Los Angeles Times

Blind magician triumphs handily

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

That signature sleight-of-hand saying, “Now you see it, now you don’t,” takes on an added layer of significan­ce with “Dealt,” a penetratin­g documentar­y portrait of master playing-card manipulato­r Richard Turner, who also happens to be blind.

As demonstrat­ed in Luke Korem’s revealing film, winner of the Audience Award at this year’s South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, you wouldn’t readily know from Turner’s painstakin­gly rehearsed repertoire about his condition — and he prefers that.

The doggedly determined, notably fit 63-yearold was diagnosed with macular dystrophy as a child. He prefers to be called a “card mechanic” rather than a magician and is never without a fresh deck of cards that he keeps clutched tightly in his hand, just one behavioral trait leading a colleague to observe that “he’s on the crazy end of obsessive-compulsive.”

That may be the case — Turner did name his son Asa Spades, after all — and his stubborn force of will has yielded a 40-year career and a black belt in karate. But as keenly observed by Korem and cinematogr­apher Jacob Hamilton, “Dealt” achieves the neat trick of giving its main subject a rewarding character arc.

Despite his lifelong refusal to acknowledg­e his visual handicap, Turner finally, movingly, comes to terms with it, with the support of his family (including a sister who also lost her eyesight) and those 52 constant companions.

“Dealt.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 26 minutes. Playing: Arena Cinelounge Sunset, Hollywood.

 ?? Geoff Duncan Sundance Selects ?? “CARD MECHANIC” Richard Turner painstakin­gly rehearses his repertoire in the award-winning film.
Geoff Duncan Sundance Selects “CARD MECHANIC” Richard Turner painstakin­gly rehearses his repertoire in the award-winning film.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States