Hey, one of you smartasses spoil David Blaine: Real or Magic for me...

That’s basically Blaine’s real trick. He shows people real magic tricks, and then edits them so that the trick looks totally impossible. Since we see his RL audience appear totally blown away, we think they must be blown away at the same thing we’re seeing, instead of a more mundane trick.

His fame come more from getting over-the-top audience reactions then slight of hand.

I’m sure mileage varies, but I think its kinda cheap. Obviously magic tricks are going to involve some sort of a “trick”, but executing a trick live involves a lot of skill and cleverness. Doing it with camera angles and editing makes the whole exercise rather trivial, and thus pointless.

Have you ever seen a closeup of his arm after the trick with actual holes going through his body? Of course not. It’s a trick.

As soon as you say, “well, it must be real” you are declaring yourself to be the perfect mark. You seem to take pride in that for some reason. But you might want to notice that the rest of us are backing away from that title at 100 mph and leaving it solely to you.

David Blaine getting invited to a party that Harrison Ford is going to be at is plausible. Blaine sneaking a camera into such a party is plausible. Blaine then showing footage from that camera on national TV without paying Ford for it is not plausible, as that would be way too expensive and Blaine can’t afford it.

The trick you describe is quite easy, but how do you suppose Blaine does HIS trick? There is no chance of a card force. He hands Ford the deck, tells him to think of any card, and then name the card he thought of. Without touching the deck, Blaine asks Ford to find the card in the deck he (Ford) has been holding the entire time. Ford searches, but the card is missing. He then points to a piece of fruit in Ford’s fruit ball. Ford cuts the fruit open to find the card he named inside.

Yes. That’s what we see and we hear. But that may not be exactly what happened when it was being recorded.

So if I find a video of a non-magician doing this feat without bleeding and pulling out a clean skewer, you’ll apologize to me for calling me an easy mark?

All it needs is a signed release. Which would not be hard if Ford was genuinely impressed. Do you really think that Ford, DeNiro, Woody Allen and George W. Bush shilled for David Blaine for money? What do you think is a more likely explanation? This is something he put together over several years before he got enough good footage.

And its not a party Ford is at. It is Harrison Ford’s house.

And risk Harrison Ford coming forward to say that it was in fact an overdub, as Ford would know since he was there, thus destroying Blaine’s credibility? Highly unlikely, I’d say.

No one has mentioned the “indigo” woman, although it has been alluded to how Blaine might pull off similar tricks. I can think of two possibilities: perform the trick until you get lucky that the “mark” picks the color already set up on the plywood, or more likely (who ever picks the color “indigo”?!) perform the trick until someone plays along because they know they might get on TV. The key is that Blaine didn’t ask the woman to name her color before he caused it to be revealed.

Why would Ford snitch?

I’m not saying that’s the way it was done, but we are missing the beginning of the trick, and my guess is there’s more involving the deck beforehand. It just looks like a trick being shown in mid-stream to me, but, who knows–I’m sure the real magicians know a better way of achieving this effect, but that’s one easy possibility.

The other thing is, remember, this special was recorded over a period of years, according to what someone said upthread. From what I’ve seen, people are not terribly good at recalling exactly how a trick played out last night, much less some time ago, so it’s completely believable to me that Blaine could have been banking on Ford not remembering the exact sequence of the trick, too, if he was worried about him snitching. Especially if you’re at a house party or whatever and perhaps are a bit liquored up or something else. All Blaine has to say is, no Harrison, you’re misremembering, look at the tape, and Harrison really has no proof his memory is correct.

But I don’t think that’s a big deal. I don’t think Harrison would care enough to say anything–he was quite impressed by the trick, and we’ve already seen Blaine manipulate video (as seen above with the levitation trick) to record true reactions, but then cut in doctored footage of his levitation trick, so why would he be above dubbing audio?

This could also have just been one possible outcome for the trick, right?

You tell him the card is gone from the deck, but have no idea what card it is. You hand over the deck. If he spots his card, you go with ending (a) where you ask him to say the card in mock disbelief, and you take the deck and it’s not there (because you remove it), and then he can’t find it when you hand it back, but it appears in his own sleeve (or some other variation of a relatively boring trick). But if he doesn’t spot the card, then you go with ending (b) where you palm the card into an orange after he reveals it (because you pull it out of an ordered deck in your back pocket or what-have-you).

And if it didn’t happen to be Harrison that got to (b), then it would have been Tom Cruise or someone.

Sure, that’s another possible way of doing it. But I don’t think the card was palmed. I do think the card was actually already in the orange, which is why Harrison Ford is so genuinely surprised, as he sees the orange being opened in front of him with the card embedded. At least that’s my impression, knowing how the standard way of doing the card-in-an-orange trick goes.

And there’s so much competition.

I can’t help but notice the few posters that claim to be able to do a few of these tricks ain’t ponying up any info on how they are done.

So, that being said: I can raise The Dead! I’m a *huge *hit at funerals! :smiley:

Trust me.

I agree Blaine has just game planned for various outcomes, and only shows the successful ones. Additionally, just because Ford’s card is missing doesn’t mean his card was the ONLY one missing. That deck could have been missing several cards without most people noticing from a casual search.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ducati
He’s an arrogant, smug asshole who preys on the stupid or uneducated.

:smiley:

Schadenfreude Let me know when your special is on

I’m going to go out on a limb here and guess that you don’t know what “schadenfreude” means.

And I can’t make movies either, but that doesn’t mean I can’t legitimately point out that Uwe Boll sucks.

Watching the Ricky Gervais one I noticed his hand on the pierced arm doesn’t move throughout the piercing. No finger movement, no wrist movement. It made me think the entire arm was fake. Going back to see the last time he moved his fingers or wrist he does move them when placing his arm above the table.
So I looked for any film changes for when they might do a switchover. Might be just me but at the 1:17 mark the hue of Ricky’s face changes. Pretty smooth editing but still my guess for a splice.

Sorry. I did mention something about “knowing how the standard way of doing the card-in-an-orange trick goes.” There’s nothing too special about it. You roll up a card and put it in an orange. Normally, you cut out the stem end, jam a card in there, and replace the cut part maybe with a bit of glue. Now you have a card in an orange. Now all you need to do is force a playing card using your method of choice.

There’s also a version where you have the subject pick a card (forced, naturally), then you take that card, tear it into pieces (while retaining a corner of the card by leaving it on the table), and set the rest of the card pieces on fire. You open up the orange, the card is magically in there, with a missing corner, of course matching exactly the one you had (because you were palming the torn corner and left that corner behind.)

I’ve only done the orange trick a few times because it’s a waste of a perfectly good card. The effect on the subject is great, though. But just as fun, if not more, is sneaking a playing card into your subject’s pocket somehow–coat pockets are always easy–(or into some personal affect of theirs) and pulling some kind of force and doing the big reveal that way. That one really freaks people out.