary about their relationship.
Asked whether comedy could still be transgressive, Marin says it can, as long as there is an authentic connection between the comedian and the audience.
'It depends upon the right comedy and if it's truthful comedy. It's not the comedy that wants to please everybody. We want to please ourselves. And in doing so, [we] do something that's relevant for the people,' said Marin, who's 78. "I think that will keep happening, absolutely."
But for comedy to succeed today, Chong said, it can't simply repeat what was done in the past.
'We're living, like, in a travelogue,' he said. 'We're no longer in the '60s, the '70s or the '80s or the '90s. We're now. And so, in order to stay relevant, you got to acknowledge what's going on now. Because we're alive and we're still breathing, we can still think about it.'
Asked whether this was really their "last" movie and what would get them together on screen again, Marin said, "Very easy, money!"
"No, we're going to keep hammering until they take the cold, warm bong out of my hand," Chong said, as the two men laughed.
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The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘He wrote five songs about washing dishes!' The lost Woody Guthrie gems rescued by AI
With mass deportations of migrants across America – not to mention reports of people being put in shackles or made to kneel and eat 'like dogs' – Nora Guthrie is disappointed there hasn't been more noise from musicians about the issue. 'I've been out protesting every weekend,' says the 75-year-old daughter of singer-songwriter Woody Guthrie, and founder of the Woody Guthrie Archive. 'And I've found myself asking, 'Where are the songs for us to sing about this?'' In need of a track that meets the moment, she turned to Deportee, a song her father wrote in 1948 in response to a plane crash in California that killed four Americans and 28 Mexican migrant workers, who were being deported. 'A few days later, only the Americans were named and the rest were called 'deportees',' explains Nora's daughter Anna Canoni, who recently succeeded her mother as president of Woody Guthrie Publications, over a joint video call from New York. 'Woody read about it in the New York Times and the same day penned the lyric.' Originally a poem, the song (often subtitled Plane Wreck at Los Gatos) was first popularised by folk singers Martin Hoffman and Pete Seeger and has since been covered by the likes of Bruce Springsteen and Joni Mitchell. Now, though, leaps in AI audio restoration technology mean we can finally hear Guthrie's own long-lost, home-recorded version, and it's striking how powerfully it speaks to the way migrant workers are demonised today. They 'fall like dry leaves to rot on my topsoil', he sings, 'and be called by no name except 'deportees''. Singer Billy Bragg argues that 'When the ICE [US Immigration and Customs Enforcement] are rounding people up in fields, the song could hardly be more relevant.' Initially a single, Deportee also appears on Woody at Home, Vol 1 and 2, a new 22-track treasure trove of Guthrie's final recordings (including 13 previously unheard songs), made at home in 1951 and 1952, just months before he was first hospitalised with the neurodegenerative Huntingdon's disease that led to his death aged 55 in 1967. 'He'd been blacklisted [during the McCarthy era, for activism], so he couldn't perform as much and couldn't get on the radio,' says Nora. 'Huntingdon's was seeping into his body and his mind. The tapes are a last push to get the songs out, because he senses something is wrong.' Guthrie's advocacy for migrant workers and social justice was informed by lived experience. Born into a middle-class family in Okemah, Oklahoma, he was just 14 when the family lost their home and he subsequently lived through the dust bowl, the Great Depression, the second world war and the rise of fascism. 'He had to migrate from Oklahoma to California,' says Bragg. 'He knew what it was like to lose your home, to be dispossessed, to go on the road. The Okies were really no different to those Mexican workers and were just as reviled.' Performing with the slogan 'This machine kills fascists' written on his guitar, Guthrie packed his seminal 1940 debut Dust Bowl Ballads with what Anna calls 'hard-hitting songs for hard-hit people'. He penned his most famous anthem, This Land Is Your Land – a new version of which opens Woody At Home with extra verses – after a road trip, as the lyric says, 'from California to the New York island'. 'Woody wrote it because he was really pissed off with hearing Irving Berlin's God Bless America on every jukebox,' says Bragg. 'It annoyed the shit out of him. I've actually seen the original manuscript for the song and crossed out at the top is Woody's original title, God Blessed America for You and Me, which I think gives him claim to be an alternative songwriter, the archetypal punk rocker.' Between the early 1930s and the 1950s, Guthrie penned an astonishing 3,000 songs, recording more than 700 of them. The Woody at Home recordings were made at his family's rented apartment in Beach Haven, Brooklyn, on a primitive machine given to him by his publisher with a view to selling the songs to other artists. With his wife out working, the increasingly poorly singer somehow managed to record 32 reels of tape while minding three kids. Sounds of knocks on doors, and even Nora as a toddler, appear on the tapes along with conversational messages. 'He'd write on the couch with the kids jumping on his head,' Anna says. 'He'd write on gift wrappers or paper towels. We've found some of Woody's most beautiful quotes in correspondence, like in a 1948 letter to [folk music champion] Alan Lomax, 'A folk song is what's wrong and how to fix it.' Sometimes he only had time for a title. Everything was coming out so quickly he had to get it down.' Woody at Home contains previously unheard songs about racism (Buoy Bells From Trenton), fascism (I'm a Child Ta Fight) and corruption (Innocent Man) but also showcases the breadth of Guthrie's canon. There are songs about love, Jesus Christ, atoms … even Albert Einstein, whom he once met and took a train with. It tickles Nora that her father wrote 'no less than five songs about washing dishes'. Guthrie wrote Old Man Trump, also known as Beach Haven Race Hate, about their landlord, Fred Trump – father of Donald – and his segregative housing policies. Woody at Home premieres another song about him, Backdoor Bum and the Big Landlord. 'It's really the story of how the guy who has everything gives nothing and the guy who has nothing gives everything,' says Nora. 'My favourite bit is when the landlord gets to heaven laden with gold. They send him to hell and he goes, 'Let me see your manager. I'm gonna buy this place and kick you out.' The arrogance and entitlement are astonishing, but it clearly defines someone we all know. We lived in Trump buildings. We know who they are.' The family moved to Queens where, when Nora was 11, she answered the door to an inquisitive 19-year-old singer-songwriter called Robert Zimmerman. The future Bob Dylan had read Guthrie's autobiography, Bound for Glory. 'I was a little upset because I was watching American Bandstand and had to answer the door,' she chuckles. 'There was this guy standing there who looked dusty and weird. I slammed the door and ran back to American Bandstand. But he kept on knocking.' The 2024 Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown dramatises the iconic 1961 meetings between the teenage future legend and his hospitalised, dying idol. Nora loves the film, but points out: 'My father wasn't in a room on his own like in the movie. Woody was on a ward with 40 patients, in a psychiatric hospital because there were no wards for people with Huntingdon's at the time. There was a sunroom to the side where Bob would meet him, take him pens and cigarettes. My memory is that Bob would not only sing his songs for Woody' – Dylan subsequently recorded a heartfelt tribute, Song to Woody – 'but that he'd also sing my father's own songs to him. I can't emphasise enough how kind Bob was, but he understood that Woody needed to hear what he'd achieved.' By then, Guthrie was very ill. 'Because of Huntingdon's I didn't have a dad in the traditional sense people talk about,' Nora says with a sigh. 'He couldn't really talk or have long conversations like we're having now. We couldn't have physical contact because with Huntingdon's your body's always moving. You'd have to hold his arms back so you could hug him. If we ever went out to a restaurant people would look at us like he was drunk and that hurt.' Nora became Woody's carer and, in her tireless curation of his legacy, has been caring for her father ever since. 'That happened accidentally,' she says, explaining how she'd spent 10 years as a professional dancer when – in 1991 – Guthrie's retiring manager called her in to sort through boxes of his stuff. 'One of the first things I pulled out was a letter from John Lennon,' she says, fetching the framed letter, sent to the family in 1975, for me to see. It reads: 'Woody lives and I'm glad.' The next find was the original lyrics for This Land Is Your Land. 'It was a treasure trove.' From which there is more to come. His descendants hope to spark today's young songwriters – and protesters – in the way Guthrie did for Dylan, Springsteen and countless others. 'I see us as the coal holders,' says Anna. 'We keep Woody's ember burning so that whenever someone wants to ignite the fire in them, Woody is hot and ready.' Deportee (Woody's Home Tape) is available now on streaming services. Woody At Home, Vol 1 and 2 is released on Shamus Records on 14 August


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Take the near-impossible quiz that was used to determine if applicants at Vogue were fit for the job
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In June, Wintour told staffers that she will be stepping down from her role as Vogue's editor-in-chief. She will continue to hold her position as Condé Nast's global chief content officer and global editorial director at Vogue, and the new head of editorial content will report directly to her. As chief content officer, Wintour oversees every brand globally, including Wired, Vanity Fair, GQ, AD, Condé Nast Traveler, Glamour, Bon Appetit, Tatler, World of Interiors and Allure.


Daily Record
3 days ago
- Daily Record
Game of Thrones star joins 'promising' new historical BBC drama opposite James Norton
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