Several outlets report that a restored version of “The Odyssey” is being shown in only a limited number of cinemas worldwide, presented as the film’s director intended. The reporting says the release includes a sizable run of digitally restored footage—described as about 17 kilometres of film—and is offered to audiences at a ticket price of around $47.
The articles state that Australia is among the countries hosting the special screenings, though they do not present differing details about the venue or schedule. Instead, the sources focus on the rarity of the format and the concept of “resurrecting” the film by screening it in a director-approved version rather than in a more typical edit.
While the articles share the same core claims—limited international availability, restoration faithful to the director’s vision, and the scale and pricing of the screenings—their common emphasis is on why audiences are seeing this version now: it is part of a small, targeted exhibition rather than a broad general release.