I went looking, and found a much sharper print (which is unfortunately broken into three parts) on YouTube:Unfortunately, the only way to get a copy of your own from that source is to use a download utility that can capture streaming media to a file, and a media player that supports Flash videos (FLV). I did not find any other copy of the film here on IA. The UCLA Film & Television Archive apparently has it, but I do not know if the public can access the collection.[Update following Digital Axis' review:] I've been looking over some freeware media transcoder packages. Some of them have the capability to extract the video and audio streams from one container format and losslessly place them into another container. YouTube is currently encoding their content with H.264 AVC and AAC, which is then placed into the Flash video container (FLV). If Freemake can transcode losslessly, these FLV files are perfect candidates for conversion to MP4. One advantage to MP4 is that it supports tags; FLV apparently does not. When I tag my MP4 files, I usually put the source URL in the comments field.