Random I-Tunes Song of The Moment: Stick To Your Guns By Bon Jovi

Every once in a while I need to remind my readers of my take on writing reviews. This particular effect seems a good place to do so. Here's the skinny folks. Whether I like an effect or not is irrelevant. If I only like coin tricks, is it fair to say that Al Baker's The Pack That Cuts Itself is a bad trick/product? I think not. Every trick out there will attract different magicians. Many of you will like an effect that I'll not like and vice versa.

So how do I review tricks? I look at three main things:

  1. The Practicality of The Method
  2. The Quality of the prop/gimmick
  3. The honesty of the advertisement claims

If the method for the aforementioned Baker effect was that you needed a deck of 52 shimmed cards and a magnetic table, I might give the effect a lesser rating because it's not the most practical method. If the product came with shimmed cards and they were poorly made, again . . . lower rating. Finally, if the advertisement claimed that you could use a borrowed deck and that no magnets were used . . . well that would be a lie (in the case of this fictitious version of the effect).

Having said all that, let's take a look at Mintalist and see how it stands up to those three criteria.

The Practicality of The Method

The method is simply a gimmicked Tic Tac box that supposedly does all the work for you. However, it's not so simple. First, the spectator is handed the gimmicked box and told to pour out some mints in their hand behind their back. The box is such that only a certain amount can come out of the box. You control what that amount is during your pre-trick set up. However, it only controls the maximum that comes out, not the minimum.

So if you've got it set to only let 6 mints out, they won't be able to pour out more than 6, but they can certainly pour out less than 6. Well, when the effect is that you've predicted how many they'll pour out, that's not a very practical method. In experimenting with the box, I loaded it with some mints. Then I tried to shake them out. One of them got stuck and was refusing to come out. I was purposely trying to get all of the mints out of the gimmick, and I was not doing it behind my back.

Imagine, now, giving this to a spectator to do behind her back. First, she won't be trying to shake out all of the mints in the gimmicked chamber because she won't know that it exists. She'll just try shaking some out in her hands. Further, it's behind her back - it has to be behind her back so she doesn't discover the gimmick - which is awkward. So the odds of a mint or two staying behind are pretty good, thus your effect fails.

The Quality of the prop/gimmick

The gimmick seems to be well made. However, the little secret "something" that allows the effect to work gets stuck easily. This impacts the ability to reset the gimmick, and the ability to allow the box to be handed out. Further, the one I got absolutely would not reset. It is permanently stuck in the locked position. No matter how I tried to do what the instructions said, it would not unlock.

The gimmick is supposed to easily unlock during performance by simply giving the box a quick (very suspicious looking) shake. Sorry folks, but it doesn't work. In order to get the gimmick to unlock, I had to basically bang the crap out of the box and finally it unlocked . . . not exactly the most natural of actions.

The honesty of the advertisement claims

Well, if the gimmick worked as smoothly and reliably as it should, then I might say that the ad copy claims were accurate, but the problem is that the gimmick is unreliable. Additionally, the effect called Mintal Separation is slightly misrepresented. It claims that the spectator thinks of a color and all the mints in her hand change to that color. That's not quite true. That happens 50% of the time when she names the "right" color. The other 50% of the time (when she names the "wrong" color) the effect is not what it claims.

That one effect aside, the gimmick has the potential to do all of the effects that it claims. The concern I have is that the gimmick is very unreliable. The ad copy also says that it's 100% examinable. That is true if you can easily unlock the gimmick. There are two problems there. First problem is that if the spectator left behind a mint or two, the gimmick won't unlock until you remove those left behind. But the bigger issue is that even when none are left behind, in order to unlock (and thus hide) the gimmick, you have to pound the crap out of the box on your hand and cross your fingers and hope that it dislodges. My experience so far is that it doesn't - at least not easily.

Final Thoughts

This type of effect, if it worked, would only be practical in a more casual setting which I like. I'm a fan of the kind of magic that happens outside of the confines of a "show." Unfortunately, this gimmick just doesn't live up to its potential.

Final Verdict:
Half Star with a Stone Status of Rubble

8 Comments

  • Jay Best says:

    Interesting and disappointing. I love the idea of this, the mint box is so organic and something I usually have on me so it seems perfectly natural.

  • Jeff Stone says:

    @Jay – That’s kind of how I felt. The gimmick looks great, and the audience would never see it upon examining the container . . . if you could get it to unlock before you handed it out . . . and if no mints were left behind . . .

  • Steven says:

    I would have used this as well. Let me know if an upgraded version comes out.

    • Jeff Stone says:

      I’ll keep you posted. However, I just have to vent. Products like this really annoy me as a magician, customer and reviewer. This is the kind of thing that clearly should have been obvious to Peter Eggink before releasing it. He should have known better than to release this in the condition it was in. So far, I’ve not seen one good review of this product.

  • AnthonyD says:

    Hi not to add insult to injury but I had to send mine back as that little something was on the bottom of the container. I did everything needed to “re-install” however it would not stay . I loved the idea too. However I feel even of it did initially work how well would it hold up considering the material . One thing that I did not like was the “out” printed on the label. To me that just kills the notion of an every day mint box. Wish some one who create one that can work without risk of failure ( although that was covered ) and secondly hold up to use. And lastly get rid of that awful out on the label.

    • Jeff Stone says:

      @Anthony – to quote Jeff Boomhauer from King of The Hill, “talkin’ ’bout dadgum, dang ol’ . . . yep!”

  • Mark says:

    Hey Jeff,

    Firstly I wanted to say I love your reviews, they are great and always filled with your honest opinion of a product.

    I am a 20 yr old aspiring magician from Ontario, Canada. I do a lot of walk around magic and honestly I found this to be a really organic mentalism effect to have on me… I’ve had my gimmick for quite sometime now and its worked great for me, maybe yours just wasn’t in good condition? The clean up works smoothly for mine, and the box is completely examinable. As long as I tell the spectator “shake out quite a few mints” “give it a good shake” they usually always get all the mints. I do agree this isn’t 100% sure fire, which is definitely a let down… but I’d say it works 90% of the time, which is fine by me. If I get the amount of mints wrong its usually off by one or two and still ends up looking impressive. I just move on to something different.

    You can easily replace the label with a label that works. I found the exact same size mint boxes around Christmas time here and the label looks great on it… I stocked up on them so I’d have extras hahah

    All and all is this my go to walk around effect for mentalism, no… but I always have it on me. And I believe because of how organic it is and how examinable it is that it at least deserves 3 stars.

    • Jeff Stone says:

      @Mark – thanks for the feedback. And most importantly, thanks for disagreeing with me so civilly. That’s very much appreciated. I’m glad yours is working for you. You must have received the one good one. 🙂

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