Up In Smoke Internet Archive - Cheech And Chong

Search "Cheech and Chong Up in Smoke" on the Archive, and you’ll find multiple versions: a grainy, VHS-rip complete with tracking lines and 1980s TV commercials; a cleaner, DVD-era transfer; and even a rare, uncut “director’s” version that includes improvisational scenes cut from the theatrical release. The presence of Up in Smoke on the Internet Archive speaks to a larger mission: preserving media that mainstream gatekeepers often neglect. While major studios focus on blockbuster franchises and 4K restorations of The Godfather , cult classics with a devoted but niche audience risk becoming "orphaned works"—films with unclear or contested ownership.

“Hey, man, am I driving okay?” “I think we’re parked, man.” cheech and chong up in smoke internet archive

So fire up a browser (and whatever else you like), search for “Cheech and Chong Internet Archive,” and take a trip back to 1978. The film may be about getting high, but its preservation on the Archive is about something deeper: ensuring that the laughter, the rebellion, and the sheer absurdity of two guys named Pedro and Man are never, ever deleted. Search "Cheech and Chong Up in Smoke" on

In the pantheon of stoner cinema, there is the Big Bang, and then there is everything else. That Big Bang occurred in 1978 with the release of Up in Smoke , the debut film from comedians Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong. What started as a low-budget, $2 million lark became a sleeper hit, grossing over $44 million and launching a genre. Nearly five decades later, the film remains a cultural touchstone—a time capsule of post-Vietnam, pre-Reagan America, where cheap weed, van art, and a disdain for authority ruled the day. “Hey, man, am I driving okay