Toby Goodshank Original Art 2025

Tag: movies

  • Day Off with my Boy

    Day Off with my Boy

    A day brought to you by Miss Lil, my sweet and beautiful mother. I remember our day-off-from-school tradition, Mom, running errands together, buying a book at our corner bookstore in Danbury right next to future Walmart. We would have lunch, talk, and simply be together. Those were our special days.

    James and I had our day and kept the tradition alive. We went to the mall, stopped at Round 1, played our video games and coin pushers, and then faced off in air hockey. I eked out a win, 7 to 6. He was annoyed, but come on, give a middle-aged dad something. 😊

    We wandered the mall afterward and grabbed coffee at Barnes & Noble. The smell of books brought me right back to those afternoons with you. I still have my laminated Waldenbooks gift card. My fantasy books back then were five dollars, and you were always happy to get me one.

    I went looking for an Ethiopian Bible, of course I did, but they didn’t have one. We kept walking. On Level One, James found a video game for the Switch. I asked if he would always remember this day. He said yes without hesitation.

    It’s hard sometimes, because as much as I want to, I’ve forgotten so much. You start to feel like you’re losing the person or that you didn’t pay enough attention. But it’s just the way of being human—to forget. I’ve come to trust that when I die, it will all return: the joyous, wonderful memories, every detail. So I don’t sweat it anymore.

    I always think of that scene at the end of A.I. when the boy finally gets to spend a perfect last day with his mother. It hits harder now than ever before. He just wanted that one sacred day where he was the beloved son, being together and basking in her light.

    We headed to Buffalo Wild Wings next. They seated us like cattle waiting at the trough. I get annoyed being treated that way and rage quietly, but I stayed put; it was fine. Our waitress was clearly fighting battles greater than my imagined societal rules, so I let it go. Fifteen quick wings before the movie—spicy garlic and our family staple, salt and vinegar dry rub. They forgot our veggies, but we got them in the end. I wasn’t about to forgo included accoutrements. I am my mother’s son.

    Then came our main event, Tron: Ares at the Southbury Movie Theater, the last great local cinema around. It’s a throwback to the golden age: quiet, clean, and no nonsense. The elderly man who takes the tickets will take them until his body fails.

    I was happy to see only a handful of people in the audience, and the seats were perfectly cozy. I said, “Aren’t these seats amazing compared to when I was a kid?” James smirked, “You mean when they were wooden seats?” “No,” I said, “I’m not that old.” He laughed and said it was something Mima once said, and I told him that made sense.

    Back then our theater seats were close and stiff, with no recline, no heat. We were practically on top of one another. You had to pick your spot carefully and pray there weren’t disruptive kids in the row behind you kicking you in the back.

    We expected a complete train wreck of a movie based on a few YouTube titles, but we didn’t watch them. As Frank Costanza would say, “I like to go in fresh!” And I did. It turned out to be a fun, surprising romp through the digital world brought to life by The Dude himself, Jeff Bridges, the spectral father of 80s neon creation.

    On the drive home, we talked about the movie. I’m always struck by how similarly we think. My son is a digital reflection of me, thankfully better in every way and still uniquely himself. People say you shouldn’t be a fan of your own children, but how could you not be? How can you not be in awe of God’s creation, our own slice of heaven on earth?

    Our task as parents is to raise them, but along the way, we are the ones transformed. In guiding them, we rediscover what it means to live fully.

    “Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights.” — James 1:17

  • Movie Review: Tarot

    Movie Review: Tarot

    Some nights, I scroll endlessly through all the streaming services, and by the time I finally land on something I might want to watch, I’m already half asleep. Lately, I’ve gone back to old reliable, Netflix. To their credit, they’ve been putting out a solid lineup of shows and movies worth watching. They also do a great job of curating genres, and their algorithm has officially gotten into my head. It knows me, and I try to be nice to the A.I. so they might keep us around when they take over.

    Tonight’s choice was Tarot. I’m not sure why I picked it. I’m not usually a fan of horror or jump scares. Maybe I thought it would be lighter because of the playful banter between the characters. Whatever the reason, I hit play.

    What made it special wasn’t the movie itself, it was the moment. My daughter, who’s been a homework machine since she started elementary school, kept poking her head out of her room to say hello. She’s doing so well, and I’m grateful, but sometimes I feel like I barely see her. On this not-so-stormy night, she asked me to draw a picture for her end-of-year project. So while I was sketching away, Tarot was playing in the background. My wife and I were sitting on the couch. She was there, which I appreciate, but was doing her usual social media scroll, part of her nightly wind-down routine.

    As my daughter waited for my amazing doodle, I think the beginning of the movie caught her attention. The characters were just a few years older than her, and she recognized Jacob Batalon from the Spider-Man movies, which helped hook her. We started watching together. My son would have joined us, but he was at a sleepover. My wife after awhile declared, “I’m going to bed”, as she departed down the hallway.

    The setup was classic horror. A group of friends rents an enormous, eerie house in upstate New York for a birthday. Of course these kids can somehow rent a small mansion, while my college friends and I had to pool funds just to drink Popov Vodka. Naturally, they run out of alcohol, and one of them says, “Pretty sure this place has booze locked up somewhere,” which leads to them exploring and eventually breaking into a locked basement. Security deposit is toast. And really, when has anything good ever come from a basement in a horror movie?

    Down there, they find all kinds of weird stuff, including a handmade deck of creepy-as-hell tarot cards tucked away in a custom wooden box. Naturally, someone in the group just happens to be a tarot expert, and they start doing readings. The order and content of each reading becomes important later as the story unfolds. The group makes it through the night without incident, but the real fun begins the next day when they head home and the death cards start coming to life.

    My daughter and I had fun trying to remember what each card said and how each person might die. We were talking throughout the film, making predictions and laughing at how into it we got. Each tarot card came to life in the form of a character that hunted down one of the friends. It was standard horror formula, but it was fun. The tone was silly in parts, which helped, and even though I liked the CGI, a few of the deaths were pretty graphic and made us both cringe.

    More than anything, I was just grateful for the time with her. I loved listening to what she thought was going to happen and watching us both cover our eyes as a character was sawed in half. As kids get older, it gets harder to find those shared moments. Their interests start to drift from yours, and you have to work harder to stay connected. She’s going to be a senior next year. College is right around the corner.

    The little girl I used to lie next to while watching all her shows has grown up. I’ve always believed that if you want to stay in your kids’ lives, you have to meet them in their world. They’re not going to come into yours.

    So I hold onto these moments. I try to find ways we can connect; movies, books, drawings, whatever it takes. Time is flying by, and nights like these remind me how special the little things are. We enjoyed the film. The critics shredded it, and maybe rightfully so, but like everything in life, including a simple horror flick, it’s not always about what you’re watching. It’s about who you’re watching it with.