Twisted Sisters

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Twisted Sisters

Postby katrielalex » Mar 13th, '05, 14:06



I know there's already a review, but this is written by ME :twisted:!

The Effect
"You get the attention of two spectators, inviting them to participate. You place two small packets of cards, one red-backed and one blue-backed, on the table. Your give your first spectator the choice of either the red or blue packet. You ask her to imagine that the packet consists of the four Queens and to merely think of any one of the Queens. (There is no equivoque: your spectator may choose either packet and any of the four Queens.) Now directing attention to the other packet, you ask your second spectator to think of one of the remaining Queens.

You boldly state that you will cause the two thought-of cards to change places. After a magical gesture, you invite your two spectators to reveal their thought-of Queens. You spread the packets fairly on the table and the thought-of Queens are now face up. The Queen in the blue packet, moreover, is red-backed. Similarly, the Queen in the red packet is blue-backed. The thought-of cards have indeed “changed places” with each other.

You lean forward and hazard a guess that one question is on everyone’s mind: What would have happened if either spectator, or both, had thought of a different Queen? You remark with a relieved tone that it’s a good thing they didn’t, because the trick would not have worked: You turn the remaining cards in each packet face up revealing to an astonished crowd that they are all Jokers—not Queens at all. "

As quoted from Penguin. The effect is exactly as performed here. No (I repeat, NO) sleights are required, although an E*****y count makes it perfect.

Cost
$11.95 from Penguin.

Difficulty
(1 = self-working, 2 = No sleights, but not quite so easy, 3 = Some sleights used, 4 = Advanced sleights used, 5 = Suitable for experienced magicians only)

It can be anywhere from a 1 to a 3, depending on the presentation and the preferences of the performer.

Review
Trust me, this trick hits them HARD. I learnt the required move within a week and was soon frying spectators with ease.

There's only one problem: although the 'reset' just consists of putting the cards back the way they started, you can't let the spectators see this as they will immediately get a major part of the trick.

I also don't recommend repeating this trick, as the more able-minded spectators can sometimes deduce how this is done.

Apart from that, this is a killer. ADD TO CART now!

Overall
9.5 / 10 - the 'reset' is troublesome, especially because this is one of those tricks with the 'do-it-again' factor. Apart from that, I can't find anything to fault it.

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Fried Thrice

Postby IanB » Mar 14th, '05, 21:32

Jon Racherbaumer released a pamphlet called "Fried Thrice" many years ago which added two extra phases to Twisted Sisters using the Jacks and Kings.

This, for me, is the best and only way to perform the routine now. It absolutely kills !!

Unfortunately the pamphlet is OOP but you may be lucky to pick one up at auction.

Cheers

IanB

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Postby crayfishuk » Apr 4th, '05, 09:44


PostPosted: Mon Mar 14, 2005 8:32 pm Post subject: Fried Thrice
Jon Racherbaumer released a pamphlet called "Fried Thrice" many years ago which added two extra phases to Twisted Sisters using the Jacks and Kings.


Sounds interesting.... Any chance you could detail the effect (without any reference to the method - obviously)...?

-C

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Postby Takashikun » Apr 5th, '05, 08:41

good thinking on utilising Elm**** ***nt. Actually I also use that method on B'wave; it seems to make clear to the specs the fact that the cards are seen to be all face-down, all blue-backed.

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Postby katrielalex » Apr 5th, '05, 08:51

Using the E*****y Count in TS was not my idea :?. It's recommended in the booklet, as well as on the instructional video on Penguin. You even get a free video on the Count to top it off.

Kati

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Postby edh » Apr 8th, '05, 02:09

crayfishuk,
you can see a demo of it on penguinmagic.com. If you study it you can figure out the process of this trick. In my opinion B'Wave is the basically the same as Twisted Sisters. The difference is that Twisted Sisters uses to B'Waves. B'Wave is more of a mental type of effect where as TS is magic.

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Postby crayfishuk » Apr 8th, '05, 08:54

edh, thanks for the pointer to BrainWave, I have a B'Wave deck and also use the 8card B'Wave from Daryl - but in this case I was after some pointers to the Fried Thrice enhancements to see if it was worth researching further...

-C

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Postby bananafish » Apr 8th, '05, 09:13

I was after some pointers to the Fried Thrice enhancements to see if it was worth researching further


I haven't seen the Thried Rice routine, but I would suggest (and remember this is just MHO) that Twisted Sisters is better off without it.

In my experience TS is an awesome effect, that already has not one but three ever increasing in strength endings. It is though quite a complex effect to explain to an audience.

"You pick a pile, then think of a queen, then I will take your queen turn it face up and put it in the other pile - and then you do the same but with the other pile and another queen".

How many times have you added - "don't worry - it will all make perfect sense at the end"?

Don't get me wrong, the ending is so beautiful that it really does make this a near perfect table trick - but does it really need anything else happening? Personally, I don't think so.

As I said. I don't know the Thried Rice routine, so I may at some point eat my words, but I think as magicians we are too eager to over complicate an effect to just add that one extra thing it does...

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Postby crayfishuk » Apr 8th, '05, 09:35

Bananafish (I know how to spell banana - but I can never remember when to stop...)

Thanks for the input - precisely the feedback I was after. Totally agree with you. TS is one of the simplest more staggering table effects I do (there are more out there that I haven't seen or don't do... Nemesis is pretty impressive)

The poster (whose name I forget) alluded to Fried Thrice, and I wondered idly if it would improve or detract from TS - sounds like it may be too much of a good thing...

Thanks,

-C

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Postby kems » Apr 25th, '05, 09:05

I just watched the demo on penguinmagic and am pretty sure I figured the trick out first time watching it... can somebody please confirm this for me.. am I correct in thinking that only 2 'special' cards are used....

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Postby katrielalex » Apr 25th, '05, 10:00

Could you PM me please with how you think that the effect works, and I can let you know if you are correct or not.

Kati

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Postby Stephen Ward » Apr 25th, '05, 10:28

I really like Twisted Sisters. I also have the Jumbo version which is really good.

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Postby katrielalex » Apr 25th, '05, 13:31

Jumbo :lol:.

Isn't the E****** a bit hard...or do you just leave that out?

Kati

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Postby Stephen Ward » Apr 25th, '05, 13:55

Jumbo takes practise. You can do that (boy is it hard :shock: ) but you can just leave it out. I find it great for cabaret bookings. I did an OAP home a while ago and did the jumbo version. They loved it.

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Postby katrielalex » Apr 25th, '05, 14:00

Another topic that would be good is whether the E****** adds to the routine.

1: Yes

It proves to the spectators that the card they thought of was not face down at the beginning, so it must be magic.

2: No

Doing the E****** means that the spectators think that you must turn the card face down sometime during the routine. If they suspect that you are doing finger-flinging, it downgrades the routine from magic to...er...sleight.

Opinions anyone?

Kati

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