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Saturday, March 16, 2024
SXSW Cheech and Chong's Last Movie Q&A
Tuesday, March 12, 2024
Reviews of Cheech and Chong's Last Movie
Today, Cheech and Chong's Last Movie premiered at SXSW in Austin, Texas. Here's a collection of reviews.
Exhaustive account of the comic pair's career while doubling as a road-trip comedy.
The filmmaker has uncovered a wealth of vintage clips and archival footage, including priceless scenes of the pair being interviewed at the Playboy Mansion, complete with nude women swimming in the grotto behind them
They bitterly recount how Adler screwed them over and that they made only $2,000 and a tape recorder for the film. Despite that, they’re still on cordial terms with Adler, who briefly shows up in the film when they amusingly spot him walking in the desert and give him a ride.
Their low-key chemistry and obvious affection for each other despite their past issues are still very much on display, delivering a nostalgic kick that you don’t even have to be high to enjoy.
The two remember different versions of the same events, and depending on who’s telling the story, the other half is inevitably portrayed as the malefactor.
“Last Movie” spends most of its runtime recounting in painstaking detail the entire Cheech and Chong history
Some of the footage feels redundant or unnecessary.
Tommy betrays plenty of egotism on his part when he insists he needed full creative control with every successive film and Cheech never quite got over being marginalized in the act.
Grade: B-
Though they don’t come to a concrete agreement on what happened that led to their professional separation, they ultimately agree to not focus on the unimportant issue, and that their friendship prevails.
5 out of 5, man
Clocking in around 2 hours, Cheech and Chong’s Last Movie is a tad lengthy with its very detailed timeline, but it held the audience’s attention anyway.
I wish the film spent less runtime on a goofy script and more on creativity and external sources explaining their lasting impact on film and cannabis culture.
I wished that “Last Movie” simply had more comedy material in it—the balance is sometimes off between how Cheech & Chong got famous when the film could have used a little more why. They were ahead of their time in SO many ways, comedically and culturally, which makes the fact that “Last Movie” feels stuck in the ‘70s and ‘80s all the more disappointing.
From the editors:
After all these years C&C won't fess up and tell the whole truth regarding the breakup and how their wives were involved.
Watch Cheech and Chong's Last Movie Red Carpet
Cheech and Chong make Surprise Appearance at Austin Club
Yesterday, Cheech and Chong made a surprise appearance at Austin's C-Boy's Heart and Soul club. They are promoting Cheech and Chong's Last Movie
With Chong on guitar, Cheech sang Mexican Americans.
They were at the club for five minutes.
The club gave a tease that Cheech and Chong would be there last night.
Update: Interview with Cheech and Chong at SXSW
Today, The Hollywood Reporter ran a piece on Cheech and Chong's Last Movie, a documentary on Cheech and Chong premiering this week at the SXSW festival in Austin, Texas.
Here are some highlights:
- Director David Bushell, whose producing credits include Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Dallas Buyers Club, initially approached Marin and Chong with an idea for a narrative feature. When that reunion film didn’t pan out, Bushell has a realization: “No one had made the definitive documentary.”
- Bushell counts 9,000 high-res images collected for the doc. He remembers, “We found stuff in someone’s storage locker that was [an interview] from the late 70s on 16-millimeter film all in garbage bags.” There are other revealing longform interviews with Playboy in the ’80s and one with a pre-Fox News but equally mustached Geraldo Rivera.
- Production filmed Marin and Chong driving through the desert in a vintage car two hours outside of Los Angeles near Joshua Tree National Park. Idea was “to poke them with a fork, together, and get something that is funny, or get something that’s emotional, or gets something that’s real.”
- Cheech and Tommy discuss their break-ups in great detail. “The most important thing for me, that I got out of this process, is that everybody got to say their piece, and nobody died.”
- Tommy didn't want an advanced screening of the doc because he knew he would want to make changes.
Saturday, March 09, 2024
Behind the Cheech and Chong Last Movie Premiere at SXSW
Today, The Hollywood Reporter ran a piece on Cheech and Chong's Last Movie, a documentary on Cheech and Chong premiering this week at the SXSW festival in Austin, Texas.
Here are some highlights:
- Director David Bushell, whose producing credits include Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Dallas Buyers Club, initially approached Marin and Chong with an idea for a narrative feature. When that reunion film didn’t pan out, Bushell has a realization: “No one had made the definitive documentary.”
- Bushell counts 9,000 high-res images collected for the doc. He remembers, “We found stuff in someone’s storage locker that was [an interview] from the late 70s on 16-millimeter film all in garbage bags.” There are other revealing longform interviews with Playboy in the ’80s and one with a pre-Fox News but equally mustached Geraldo Rivera.
- Production filmed Marin and Chong driving through the desert in a vintage car two hours outside of Los Angeles near Joshua Tree National Park. Idea was “to poke them with a fork, together, and get something that is funny, or get something that’s emotional, or gets something that’s real.”
- Cheech and Tommy discuss their break-ups in great detail. “The most important thing for me, that I got out of this process, is that everybody got to say their piece, and nobody died.”
- Tommy didn't want an advanced screening of the doc because he knew he would want to make changes.