I haven't found videos of them online anywhere, yet. Believe me, I've looked. There is one video of a couple beginner brown belts joking around, and performing one of the tiger forms very poorly.
Another thing which makes me believe these forms may be unique is the dialect/language used to represent them. I wish I knew what the actual Chinese characters were, to have someone translate them using more common mandarin dialect. It's possible that it may be fujian/min dialect, but I'm not sure.
In mandarin, crane is pronounced "hur", romanized pinyin as "he", right?
Our crane forms are called "hao". Bai hao chuan se, bai hao huan se, bai hao huan jiao. likewise, many of our forms use the romanization "chien" for fist. I know pinyin romanization is "quan", though the actual pronounciation does sound very close to "chien", at least I've heard it spoken that way before.
Chie Chien, and ching kong fu hu chien.
I don't know if the language element means anything, but it may provide a clue to the origins of some of these forms, or at least the people who passed them on to the The family. With the actual characters for these names, we could find out for sure if the "official" translations are correct. I know I saw a list of forms, at one point, with characters and translations hand written. Maybe some of the guys from the east have a copy of it.
If I had a video camera and a space to do it, I'd think about putting up videos of myself doing some of these forms. I would love to hear what outside people have to say about them, if they recognize them or any elements of them.
I keep contemplating using my digital camera, which can make short videos, to do it, but the quality might be poor, and I'd need help from my wife to make sure it keeps me in frame
"I am a servant of the Secret Fire, wielder of the flame of Anor. The dark fire will not avail you, flame of Udun! Go back to the shadow, you cannot pass!"