Once you’ve mastered the Elmsley, this is a sweet little routine to carry as an EDC. Only 4 stars
because it should be a download at half the price. You pay for an unnecessary gimmick that you can
make up an any alternative yourself from cards you must have lying around.
7 of 8 magicians found this helpful.
The trick looks great and the cards are of good quality. What caught me out is the entire trick
being based on a sleight which, as a complete newbie, I had no idea about. So, on the positive side,
it's expanded my knowledge and forced me to learn and practice a new technique. On the negative, it
may be some time before I can make use of this trick as it's going to take a lot of work before I
can make it look any good. Also the instruction video neglects to tell you the starting positions of
the cards. Again, this may be obvious to the more experienced used but not to people just starting
on their journey into magic.
6 of 6 magicians found this helpful.
It’s very simple and direct and very logical trick but I already have a lot of that secret move in
my repertoire so I will add something to make it better…
If you are beginner you will learn and
enjoy that.
I think the book Lucky by John explained this routine in first chapter also.
5 of 5 magicians found this helpful.
I love my packet tricks. They are perfor my restaurant work. Easy to carry and reset. Chop Shop is
very fun to perform. There is only one sleight used throughout the whole routine. You end clean too
because you put the cards in your pocket since it's part of the routine. I love the gag with the
card saying look! It always gets a laugh. Once you know the secret you could make your own!
5 of 6 magicians found this helpful.
I like this guy, Bannon. I first purchased Spin Doctor and found the sleight was well within reach
of my skill level. This trick uses the same principle but it has an even better ending. The tutorial
is excellent and it’s the perfect length. I actually recommend both of these for a great little
packet trick session.
3 of 3 magicians found this helpful.
First of all, let me say that I love John Bannon. My first magic set was his Move Zero DVD set and I
still do some tricks from that. That was, in fact, a big motivating factor for me buying this
trick. After playing with it, it's a fine trick I suppose but it has a discrepancy that I just
can't get past.
At the beginning, you ostensibly have 3 cards. At the end, you have 4.
Even disregarding the ones you put in your pocket, it is still obvious that there were always more
than 3 cards in play, because, that's just the way it's presented, it's needed to get the "kicker
ending".
Even if the audience is unaware of what an EC is, they still must intuitively know
that the method boils down to hiding extra cards. The fourth card had to come from somewhere. In
the tutorial they say that some might find working with that many cards is "distasteful", and I
guess I'm one of them. So I'm deducting one point for that.
I'm deducting another point
because I felt that the instructions just kind of assumed you were already familiar with magic, it
was clear it was not produced to rote beginners, which kind of shocked me due to my previous
experience with Bannon. The instructions just didn't seem top notch. This doesn't affect me, but I
can see how it might others.
Anyway I hope everyone enjoys their purchases, but I already
know enough tricks in this vein that I think it's going to go in the drawer.
2 of 2 magicians found this helpful.
If you like to practice something to boggle people’s minds, this is worth it. If you are a gimmick
kind of person (looking for the Holy Grail of Gimmicks so you don’t have to put in practice time)
this is probably not your ticket.
1 of 1 magicians found this helpful.
Super easy handling for a super effective effects that has a few punches.
1 of 1 magicians found this helpful.
John Bannon is the king of powerful packet tricks that are also easy to do. I love Spin Doctor, and
now I love Chop Shop.
This is super easy to learn and to perform. I was able to run through
the handling a few times before the video was even over.
There's only one sleight-of-hand
move you'll need for the entire routine. If you're a fan of packet tricks, you probably already know
the move well.
This has multiple moments of magic and a strong kicker. You can drop it into
your repertoire almost immediately, and there's really nothing to think about or keep track of as
you go through the routine.
Five stars all the way!
1 of 2 magicians found this helpful.
One negative with this is my worry people will ask to see the cards you place in your pocket, other
than that which is quite an easy get round it’s fantastic super easy to do and the kicker at the end
is great