by Susan Ellis
n some ways, Half Baked reads like a recipe for disaster. This
comedy devoted to marijuana is being produced by the person who
brought you Adam Sandlers golfing flop Happy Gilmore and is being
directed by the person who helmed CB4, the site of comedian Chris
Rocks near-death experience.
That aside, Half Baked does have some things going for it not
the least of which is a built-in audience consisting of the legions
of Americas stoners. But also, its got Dave Chappelle, the young
comedian who, playing a young comedian, proved to be a scene stealer
in the remake of The Nutty Professor. Plus, there are Saturday
Night Live cast member Jim Breuer (aka Goat Boy) making his motion-picture
debut as a Deadhead, and the films series of cameos, including
Jon Stewart as the Enhancement Smoker and Willie Nelson as the
You Shoulda Been There Smoker.
In a recent interview with Breuer and Chappelle, Breuer admitted
that hes not too worried about embarrassing himself in Half Baked
(hes got the show to fall back on, after all). In fact, he says
he found making the movie so swell that he claims things can only
go downhill from here. Its like I just dated Miss
America my first date, he says. Now where do I go? But for
Chappelle, who co-wrote the movie with Neal Brennan, things are
just getting started. Even before the films release, Chappelle
has been garnering interest as a writer and is now working on
his next screenplay. What is it about? Oh, thats a surprise,
he says. But it should be equally, if not more, inflammatory.

Counter-clockwise from bottom left: Dave Chapelle, Jim Breuer,
Harland Williams, Guillermo Diaz of Half Baked.
Tell me about the movie.
Jim Breuer: What do you want to know about it?
What is it about?
J.B.: Dave, do you care to elaborate?
Dave Chappelle: Its about marijuana, pretty much. Its a movie
about four friends who like to indulge in their favorite illegal
substance, which is marijuana. One of them gets in a lot of trouble.
J.B.: By accident.
D.C.: So they decide, to get him out of trouble, theyre going
to sell pot that they steal from a laboratory (theyre studying
it for medicinal purposes) to raise his bail. Thats the movie.
Thats the very short of it.
J.B.: Thats how everything gets kick-started.
Where did the idea for the movie come from?
D.C.: In New York City, they have services where people deliver
marijuana like Dominos. You look at guys like that, who are going
pretty much into everyones apartment they go to peoples apartments
in Harlem, peoples apartments on Park Avenue. These are the guys
who know the subculture like the back of their hands.
So from
that idea, that spawned into a movie.
Plus, you have to think that more people smoke marijuana now
than ever. So its fertile ground for comedy. Its something that
a lot of people can relate to; whether they smoke it or not, they
know somebody who does.
How long did it take to write the movie?
D.C.: Three nights and 40 arguments. Me and my writing partner
Neal Brennan, we talked about it forever and then ended up writing
it in three nights.
Did you have to do any kind of research?
D.C.: Well, yeah, sure (laughs).
J.B.: Actually, I did honest research. I rented all these Deadhead
tapes because I wanted to do a particular character. I just couldnt
pinpoint what I wanted to do. Theres this one guy I saw at a
Dead concert who was just the happiest- go-lucky guy, had a little
feather in his ear and he just had a smile from ear to ear. Guards
were yelling at him, [but] he just didnt care as long as he was
there listening to music and having a good time. Thats all that
counted in this guys world. I thought he was hilarious.
As far as the movie goes, were you looking for a Cheech and Chong
thing?
D.C.: Have you ever seen or heard of a movie called Trainspotting?
[Its] like a guide to this guys world who is a heroin addict,
which has to be a drama. Heroin, everything around it just seems
dark and shady. On the other hand, pot is just a sillier kind
of thing.
J.B.: You think giggling and you think eating.
D.C.: You think of pot and a million jokes come to mind if youre
a comedian. It was just something that let you do all those crazy
jokes. Ive never seen a Cheech and Chong movie.
Tell me about making the movie.
D.C.: It was a lot of hard work. We would work 15-hour days. We
would get the shot list in the morning and every day we would
be like, This is impossible. And every day wed do the impossible.
But it was good. It had a good crew and cast. Where that could
have been like a very tense, rough situation, it was fun to be
there 15 hours a day. Whether the camera was running or not, we
were always laughing, we were always joking.
You have a lot of cameos in the movie; tell me how you convinced
them to appear.
D.C.: It wasnt hard. I just asked them.
Is there anybody you asked who refused?
D.C.: Harrison Ford.
For real?
D.C.: Yeah, for real.
And did he give you a reason?
D.C.: No (laughs). n
Half Baked opens Friday.