In my case, the resulting PDF looked fine in Adobe Reader and Mac preview, but did not appear to have been split into separate pages at all when viewing on iOS.
I used Python 2.7.8 and PyPDF2, and modified the script as follows, which worked fine (and reordered the pages left/right, rather than right/left).
import copy
import math
from PyPDF2 import PdfFileReader, PdfFileWriter
def split_pages(src, dst):
src_f = file(src, 'r+b')
dst_f = file(dst, 'w+b')
input = PdfFileReader(src_f)
output = PdfFileWriter()
for i in range(input.getNumPages()):
p = input.getPage(i)
q = copy.copy(p)
q.mediaBox = copy.copy(p.mediaBox)
x1, x2 = p.mediaBox.lowerLeft
x3, x4 = p.mediaBox.upperRight
x1, x2 = math.floor(x1), math.floor(x2)
x3, x4 = math.floor(x3), math.floor(x4)
x5, x6 = math.floor(x3/2), math.floor(x4/2)
if x3 > x4:
# horizontal
p.mediaBox.upperRight = (x5, x4)
p.mediaBox.lowerLeft = (x1, x2)
q.mediaBox.upperRight = (x3, x4)
q.mediaBox.lowerLeft = (x5, x2)
else:
# vertical
p.mediaBox.upperRight = (x3, x4)
p.mediaBox.lowerLeft = (x1, x6)
q.mediaBox.upperRight = (x3, x6)
q.mediaBox.lowerLeft = (x1, x2)
p.artBox = p.mediaBox
p.bleedBox = p.mediaBox
p.cropBox = p.mediaBox
q.artBox = q.mediaBox
q.bleedBox = q.mediaBox
q.cropBox = q.mediaBox
output.addPage(q)
output.addPage(p)
output.write(dst_f)
src_f.close()
dst_f.close()