Hey guys, haven't posted here for a while. University has taken most of my time.
I am working on an effect created around legends of people who encounter a mysterious stranger and end up losing their soul. It is basically a version of the "Judas Card", but also inspired by something Eugene Burger does in one of his Voyages. I really enjoy putting an effect together like this, yet I struggle a bit with the ending. But to begin with the beginning...
(wording is not final, just the basic idea)
I explain how a young man once met the Devil on a dusty crossroad. "Allow me to show you what happened" (I remove an envelope from my pocket) "The Devil told the young man, that there was something in the envelope. The young man was curious and asked what it was. 'That is a secret - a secret which you might win from me in a little game of cards.'" I produce 10 cards from my pocket "We play four hands, and if you win just one of them, I will show you what is in the envelope, continued the Devil."
From then I use the "Judas card" principle
1. hand: I shuffle and deal the cards.
2. hand: Before dealing each card, I offer the participant a choice of whether he wants the card or not (face down). I use SecD or BotD.
3. hand: "Did I forget to mention that if you win, your soul will belong to me? I am sorry about that... To make up for it, I will make it very easy for you this time, said the Devil... wouldn't you say it would be a great help if you could actually see the faces of the cards as you discard half of them?" Agreement. "Please, point to one of these two cards (faces shown)" ...
4. hand: "Now the young man began to realise, just what his curiosity had led him into, and the devil handed him the cards for the final shuffle, and said, Why don't you deal the cards this time?"
In the fourth hand, I have no control of the cards, so I have a scenario for the two possible outcomes.
However, should I lose on the last hand, I want to open the envelope and show that it contains an identical hand to the one that the participant just dealt himself.
I have considered numerous ways to do this, but most of them seem very burdensome and impractical - an index (but I have to pick out 5 cards and load them into an envelope which I must then substitute for the original... bit hard to do in a discrete way), an accomplice with an index, switching of hands...
So my question is, how you would do something like that?
Also, the two outs allow me to leave the cards entirely in the participant's hands in the last round. But I am uncertain whether that is not less impressive to a non-magician than the previous (third) round.
Any other tips, criticism and suggestions are also welcome. Method-sensitive answers can go to my inbox
- C


