Rare Charlie Chaplin Film Fails to Find Buyer

A very rare Charlie Chaplin film, said to contain the earliest-known animation in film history, has failed to sell at auction in London.
Rare Charlie Chaplin Film Fails to Find Buyer
MORALE BOOST: The World War I propaganda film starring Charlie Chaplin was sent to boost the morale of the troops stationed in Egypt. (Courtesy of Bonham's)
7/12/2011
Updated:
7/13/2011

<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/charlie_chapman_medium.jpg"><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/charlie_chapman_medium.jpg" alt="MORALE BOOST: The World War I propaganda film starring Charlie Chaplin was sent to boost the morale of the troops stationed in Egypt.  (Courtesy of Bonham's)" title="MORALE BOOST: The World War I propaganda film starring Charlie Chaplin was sent to boost the morale of the troops stationed in Egypt.  (Courtesy of Bonham's)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-129071"/></a>
MORALE BOOST: The World War I propaganda film starring Charlie Chaplin was sent to boost the morale of the troops stationed in Egypt.  (Courtesy of Bonham's)
A very rare Charlie Chaplin film has failed to sell at auction in London despite expectations that it would reach a significant six-figure sum. The seven-minute movie shows what is said to be the earliest-known animation in film history.

Morace Park bought the film from an online auction site in 2009. On the surface, it looked like a battered cinema reel, but once opened, it revealed a roll of film titled “Charlie Chaplin in Zepped.”

Mr. Park could not find any records of the film from his research, but his investigation eventually led him to the discovery that it was the last copy of a forgotten Charlie Chaplin film.

“At first, I had no idea what I had. However, it soon became clear that ‘Zepped’ is a very special film. I visited film experts in Europe and the USA and lost count of the superlatives that they came out with, but one comment was common: None of them had ever seen this type of film before,” Mr. Park said in a press release.

Unfortunately, the movie only received one bid.

“Obviously we’re disappointed the film didn’t sell, but it’s an unusual item, and the nature of auctions means these things are always unpredictable,” a spokeswoman for Bonham’s told the BBC.

<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/charlie_chapman_film_medium.jpg"><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/charlie_chapman_film_medium.jpg" alt="'ZEPPED': It is believed that the recently discovered film starring Charlie Chaplin was created to help defuse the terror of zeppelin attacks during World War I.  (Courtesy of Bonham's)" title="'ZEPPED': It is believed that the recently discovered film starring Charlie Chaplin was created to help defuse the terror of zeppelin attacks during World War I.  (Courtesy of Bonham's)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-129072"/></a>
'ZEPPED': It is believed that the recently discovered film starring Charlie Chaplin was created to help defuse the terror of zeppelin attacks during World War I.  (Courtesy of Bonham's)
According to a press release, the reel shows scenes of a zeppelin raid over London while Chaplin acts in his trademark comic style. During World War I, zeppelins were used in bombing raids over England and France.

Bonham’s explains that the zeppelins were often called “baby killers” and “terrors of the sky” at the time, and it is believed “Zepped” was designed as propaganda, using Chaplin’s world-famous comedy to defuse the terror inspired by these attacks.

Professor Paul Wells, director of The Animation Academy Research Group at Loughborough University believes that “the zeppelin is possibly real, but could also be a premature form of puppetry,” according to the press release.