Lost Walt Disney film last seen in 1928 found in British archive

Six-minute film Sleigh Bells, featuring Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, was feared lost forever

A long-lost Walt Disney film featuring his first ever animated character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, has been discovered buried away in the national archive of the British Film Institute.

The BFI announced the remarkable discovery of the six-minute film Sleigh Bells, unseen since its release in 1928 and feared lost for ever.

The film has now been restored by Walt Disney Animation Studios and will get its world premiere at the BFI in London next month.

Robin Baker, the BFI National Archive head curator, said the film demonstrated the vitality and imagination of Disney's animation at a key point in his early career".

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He added: “What a joyful treat to discover a long-lost Walt Disney film in the BFI national archive and to be able to show it to a whole new audience 87 years after it was made. The restoration of this film will introduce many audiences to Disney’s work in the silent period.”

The film entered the archives 34 years ago, part of a job lot from a Soho film lab that had gone out of business.

The stock was dated 1931 and there was nothing to suggest that this was an important lost film. “There must be a hundred things called Sleigh Bells,” said a BFI spokesman

Because there are around 1m items in the archive, including 770,000 TV programmes, it would be impossible for everything to be watched.

The discovery was made by a researcher browsing the BFI archive catalogue specifically looking for lost Disney titles, recognising that the words Sleigh Bells could mean it was a missing short film.

While a number of Oswald films do survive, Sleigh Bells had been feared lost. “This is the only copy in the world,” said the spokesman.

Sleigh Bells features Oswald, a clear precursor to Mickey Mouse in that he looks very similar. He is basically Mickey as a rabbit with longer ears.

The animation is by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks, who both went on to create Mickey following a contractual disagreement with Universal, for whom they had created the Oswald films.

The film features Oswald in an ice hockey game against a winter wonderland backdrop and has surreal touches with the rabbit at one point removing his ear to make a balloon.

There’s also an elephant and a laughing donkey, who gets the puck stuck in his mouth.

Andrew Millstein, the president of Walt Disney Animation Studios, said they were thrilled to be collaborating with the BFI on restoration of the short Oswald film.

“The Oswald shorts are an important part of our studios’ history and we have been working with film archives and private collectors all around the world to research the missing titles.”

Sleigh Bells will get its world premiere as part of a programme, called It’s a Disney Christmas: Seasonal Shorts, on December 12th.

The Guardian