Magic is illusion - creating the illusion of the card moving to the top of the deck is more potent than actually moving it to the top of the deck.
That would be the case if they SAW IT actually being moved to the top of the deck.Illusion is created by methods, the pass is one method to achieve the illusion. (
playing with you ). Anyway, here's a qoute by Steve Youell, I think you'll love it.
Too many people have the wrong idea about misdirection. They worry too much about what the spectator's looking at and not enough about what the spectator's thinkiing about.
The default analogy is that the human eye is a camera. That's a bad analogy. The human eye is the lens. The brain is the film. They work together. If the brain doesn't record it, then for the spectator, it didn't happen.
John Muholland said "Magic is designed to fool the brain, not the eyes."
And I agree.
Anywho, I can really where you're coming from ( its actually one of things I like about magic
), so lets talk.
elegance of construction, separation of method and effect and last but most important: just because you can, doesn't mean that you should.
The way I see it, the argument in your post was mainly around separation of method and effect.
This is just depending on the trick/principle you're doing, and its also up to the performer.
Distancing the method from the effect is one way to make the trick more deceptive, but is it the only way? Of course not. Then, the next question would be, why using a method that is close to the effect? Because sometimes its the best method to achieve the desired effect. The construction of the trick should evolve around covering any con's of the method ( misdirection, sublties or otherwise ). There are ALOT of examples in this, Bro. John Hamman, Gene Maze and Slydini particularly have maaaany tricks that flow the above concept. Anywho, here is an example:
Say a 4 aces are outjogged, push in and you hand out the deck to be shuffled, only to locate the aces again. Many methods to locate the aces after they are shuffled. I know someone who does a diagonal palm shift with 4 aces outjogged in different parts of the deck ( read that again ) and mind you, he does it flawlessly. He steals the aces, the deck is shuffled, and he can control them now. Its the same method the spectator would suspect, but the nature of the revelations and cutting, let alone the flawlessness of the technique execution, made no doubt to the spectator that the aces were never controlled or being stolen out throughout.
You have Card College, check vol.2, Palm section, the cards across there. You are achieving the trick with the exact method that might come to the mind of the spectator, though the construction covers everything, and the desired effect is worth it. Through after performing the trick extensively for 2 years, I always get a kick out of performing it, fun for me ( I love bold stuff ) and gets the reactions.
You limited your post to the ACR, so lets talk a bit about that.
Any card control method is a very close method to achieve the effect. The pass can be used ( I use it, many cardmen use it, like Darwin Ortiz, Bill Malone ) to achieve 2 things:
1) effect not possible by any other move, card face up in middle, now its face up on top with almost no cover ( assuming the one doing the pass knows what he's doing ).
2) The pass is also commonly used to control the selection 3rd from the top at the beginning of an ACR, the first phase they might see a flash, or it might not be as clean as other phases, but the next phases, they are clean ( thanks for the multiple lifts done ).
This falls under the idea of making the effect cleaner and cleaner as the trick is repeated, making the trick more impressive, a concept applied extensively in card magic ( Homing Card Plus, and that cards across, both are in Card College vol.2, Palm chapter ). So, if you don't like using the pass, many cardmen still think its very good, I think its amazing. I personally do 2 passes in my ACR, first phase and fifth phase ( face up ). I also use a control by Slydini to the top, but the construction of my ACR make it needed.
An argument might arise, saying that you can control a card 3rd from the top using tilt or bluff pass. For Tilt, I don't want to replace the card in the deck myself at the beginning of the ACR. For Bluff Pass, I use that every now and then, but I still use the pass as my preffered method.
After making the above points clear, heres another: Any magician as he goes in magic will make it "personalized", he'll use sleights he like more than any sleight. Lennart Green's magic covered with Lateral Palms, my magic covered with loads of stuff that magicians don't like ( hence I won't be writing any magic book for the next 20 years, no one will read it! ). Now, if the trick can be elevated using the pass, I use it. If the trick can be done with the pass as an alternative method, but the effect or method would be inferior, then I
WOULD NOT use it.
Now don't get me wrong, I always cover things up to make the trick as deceptive as it can. Indirect methods achieving direct effects are always great if not amazing ( Bro. John Hamman has alot of such methods by the way ), but that doesn't mean that direct methods achieving direct effects are not amazing too ( Cavorting Aces, Bro. Hamman, Slydini's magic, Gene Maze magic .. etc ), but the construction of the trick would help.
In fact, now I'm thinking about it, its a credit given to magicians that they can fool a spectator with the exact method he's thinking of, even make him convinced that the method he's thinking of is not used. Cups and Balls?
At the end ( whew, I think I'm gonna put this in my blog!
), its up to the performer to decide.
You mentioned that a good sleight of hand guy can make sleights effortless, but yet there must be a lack of flow involved ( you said misdirection, or some sort of handling the deck ). Let me tell you this: They practice to MAKE TRICKS FLOW BETTER. Go check Darwin Ortiz, Steve Forte Bill Malone, Slydini ... etc, all of them are miracle workers with an extremely good flow. In other hand, go check Harry Lorayne's Ace cutting routines ( Halo Cut .. etc ), extremely easy, and yet it flows. My point is? Please please, don't say that difficult magic can lack a flow easy magic can have. I understand you're a very experienced magician ( far more than I am ), didn't you study the work of these men? Then you should know better that these people ( as should others ) imply difficult sleight of hand to make the effect look even more miraculous. Of course, from spectator's point of view, they see nothing.
Harry Lorayne often says that his favorite magic is the one that shows him as the best card manipulator in the world, while the secret is so so simple anyone can do it. He never said "the harder ones are inferior" because he knows this is not true, this is just his taste. I do a version of Marlo's Estimation Aces made by a friend, its very tricky and very bold to do, though I had alot of success with it, not because the fact its difficult, but because the fact I ( hopefully! ) make the effect clear to laymen.
By the way, direct methods are not always difficult.
Hope this helps. Good discussion.
Discussing the relative merits of the pass as a technique compared to others is missing the point - place the discussion into a meaningful context
It depends on what you're comparing. Side Steals vs Pass ( say half a jiggle ), both would look almost the same to the eyes of spectator assuming that they remember the deck being squared at the context of the routine ( which obviously almost never happens ), but which can have a more economic way of producing the effect? which is more benifitial to the trick? To make it flow better? Thats what it was about.
So, I firmly believe I didnt miss any points.
i think the pass is kind of an impractical and angly move.
The only bad angles for classic are the direct right and back. You got about 150 degrees of safe angle, and that without you moving naturally to the right, which covers it. For Hermann, just reverse what I said.
Looks good to me.
There are passes that are angle proof. Free Turn pass is one of them. There are passes that have severe angles, Float Pass by Lennart Green is one of them.
This gotta be the LARGEST POST EVER POSTED on T11!!
Cheers,
~ Feras