Fifty years after the distinctive opening guitar riff of one of Australia’s best loved rock anthems detonated across Australian radio, a rarely-seen experimental colourised version of Daddy Cool’s iconic promotional film clip for ‘Eagle Rock’ has been found and restored by the NFSA.

Ross Wilson doing the Eagle Rock. Frame capture from NFSA Title No. 1105254.
Originally shot on 16mm black-and-white film in 1971 by 23-year-old Melbourne filmmaker Chris Löfvén, the newly discovered version features a 37-second section using colour filters printed onto colour film stock. This particular print, though never intended for screening, was possibly seen by teenage audiences of 0-10 Network pop music program Happening 71 throughout 1971. Television viewers however would not have seen the full effects of this psychedelic-flavoured sequence, as colour transmission to Australian television sets did not roll out nationally until 1 March 1975. Edited into a new HD master digitised from the 16mm black-and-white inter-negative and synched with a digital transfer from the original 1971 45rpm stereo mix, this colour sequence is presented here complete for the first time.
Recorded for the NFSA’s Oral History Program in 2006 (NFSA title: 687069), Ross Wilson discusses the origin of the clip’s creation in this excerpt:

























