Zahn, that is. Because I'm talking about the HBO Max original movie 8-Bit Christmas (which does indeed, however indirectly, have something to do with this pic. But we'll get there.). As nostalgic and charmingly rough around the edges as A Christmas Story, 8-Bit Christmas strikes a chord with anyone who's ever made a Christmas list, but especially those of us who grew up in the '80s. Jake Doyle (Neil Patrick Harris) tries to connect with his cell phone-obsessed daughter by telling her the tale of how his tween self would stop at nothing to get a Nintendo. So starts the setup for a classic Christmas frame story as Jake detours down memory lane. And it turns out that scoring an NES is a tall order for young Jake (Winslow Fegley) and his ragtag group of friends. First, because Nintendos are hard to come by in 1988. Secondly, because, in a rare case of conscience over consumerism, the local parents' protest against video games has convinced stores not to sell them. Jake's own dad (Steve Zahn) would rather Jake spend his time helping him with his endless home renovations than snagging extra lives and getting to the next level. That is, when he's not nagging Jake to pick up the dog poop dotting their yard. But Jake doesn't listen. When he realizes that he's not getting a Nintendo for Christmas, he enters a competition to win one. His tunnel vision pursuit of Super Mario Brothers bliss begets one disaster after another. Yet somewhere in this caper -- which also features girls' Esprit snow boots, counterfeit Cabbage Patch Kids, and a steady stream of upchucked SpaghettiOs -- is the meaning of Christmas.
This was only one of my takeaways from the movie. The other was that I won a Nintendo in 1989 for drawing this: