Michael Jackson’s Final Home Contents Up For Auction
The various contents of the King of Pop, Michael Jackson’s final home will be sold at an auction next week thereby presenting collectors and Jackson fans a unique opportunity to purchase the exclusive collection. Reuters

(Reuters) - Previously unseen footage of Michael Jackson's 1993 Dangerous tour, which had been expected to fetch 4-5 million pounds ($6.2-7.8 million) failed to sell at auction in Britain on Saturday.

At this stage it has not sold, said a spokesman for The Fame Bureau auctioneers, who specialize in pop memorabilia. We are still talking to people, but online it did not sell.

He said he was confident a buyer would be found, although nothing is a certainty.

The auction house said it had been forced to remove a brief clip of the video from its website before the online auction after Jackson's record label made a copyright claim.

The fact that a successful buyer may not be able to use the film for commercial purposes may have dampened demand given the hefty asking price, but the spokesman played down the copyright dispute.

I don't think that was a problem at all, he said, adding that any serious potential buyer would be fully aware of the issue.

Nearly two hours long, the footage was shot by Jackson's own production crew and meant to be an intimate portrait of Jackson on tour.

But the singer was unhappy with the quality and gave the only copy to his driver, who was now trying to sell the footage, the auction house said.

It was made during Jackson's Dangerous tour in 1993 at a stop in Argentina.

A DVD of the Dangerous concert tour, filmed in Bucharest, was released in 2005 and is still available on Amazon.com and other retailers for about $12.

Items related to Jackson have skyrocketed in value since his death in 2009.

The red and black leather jacket he wore for his 1983 Thriller video sold for $1.8 million in Los Angeles in June.