I am no expert, but I thought when a motion picture is shot on film, it is shot on Vision 3 negative film, scanned, and edited digitally. Cinematographers want the look of film, so they get it in the initial capture, and from that point everything is handled in the digital domain. Am I mistaken? Nobody is shooting E6 and the only ones likely to do so are students. Kodak plans a develop and scan program for them as well, right?
It's probably not directed at major productions but film schools, independents and short films. Look at Kodak marketing. Its all on social media directed at the urban young (and young in mind) crowd. Looking at most, not all, regular posters here I agree with those upthread who argued that Kodak isn't marketing at those. Their business is hopefully a baselevel and surely welcome. But they think the survival of film is with these people.
If I am right that means that Kodak will most unlikely release new products for the darkroom (paper). There is a fraction of that modern target group who are willing to try the darkroom. But that niche of a niche is probably better catered for by the smaller and agile companies, which are still selling paper and darkroom supplies. Kodak is best set up for this scaled down large scale production and for that they need this young *crowd*. And they will likely love the 'look' of reversal motion film. Unlike negative, reversal will really deliver a look that is cast in stone/gelatin by the film itself. Not the scanning machines of Best Buy.