SAW
Sean Fields
AOI Magic
(Based on 1 review)
The performer unravels a length of thread. He then immediately, and VISBLY, begins to SAW the thread straight into his throat! The spectators can actually see the thread deep under the performer's flesh, from ANY ANGLE!
Now for the REALLY disturbing part; the performer begins to pull the thread back through his throat! This grotesque; the spectator can actually SEE the thread tearing through the skin!
After the thread has ripped though the skin, there is no wound, no scars, nothing to see, and nothing to find. Just a hunk of thread, a naked neck and the memory of an unspeakable weirdness.
Sean Fields has created a deeply disturbing effect, and has teamed up with a somewhat concerned Rodney Reyes to make it available to those that like this sort of thing.
Saw = Geek magic. Redefined.
WARNING!!!
ADULT SUPERVISION REQUIRED CHOKING HAZARD
USE ONLY AS DIRECTED
Running Time Approximately 30min
Reviews
(Top ▲)
Catering to the Chris Angel set, and with a tip of the hat to Josh Necreb, Sean Fields has adapted an old principle to serve a new plot. “Saw” is described fairly and accurately in the ads (i.e., the performer saws a length of thread into, then back out of his throat), and although it may seem dangerous to execute, there’s about as much chance of seriously hurting yourself while performing this trick as there is of poking your eye out with a Color-Changing Ball to Square.
I should say, however, that I actually prefer one of the three variations of “Saw” offered on the DVD—a trick called “Choke”—if only because it provides a theatrical (albeit demented) justification for the effect. Specifically, the magician first swallows a Lifesaver, then performs “Saw,” but when he pulls the thread out through the front of his neck, the Lifesaver is now hanging from the middle.
The deciding factor as you consider purchasing this DVD should be whether or not you will have an opportunity to perform for the kind of audience these effects require. Other than that, the product delivers exactly what it promises.
David Acer
I should say, however, that I actually prefer one of the three variations of “Saw” offered on the DVD—a trick called “Choke”—if only because it provides a theatrical (albeit demented) justification for the effect. Specifically, the magician first swallows a Lifesaver, then performs “Saw,” but when he pulls the thread out through the front of his neck, the Lifesaver is now hanging from the middle.
The deciding factor as you consider purchasing this DVD should be whether or not you will have an opportunity to perform for the kind of audience these effects require. Other than that, the product delivers exactly what it promises.
David Acer