HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Stoner Flicks Have Slowly Seeped Into Modern Culture
Pubdate: Mon, 11 Aug 2008
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun
Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Authors: Ben Carrozza, and Leah Collins, Canwest News Service
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

STONER FLICKS HAVE SLOWLY SEEPED INTO MODERN CULTURE

Scoring Big At The Box Office, Pot-Friendly Films Have Become Mainstream

With pot-friendly flicks often scoring huge at the box office -- and 
earning bags of pop culture credibility -- stoners are almost 
mainstream. In honour of pot-action comedy Pineapple Express, we're 
taking a look at genre-defining stoner flicks.

How High (2001)

Premise: When two pot-smoking, underachieving high school students 
(Wu Tang's Method Man and Redman) fertilize a crop of marijuana with 
their dead friend's ashes, his ghost helps them score a scholarship to Harvard.

Why it's awesome: Hey, who hasn't wanted to use the ashes of a dead 
friend for fertilizer? While not the funniest or most creative of 
stoner flicks, How High manages to get belly laughs out of us every 
time. Maybe it's the easy comedy chops of Method Man and Redman, 
maybe it's Fred Willard (who's funny in everything) or maybe it's 
that somewhere down the line, sixth U.S. President John Quincy Adams' 
ashes get toked -- though we can't remember why, for some reason.

Rating: 1 bong hit out of 5

Reefer Madness (1936)

Premise: A few seemingly harmless "marihuana" cigarettes lead a bunch 
of young innocents into a sordid, drug-crazed world of murder, rape, 
insanity and really-fast piano solos.

Why it's awesome: Originally intended to scare people from fooling 
with the demon weed, this church-funded flick didn't get an audience 
until the '70s when it became a regular midnight-movie favourite 
among pot-head college students (read: your parents).Nothing beats 
campy, old-timey propaganda.

Rating: 2 bong hits out of 5

Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back (2001)

Premise: When a film, based on a comic book, based on them, is being 
made without their permission, friendly neighbourhood pot dealers Jay 
(Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Kevin Smith) head to Hollywood to stop 
it or, at least, "get (their) motherf--king movie cheque."

Why it's awesome: Sure, Jay and Silent Bob have been in all those 
Kevin Smith films, but only this one can say it's a stoner flick. The 
two Clerks movies, Mallrats and Chasing Amy were about relationships 
and friendships and growing up, while Dogma was about religion and 
faith. J&SBSB channels the best of classic trips from Cheech & Chong 
and mixes it with some pinches from your "cool" older cousin's '70s 
and '80s comic book and VHS tape collection. Throw in a cameo by Luke 
Skywalker/Mark Hamill, a classic Will Ferrell appearance as an 
over-the-top wildlife marshal and a performance by Morris Day and the 
Time, and you've got a sweet trip for the ages.

Rating: 3 bong hits out of 5

Friday (1995)

Premise: Two dudes from South Central Los Angeles (Ice Cube and Chris 
Tucker) get mixed up in various shenanigans and misunderstandings 
over the course of one Friday.

Why it's awesome: Tightly written and good-natured, Friday is like a 
body buzz for the soul. Full of infinitely quotable lines, hilarious 
situations and memorable characters, the film maintains a perfect 
pace and doesn't overindulge in either preaching (stop smoking pot 
and grow up) or slacking (quitting pot and growing up is for The Man).

Rating: 3.5 bong hits out of 5

The Big Lebowski (1998)

Premise: Jeff "The Dude" Lebowski was just a dude -- content to a 
life of bowling with pals and doing a 'J' from time to time. But when 
some thugs mistake him for a millionaire (that would be the Big 
Lebowski), he winds up involved in a complicated plot involving 
possible kidnappings, nihilists, a porn mogul and a trippy bowling 
dream sequence.

Why it's awesome: The Big Lebowski isn't a stoner movie in the most 
obvious sense, but The Dude, Jeff Lebowski (though he never had much 
use for that handle himself), is sort of your archetypal aging 
pothead. He breathes stoned, drives stoned, bowls stoned, mixes white 
Russians stoned, solves complicated Raymond Chandler-esque mysteries 
stoned. And regardless of which genre you drop it in, this Coen 
Brothers flick is a modern classic -- full of memorable characters 
and dialogue.

Rating: 4 bong hits out of 5

Dazed and Confused (1993)

Premise: The highs and lows of several Texas highschool students are 
seen over the course of one day. (May 28, 1976, to be exact.)

Why it's awesome: Director Richard Linklater's seminal '90s look back 
at the '70s featured so many future stars (Matthew McConaughey, Ben 
Affleck, Milla Jovovich, Parker Posey and Adam Goldberg, to name a 
few) it was just silly. It also boasts a loosely structured and 
well-paced collection of scenes that followed an ensemble of 
pot-friendly characters through various high school and adolescent 
trials and epiphanies. It may sound like a total bummer, but it's movie gold.

Rating: 4 bong hits out of 5

Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle (2004)

Premise: After a rough day, buddies Harold and Kumar decide to unwind 
by getting "blitzed out of their skulls." A deep hunger for munchies 
follows, one that can only be satisfied by the bite-sized, 
four-cornered burgers of White Castle. Unfortunately, their local 
franchise has been bought out by "Burger Shack," and the guys must 
embark on an epic quest for this paragon of grilled meats.

Why it's awesome: It's basically your by-the-book stoner/buddy movie: 
two dudes on a quest, who happen to do exceptionally stupid (and 
therefore, funny) things along the way because they're, well, high. 
But Harold and Kumar is as much a social satire as anything else -- 
which is impressive given all the smoke.

Rating: 4 bong hits out of 5

Up in Smoke (1978)

Premise: In their classic first film together, Cheech Marin and Tommy 
Chong play two potheads who unknowingly smuggle a van -- made 
entirely of cannabis -- from Mexico to L.A., enjoying adventures (and 
the munchies) along the way.

Why it's awesome: Cheech and Chong basically created the stoner movie 
genre and Up in Smoke was their first crack at it. Its mix of (then 
taboo) drug humour, (then taboo) sex humour, and (then taboo) 
minority-centric humour. An anti-establishment undercurrent made the 
film -- like their stand-up shows and comedy albums before it -- an 
instant underground classic. This was ground zero for all the typical 
wacky one-night adventures, hilarious black holes of stoner logic, 
insanely-intricate drug paraphernalia, munchies and other stoner 
flick cliches that have come since.

Rating: 4.5 bong hits out of 5

Half Baked (1998)

Premise: A crew of stoners, led by Dave Chapelle, needs to raise bail 
for a pal who's been tossed into prison for feeding a lethal dose of 
munchies to a diabetic horse. Their plan for raising the cash: Start 
selling medicinal marijuana swiped from Chapelle's big pharma bosses. 
But when drug-lord Sampson Simpson finds out these guys are putting 
him out of business, he sends in the toughs.

Why it's awesome: Like any good stoner movie, you're expected to 
suspend your disbelief like you've been smoking what Simpson's been 
dealing. Sure, the plot doesn't have much going for it. Yeah, that's 
totally Toronto's Yonge and Dundas Square subbing in for NYC. And 
maybe Jerry Garcia couldn't actually jump out of a pouch and knock a 
guy out with his guitar. But it's all hilariously absurd -- and a 
must for anyone who loved The Chappelle Show.

Rating: 5 bong hits out of 5
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