There's a review up at: http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/observations/tng-r-review.htm
Solid review, though I thought this bit was amusing:
If he smoothed away most of the "noise" then what he has actually accomplished is to wipe out all the high frequency detail inherent in the film's grain structure, which in the case of the original camera negative, means he has wiped out most of the detail in the image with a very broad brush. You can't review the true image quality of the set if your display isn't properly calibrated -- and certainly not after applying detail destroying noise reduction (enough to completely remove occasional white specks, i.e. dirt or dust on the negative).
Technicolor has already applied a minimum level of DNR during encoding, so this, in my view, is completely unnecessary. The episodes will generally get finer-grained as the show progresses (due to more advanced film stocks being used), so the level of "graininess" will subside unless a certain stylistic choice is used (as in the Kataan scenes in "The Inner Light.")
Solid review, though I thought this bit was amusing:
I'm new to the Blu-ray world, and I actually bought a player just to view TNG-R. It took me a couple of tries to find out an image setting on our LCD TV that would include just the right amount of noise reduction to remove all the annoying white pixels and leave a decent graininess while not blurring the image too much. After that adjustment the image quality is superb, with little noise even in the dark scenes.

Technicolor has already applied a minimum level of DNR during encoding, so this, in my view, is completely unnecessary. The episodes will generally get finer-grained as the show progresses (due to more advanced film stocks being used), so the level of "graininess" will subside unless a certain stylistic choice is used (as in the Kataan scenes in "The Inner Light.")