Sammy & Sherlock Can’t Get AnyCassandra Paras is the lead actress in “Sammy & Sherlock Can’t Get Any,” playing the role of SammyBy Lawrence ZoellerDirector, Sammy &...
Adriana M. Barraza / WENN.comOliver Stone: “I believe the grass is God’s gift"Film director Oliver Stone told High Times he’s considering becoming part of California’s medical…
Gone To PotMakers of the upcoming cannabis movie, Gone To Pot—a comedy about two hustlers who inherit a medical marijuana dispensary— have announced a free video contest in…
High SchoolHigh school buddies Matt Bush and Sean Marquette have a problem: beating the school’s new zero tolerance drug test. So they get the whole school stoned.A film being…
What sounds fairly ordinary plays for big laughs, with Day delivering most of them. Known for his high-pitched chatterbox character on It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Day’s kinetic energy is infectious in Horrible Bosses; he’s practically worth the price of admission.
Paul Rudd specializes in playing doofuses, so acting the idiot brother in Jesse Peretz’s stoner comedy is hardly a stretch. His Ned is a hippie savant who changes the world around him by being compulsively truthful.
Adam and his therapist Katherine (Anna Kendrick) provide the romantic angle. As his condition worsens, they becomes more attached. Will he pull through and if so will Adam and Katherine live happily ever after?
Before he became the drug-addled Dr. Gonzo, Hunter S. Thompson simply drank and smoked cigarettes like most writers. This is the Thompson that Johnny Depp portrays in The Rum Diary
Like Friday After Next, the third Harold & Kumar installment is a Christmas movie. And just like Friday After Next, Todd Strauss-Schhulson’s A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas is a decidely mixed holiday bag.
While Chris is away, Briggs menaces Kate, but it’s Sebastian who has eyes for the blonded beauty. In Panama, they score the loot and some coke to boot. However, Chris doesn’t want the blow (clearly Briggs, who snorts lines, does) and threatens to toss it overboard
Miss Bala really should be named Miss Baja, the pageant that takes place during Gerardo Naranjo’s Mexican action flick. Stephanie Sigman stars as an aspiring beauty queen who’s abducted by a vicious drug gang.
Welcome To DopelandTalk about timely. Welcome To Dopeland, a small, weird, dark, quirky independent comedy containing some great big ideas, examines the theme of how corporate…