Chicago Sun-Times, 12/21/2001, p.32, "...If you like stoner comedies and Cheech & Chong, HOW HIGH will feel like home....Method Man and Redman lend a certain charm to this film....The pair exudes humor..."
Entertainment Weekly, 01/04/2002, p.48, "...Enough cheery mockery to amuse even non-tokers..."
Variety, 12/24/2001, p.21, "...Frequently amusing....Dylan maintains a consistent level of a swaggering, semi-anarchic silliness..."
Theatrical release: December 21, 2001
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85:1
Audio:
DTS Surround 5.1 - English
Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes
Outtakes
Audio Comentary - 1. Method Man and Redman - Stars
Making-of - 1. "BET Presents the Making of HOW HIGH"
Music Video
Trailers
Interactive Features:
Scene Access
Interactive Game - 1. Hide the Stash
Interactive Menus
Text/Photo Gallery:
Production Notes
HOW HIGH is a raucous comedy about two underachieving potheads from the projects, Cyrus and Jamal (rappers Method Man and Redman), who, through bizarre circumstances, end up attending Harvard University. It all begins when Cyrus' friend Ivory dies, and Cyrus uses his ashes as fertilizer to grow marijuana. When the two are taking their college entrance exams, Jamal explains his philosophy: Study high. Take the test high. Get high scores. Smoking Cyrus' magical weed somehow summons the ghost of the brainy Ivory, who gives them all the answers to the exam. They are recruited by Chancellor Huntley (Fred Willard) to attend Harvard, where they use the weed to continue their academic success, but thanks to the machinations of the uptight Dean Cain (Obba Babatunde), they soon find themselves without Ivory's help, and are forced to maintain their scholarship grades on their own. The plot reaches its peak of comic ludicrousness when the hapless duo attempts to dig up and smoke the remains of John Quincy Adams. HOW HIGH features Mike Epps, Tracy Morgan, and Spalding Gray in supporting roles. The film is scabrously funny and refreshingly free of logic, reason, and political correctness.