A forgotten short film featuring footage of comic legend Charlie Chaplin failed to sell at a London auction despite expectations it could raise a “significant six-figure sum.”
The reserve price on the reel at Wednesday’s sale was 100,000 pounds ($160,000) at Bonhams auctioneers, but apparently it was too high.
Charlie Chaplin in Zepped, believed to be a propaganda film made in Britain during World War One, was discovered inside a battered old film reel tin which collector Morace Park bought for 3.20 pounds on the online auction site eBay.
The seven-minute film, which shows Chaplin taking on a German Zeppelin aircraft, features some of the earliest animation in cinema history.
“At first I had no idea what I had,” Park said. “I visited film experts in Europe and the US and... one comment was common: None of them had ever seen this type of film before.”
Chaplin probably never knew of the movie’s existence, said film critic and Chaplin biographer David Robinson.
He said the anonymous maker had put together out-takes from three earlier Chaplin pictures – His New Profession (1914), A Jitney Elopement (1915) and The Tramp (1915) – and included sequences of stop-motion animation and other effects.
Although Chaplin played no part in the production of Zepped, he famously satirized Nazi leader Adolf Hitler in the 1940 movie The Great Dictator.