Sal, it helps if you know what is going on in the market. With the arrival of digital, we now had to split the pie in two. This means a restructuring in the industry, and film moving to a specialty class status. Product choices are less (no repetition), local neighbourhood labs have closed down...why....because it is a specialty good, and like surgery you find it in major cities. Things are leaner and meaner. All the smoke we saw was in the smaller formats (35mm and medium format). At one time medium format was the bread and butter in the wedding industry, but now it is replaced by the dslr.
Look now at the large format ndustry (the resellers), and the number of mfrs of film cameras (for large format) has actually increased ...Fotoman China, Goaersi, Chamonix are newcomers. The product lines are expanding....formats like 5x8,6.5x8.5,7x17m etc.... and other odd sizes have been added, and we now have ultra large format (a term that 5 years ago didn't exist). We have over 15 mfrs of large format cameras (Toyo, Linhof, Sinar, Wenham, Fotoman China, Goaersi, Wista, Arca, Sylvestri, Chamonix, Horseman, Ebony, Shen-Hao, Tachihara, and many more.
First, decide what part of the industry is suffering before you say film is near dead. The fine art market is doing well, but like any other specialty item (jaguar autos, errari,etc....you wait longer, less choices, travel farther, all are expected inconveniences (but if you want it, Mpex or Badger has it or can get it). People are not buying 44 inch printers just for their little dslr. Digital backs are unaffordable, and still do not match 4x5.
When I see large format mfrs disappearing, and their product lines reduced to one or two products (not a dozen), then I;ll worry about film. Ever look at how extensive the ebony or chamonix product line is? They didn't start-up thinking that business will be over in 5 years. Linhof would not have upgraded their technica (to model 3000), or updated the technorama. The market is smaller, film choices in large format are leaner (but all there), and new film products developed (Ektar 100). Even Polaroid is back in business. Don't just look at the small format mkt and tell us film is dead...rather look at the entire industry. Every pro still shoots his large format camera for personal work (allows bigger prints, more portable then sBetterlight scanning backs, far cheaper), they just gave up their 35mm and 120 formats. Large format is "high-end" photography, and the cheapest route for the absolute best quality while remaining affordable. Under $1000 and your in business, and you pay-as-you-go for shooting film (no massive depreciation if your not using your digital back everyday).
Well, if film is dead, I got to ask....do you have a P65 digital back (only $50k plus body, lenses, tax). This market is shrinking....people are finding they get by with a high-end dslr (that is weatherproof, and faster frame rate).....leaving only a small market wanting a digital back. The wedding/journalist/amateur/sports/magazine market is dominated by the dslr, and I don't think they will switch. Digital backs are now sandwished in the middle, better then a dslr (but not beating the 4x5 or larger formats), and cost 20x more then necessary.
Lets not get into stitching either, because I can stich large format also (eg- two 4x5 gives 4x10)....so there is no way of catching up, and your light would be changing trying to catch up doing 30-50 or more exposures.