May 15 ~ Of All the Gin Joints
“Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine.” — Humphrey Bogart
Casablanca

The gin joint is Rick’s Café Américain. The woman is Ilsa (Ingrid Bergman). The man is Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart). The film is Casablanca (1942)—a cinematic masterpiece of war, romance, and timeless style.

Featuring the unforgettable love song As Time Goes By, and lines etched in movie history, Casablanca won three Oscars, including Best Picture. It became more than a film—it became a feeling.

“I stick my neck out for nobody,” says Rick, the tough cynic whose heartbreak in Paris shadows every sip of whiskey in Morocco. But in the fog of war, love must bow to duty. “Kiss me,” Ilsa pleads, “as if it were the last time.”

The film nearly starred Ronald Reagan. Thankfully, fate gave us Bogart and Bergman. Roger Ebert called Casablanca “a favorite musical album; the more I know it, the more I like it.”

There’s something almost spiritual in how Casablanca lingers in the soul. It speaks to the parts of us that have loved deeply, lost with grace, and chosen a greater good over personal longing. The film reminds us: in a broken world, courage still matters, sacrifice still shines, and love—real love—lets go when it must. That’s the magic. That’s why we return. Not just to watch, but to feel.

And we do. Year after year, we come back. For the passion. For the shadows. For the sacrifice. For the soul.

Affirmation Icon Here's looking at you, kid.🎬