LOS ANGELES -- It was a clear spring day in 1937 when Amelia Earhart, ready to make history by flying around the world, brought her personal photographer to a small California airport to document the journey's beginning.
Al Bresnik took dozens of still photos, including a few that likely have been seen by millions. His brother John, who tagged along, made a dark, grainy 3.5-minute home movie almost nobody saw -- until now.
The film, "Amelia Earhart's Last Photo Shoot," is being released this month by The Paragon Agency publishing house, along with an 80-page book of the same name that documents a journey that ended short of the finish line when Earhart's plane vanished somewhere over the Pacific Ocean.
A downloadable copy of the film is being provided to those who buy the book. Paragon publisher Doug Westfall said he plans to donate the fragile original given to him by John Bresnik's son to an archive or museum.
The film, taken with a 16-millimeter camera, sat on a shelf in his father's office for more than 50 years until his death in 1992, said Bresnik's son, also named John. After that, it sat in the younger man's home in Escondido, California, for about 20 more years.
"I didn't even know what was on the film until my dad died, and I took it home and watched it," Bresnik said recently. "It just always sat it in a plain box on a shelf in his office, and on the outside it said, 'Amelia Earhart, Burbank Airport, 1937."'
He can't say with certainty his father took the film, although he knows his uncle didn't because he's in it.
So is Earhart, looking jaunty and more playful than the public persona she sometimes projected. Dressed in a smart pantsuit rather than her flight jacket, she shows people around the plane, clambers on top to pose for still photos and occasionally grins broadly, something she rarely did in her official photos.
"It shows a more feminine side of her," said Nicole Swinford, who wrote the accompanying book.
Like all things Earhart, it comes with controversy.
Richard Gillespie, executive director of the International Group For Historic Aircraft Recovery, said the film is authentic, but he believes it was taken in March 1937 and not in May, as Swinford concludes.
It was in March that Earhart made her first attempt to become the first woman to circle Earth when she left from California. She only got as far as Hawaii, where she crashed her twin-engine Electra L-10E on takeoff and had to have it shipped home for repairs.
"You can tell from the way the airplane's configured," said Gillespie who has studied Earhart for nearly 30 years. "The airplane as shown in the film is very clearly the pre-repaired airplane."
Whatever the date of the photo shoot, Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, left what's now known as Bob Hope Airport in Burbank on May 21, 1937, for a second try, this time heading east. Gillespie doubts there was a photo shoot before that flight because she left quietly that time.
Earhart and Noonan were about two-thirds through their journey when they left New Guinea on July 2 for Howland Island, a tiny speck of land in the Pacific, midway between Australia and Hawaii. In one of her last radio transmissions, the pilot said she thought they were near but couldn't see the island and were low on fuel.
The first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic, Earhart was one of the most recognizable celebrities of her time, and Westfall acknowledged that plenty of people may have taken her photo during stops on that trip.
But this appears to be the final film heralding her departure from California on the first leg of what would be her final flight.
"Then she left us forever," Westfall said.
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