Yes, a lizard.
Nice Dreams (1981) is the third feature film from the counterculture comedy duo Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong, cementing their status as the definitive cinematic voices of stoner culture. Released by Columbia Pictures and directed by Tommy Chong, the film followed the massive commercial success of Up in Smoke (1978) and Cheech and Chong's Next Movie (1980). Nice Dreams captures the duo at the peak of their box-office power, blending episodic, surreal humor with a satirical take on early 1980s American culture. The Plot: From Ice Cream to Excess Cheech And Chong Nice Dreams
Cheech and Chong play ice cream vendors selling a secret strain of marijuana that accidentally turns people into Notable Cameos: Paul Reubens Yes, a lizard
Cheech and Chong are no longer struggling musicians or day laborers. They've pivoted to a surprisingly successful career: . Their beat-up, tinkling truck roams the beaches of Los Angeles. But their "Good humor" comes in little frozen cups of soft-serve that also happen to be laced with a massive dose of pharmaceutical-grade THC. Nice Dreams captures the duo at the peak
Nice Dreams solidified the duo’s brand of humor, which was deeply rooted in the hippie and free-love era. It was a time when the counterculture was moving from the fringes into the mainstream, and Cheech and Chong were leading the charge.
Yes, a lizard.
Nice Dreams (1981) is the third feature film from the counterculture comedy duo Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong, cementing their status as the definitive cinematic voices of stoner culture. Released by Columbia Pictures and directed by Tommy Chong, the film followed the massive commercial success of Up in Smoke (1978) and Cheech and Chong's Next Movie (1980). Nice Dreams captures the duo at the peak of their box-office power, blending episodic, surreal humor with a satirical take on early 1980s American culture. The Plot: From Ice Cream to Excess
Cheech and Chong play ice cream vendors selling a secret strain of marijuana that accidentally turns people into Notable Cameos: Paul Reubens
Cheech and Chong are no longer struggling musicians or day laborers. They've pivoted to a surprisingly successful career: . Their beat-up, tinkling truck roams the beaches of Los Angeles. But their "Good humor" comes in little frozen cups of soft-serve that also happen to be laced with a massive dose of pharmaceutical-grade THC.
Nice Dreams solidified the duo’s brand of humor, which was deeply rooted in the hippie and free-love era. It was a time when the counterculture was moving from the fringes into the mainstream, and Cheech and Chong were leading the charge.