It actually doesn't fail but it 'cannot open in protected mode' (see here 
http://blogs.adobe.com/dmcmahon/2012/07/27/adobe-reader-cannot-open-protected-mode-due-to-a-problem-with-your-system-configuration/)

I am using subprocess.Popen("AcroRe32.exe /n <file.pdf>") which is the actuall 
adobe reader command I'd issue on the command line to open the pdf (the /n 
option opens it the file in a new instance of reader).

Now, when I issue the command straight from powershell, the pdf opens no 
problem, but when I open in my script (whether a .py or py2exe) I get the pop 
up complaining that the PDF cannot be opened in 'protected mode.' One of the 
options is to open it anyways, which works. 

Looking into it (see the link in the first paragraph) my best guess is that 
it's due to something like "JS-invoked processes: Launching a process through 
JavaScript is not allowed with Protected Mode enabled." 

But my naive understanding was that when I give Popen instruction, the command 
is handed off to windows and the called program is unaware of how it got 
called, so my thinking is that either that is incorrect or windows somehow 
'cooperates' with reader to figure things out. 

I am looking for *any* insight as to how to deal with this, and the 'turn off 
protected mode" option wont work for me. 

Here is my code,

outputname = " unlocked.pdf"

commandstr = "qpdf --decrypt " + sys.argv[1] + outputname
os.system(commandstr)

new_command_str = "AcroRd32.exe /n" + outputname
subprocess.Popen(new_command_str)

sys.exit(0)
 
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