they just circulated a single print in L.A at year's end, and then dribbled a single 70mm and single 35mm print around the country with the notion that constituted a theatrical reissue)
Were people being turned away from "House Full" cinemas, or was supply and demand satisfied?
Not the issue. Warner had a contractual obligation to do a legitimate reissue, so I see that as possibly testing the waters for further exploiting the Kubrick estate.Though as far as attendance goes, based on the admittedly goodlooking 35mm print I saw up here a few times, the crowds were pretty damn solid for the whole week.
The film's pace is said to make it less accessable, not the still utterly stellar quality of the vfx.
on the TMP part of your post:
Since I don't recognize the grainy argument for TOS vs tos-r (why exchange SOME grain and SOME mattelines in favor lack of photorealistic credibility of the object in question for most so-called improvements?), I'll ignore it.
And I categorically reject that the DE is in any substantial way pushing the film toward Wise's vision. His comments shortly after the film's release certainly don't reflect that (such as saying the ent intro should be cut by a minute or more), and there are plenty of boards and art indicating LOTS of approaches to the various shots reworked, showing as many that kept the film looking more like what it was than the way the DE reworked things. Going back to Yuricich's discarded Vulcan that was never seen in the film would be one, and I've never seen any art indicating the asymmetric view out the lounge with that lame nacelle, whereas we have nice Probert stuff indicating a symmetrical view. That whole 'animating on twos' notion is a pretty good indicator that the folks ordering stuff up on the DE didn't know enough about the past to trust their own eyes. Somebody ought to try rendering out the moire deckerilia meld transformation at the end on twos to see how jerky it would look.
As far as fans getting to see the 'director's vision' in the DE, I just don't buy it. I also think that since folks who came along after the theatrical release have only seen it on VHS (except for the rare laserdisc folks), they probably haven't had a chance to see it as a side by side compare to realize that there isn't even the reported 500 grand put into it visible in the DE.
Better that they coasted awhile and put some real money into doing it a lot more right and at a magnitude better resolution, so they could repurpose it for each new tech generation. But then again, this is Paramount, who seems to run the same regardless of ownership.