Looking back at the high-spirited (and highly smokey) world of 1981, Cheech & Chong's Nice Dreams
While it may not have the historical importance of their debut, Nice Dreams stands as a testament to Cheech and Chong's unique chemistry. It is a film that operates on its own logic—a world where selling marijuana ice cream is a noble profession, the bad guys are psychedelic turncoats, and the only thing that matters is keeping the dream alive. Cheech And Chong Nice Dreams
: Their wealth is short-lived. Chong unwittingly exchanges their millions for a worthless bank check from a mental patient named Howie (played by Paul Reubens The Antagonist : Returning from Up in Smoke Sergeant Stedenko Looking back at the high-spirited (and highly smokey)
Michael Winslow: Delivering a classic Jimi Hendrix impression. Chong unwittingly exchanges their millions for a worthless
"Cheech and Chong's Nice Dreams" (1981) is the third in the series of the iconic stoner duo's films, and it’s arguably their most surreal, freewheeling, and thematically consistent entry. While Up in Smoke is the classic introduction and Next Movie is chaotic, Nice Dreams is the one where the pair fully commit to a bizarre, dream-logic odyssey that feels less like a traditional plot and more like a long, hilarious, sun-scorched hallucination.