The trick for most of his street magic is the same. He doesn’t do street magic (or at least, not any street magic impressive enough for any but the most credulous of viewers); he does camera magic and then tells people it’s street magic. Which seems to me to be cheating, even as magic acts go.
It seems to be cutless - not talking about the levitation thing I’ve heard problems with - but lots of card stuff that seemed legit - impressed audiences and steady camera angles.
I mean, obviously not, but how does this make him a magician? Is he supposed to require supernatural powers to survive? It seems to me like it’s more a feat of endurance–body training–than anything, not a magic trick.
I feel let down. He jumped 44 feet, touched down, then ‘mysteriously levitated into the sky’. Except you could see the hook up down his jacket to the unseen crane.
I would have expected him to figure that out and get past it - he’s media savvy enough that he should have gotten that right.
He did a bullet catch too, but it was pretty boring too. Too much set up, not enough drama.
According to this article he didn’t even stay upside down the entire time for his “dive of death”.
I’ve never been impressed with David Blaine. His first TV special only happened because he happens to know Leonardo DiCaprio. For the past 8 years, he’s been pulling stunts like this that aren’t magic. The thinks he’s the next Houdini, but he’s not even one one hundredth the showman that Houdini was.
The thing is… he’s probably a really nice guy in person, but as a magician he’s barely passable. As a stunt person, he’s abysmal.
Obviously the whole “dive of death” was P.T. Barnum-ey and just to build excitement, and I don’t think he was trying to hide the safety cable and crane, but then the lights went off and when they came on again, the dude was gone. So the disappearing act was the real act. I guess it’s cool that he just sort of disappeared in front of the entire crowd, but if I was standing out there for 3 hours waiting for him to take a header into the concrete, I’d be mighty pissed at the way it went down.
Some of the street magic was cool, though. Turning 5 singles into 5 20’s- whatever sleight of hand was involved was very well done.
I think it was 5 hundreds, not that that makes it more impressive.
I liked the trick where he moved the federal reserve identifier seal across the dollar bill with his thumb. Any ideas on how he did that one?
The bent quarter trick was lame. It was obvious that the quarter was bent when he placed it into the woman’s hand, but I’d sure like to take a look at the mechanism he used to bend it.
They looked pretty hefty punches to me, but I’m sure with frame by frame advancement you’d be able to determine if he was moving back *with *the impact, as opposed to because of it.
He blamed the screw up at the end on George Bush.
The 15 minute delay, caused by George’s speech, allowed the wind to change direction…or some such…and the weather balloons that were to spirit him away broke loose. What a putz.
But that would mean that Kimbo Slice would have had to be in on the trick. Otherwise, Kimbo would have felt that the impact of the punches wasn’t quite right. Remember, the guy punches people as hard as he can for a living. He knows in his fists just how hard the impact really was.
Hilarious. I think his endurance stunts are some of the more interesting aspects of his acts. The ice encasement and long-term submersion were very interesting. Not magic - but interesting.
He’s got so-so ambiance but his “street magic” just drives me absolutely insane. Either it’s a typical variation on slight of hand that we’ve seen countless times before, or he’s got so many plants in the audience that I think I’m watching a gardening show.
Didn’t watch David Blaine, but this reminds me of a Penn & Teller TV special about 10 years ago.
The stunt involved Teller laying under the rear wheels of a semi trailer, which then runs over him. In the setup, Penn yells across the street to an assistant (who IIRC was on Saturday Night Live at the time) “Is there anything unusual about the trailer?” The reply: “No, perfectly normal looking trailer.”
Then they reveal the trick: the tires are made of foam; but more importantly, there’s about a ton of counterweight hanging on the side of the trailer opposite Teller, away from the camera. After the reveal, Penn says to the assistant “didn’t you say the trailer looked normal?” Assistant says: “I lied.”