One day someone showed the movie. Then the reel went into a case and the case went into a box and the box sat.
Until, one day decades later, it appeared again — on YouTube.
It was a promotional film for Minneapolis from the mid- to late 1960s. In addition to blink-and-you'll-miss-it shots of Minneapolis, it had an earworm song that extolled the city's virtues.
Somehow it ended up at Augsburg University, labeled "Skip Day 1947." (Perhaps it was forgotten for so long because no one wanted to watch postwar undergrad hijinks.)
Stewart Van Cleve, Augsburg's energetic digital archivist, was working his way through the university's old media, digitizing history for the future.
"I opened a drawer, and got a big vinegar whiff," said Van Cleve. That meant the film had spent its time in the dark, decomposing. "The films were stored in old metal tins," Stewart said, "with no ventilation holes — they weren't built for preservation considerations."
A cursory examination of the movie showed it wasn't about Skip Day and wasn't from 1947. It was about Minneapolis, but its date remained a mystery.
Augsburg has its own team that scans and restores films, but this one required special care. It was sent to Home Video Studio in Bloomington, where it was digitized frame-by-frame. The results were delightful.