The film is essentially Chicken Run meets The Great Escape , complete with period-accurate slang, propaganda posters, and surprisingly dark themes for a G-rated feature. In the years following its release, Valiant largely disappeared from the cultural landscape. Unlike Disney’s mainline animated classics, Valiant was not treated as a crown jewel. Its DVD release was barebones, and for nearly a decade, the film was not available on major streaming platforms like Disney+ (due to distribution rights complexities with Vanguard) without a costly digital rental.
On the Internet Archive, Valiant exists in a legal gray area of "orphaned media." While technically still under copyright (owned by Disney and Vanguard), the film is commercially dormant. The Archive’s user-uploaded versions are typically presented as "Preservation Copies," intended for research, criticism, or nostalgia rather than piracy. valiant 2005 internet archive
Furthermore, the Archive allows fans to access the film in low-bandwidth formats (256kbps MP4s), making it viewable on old computers or mobile devices in areas with poor internet, honoring the film’s scrappy, "underdog" narrative. Watching Valiant on the Internet Archive today reveals a film that is better than its 32% Rotten Tomatoes score suggests. The animation—done by the London-based Vanguard—has a charming, clay-like texture that predates the plastic sheen of later CGI. The voice cast is absurdly stacked: In addition to the leads, Jim Broadbent, Hugh Laurie, and John Hurt show up for single lines. The film is essentially Chicken Run meets The