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Published On: Apr 14, 2004 07:30 AM
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Up in Smoke!
No - it's not another article about politics.
Cheryll & I saw one of them a number of years ago. At that time he promised
they we're getting back together - now they finally are!! Read on... (link at
bottom of story, as usual)
Cheech and Chong
look for another hit
Comedy duo reuniting for another
movie

Cheech (right) and Chong's
heyday was in the 1970s, when the duo's drug-humored albums and movies had great
success. The duo's last movie was 1984's "The Corsican Brothers."
LOS ANGELES, California
(Hollywood Reporter) -- Think the Cheech & Chong film franchise ended with
1984's "Cheech & Chong's The Corsican Brothers?" Think again.
The comedy duo is reuniting after 20
years for a new feature set up at New Line Cinema that will catch up with Cheech
Marin and Tommy Chong's wacky stoner personas in the present day.
The untitled project is in the early
stages of development at New Line. Marin and Chong already have worked out a
story line and will pen the script along with an additional writer to be
recruited by New Line. Robbi Chong, one of Chong's daughters, will serve as a
producer on the project. "The world is
ripe and ready for a new Cheech & Chong movie, especially considering they
have a whole new generation of fans out there," said New Line senior VP
production Kent Alterman, who is overseeing the project alongside New Line
production president Toby Emmerich. "They came in and told us that they're ready
to do something again, which we think is a great idea."
New Line is a division of AOL Time
Warner, as is CNN.com. After parting
company in the mid-1980s, Marin and Chong started talking about working together
again about a year ago when they realized that there was a lot of Cheech &
Chong-related merchandise being sold -- particularly through the Internet --
that they weren't profiting from at all.
The two started talking with Marin's
manager, Power Entertainment CEO David Goldman (who now also represents Chong),
about pursuing a licensing deal. At the same time, Chong's daughters, Robbi and
Rae Dawn Chong, had written a script for a feature that included roles for two
Cheech & Chong-esque characters.
That got them thinking about the
prospect of reuniting onscreen (though the Chong sisters' script is not the
basis for the New Line project), and they quickly realized that they were still
very much in sync as writers and performers.
'It's so intuitive for
us'

1978's "Up in Smoke" cost
about $1 million to make and grossed more than $40 million.
Marin, who is busy preparing for the start of
production on his new Fox sitcom "The Ortegas," said the two have been
approached many times over the years to reunite, but the timing never felt
right. After their partnership broke up, Marin maintained a laser-like focus on
establishing himself as a successful actor in his own right.
"The time finally came where I felt I
had distanced myself enough from the old Cheech persona; people have accepted me
as an actor," said Marin, who starred opposite Don Johnson in the CBS cop show
"Nash Bridges" from 1996-2001. "I think Tommy and I have a better understanding
of each other now, too. Creating with him again is the easiest thing I've ever
done. It's so intuitive for us." Chong,
who most recently has been seen in a recurring role on Fox's "That '70s Show,"
echoed Marin's sentiments. "It feels so
good," he said. "When you've been together with someone as long as we were
together, there's a oneness that can't be broken."
New Line was their first stop, Marin
said, given the studio's track record with comedy franchises like "Austin
Powers." Chong credited Marin with
having the foresight to allow the anticipation for a Cheech & Chong reunion
to build over the years, even as the best of their films and albums achieved
comedy-legend status. "You know me -- if
anybody wanted me to be in a movie with dope in it, I'm there," Chong joked.
"But Cheech really protected the image. Those characters have been untouched,
and now it's so fun to be back under that classic umbrella."
'We've seen our
audience grow and grow' The six
Cheech & Chong features released between 1978 and 1984 grossed about $150
million domestically. Goldman, who brokered the deal with New Line along with
attorney Stan Coleman, called the new feature project "a monumental moment in
comedy history that reunites the most successful comedy team since Martin and
Lewis." Marin said that they are even
considering doing a live performance to promote the movie, which is expected to
shoot next year during Marin's hiatus from "The Ortegas."
For the pair who first hooked up in 1968
in Vancouver -- when the Canadian-born Chong was running an improv theater group
out of a topless bar -- the staying power of their older material, especially
the success of the DVD release of the first Cheech & Chong flick, 1978's "Up
in Smoke," has been gratifying. "We've
seen our audience grow and grow, even in the 20 years since we stopped creating
stuff," Marin said. "The albums and the movies have become a rite of passage for
each generation as they grow up." Chong
noted that a little stoner humor from the masters of the form should be a
welcome tonic for the turbulent post-September 11 era.
"This is going to be just what
everyone's been needing," Chong said. " 'Up in Smoke' sort of put the '60s in
perspective. Now we need to put the '90s and 2000s in perspective and tell
everyone that you can still laugh a little."
Cheech and Chong Web
site
Posted: Wed - July 23, 2003 at 11:40 AM
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