Acros 100, or any current film from kodak or ilford can barely reach half of what a decent prime lens for 35mm RF cameras is capable of, not just Leica, Zeiss etc.
Acros 100 is underpowered even for Industar 3,5/50 or most of the Jupiter glass.
Yeah, but this is the way to look at it if you are obsessed with technical image quality only which in my opinion is often a big distraction from the total impact of the resulting photograph, it often shows in a lot of work on here. If you are doing amaze balls work using super sharp glass on super high res 35mm film, rock on. But if it is the same old "Wow, look at that detail in my neighbor's brick wall!"...?....I'll pass every time. I have quite a nice stash of Kodak Techpan in 35mm and 120 and while amazing in 35mm behind a lens like the Leica 50mm 1.4 Asph, the prints are not nearly as amazing as say, APX25, PanF, Tmax 100 or Acros in 120. One of the main reasons is dust, it is night and day between 35mm and 120 when it comes to printing and a film like Techpan with no grain to hide it is kind of a nightmare. The main use for me with a film like Techpan is specific macro shots and *very* specific tonal relationships, not uber sharpness. I use about 3-5 rolls a year & I am glad I keep at that level and not try to use it on everything I want to look under a microscope at.
If you go waaaay back in my posts on here, you will see I too was obsessed with films like Techpan in 35mm...then I started printing from 120 and eventually 4x5 and found it exponentially easier to arrive at a nice print with loads of detail and tonal nuance.
I do love 35mm though, it's a often chosen tool by many for a reason and being able to react fast to things and nail the focus easily makes it a worthwhile choice. But the photo...impact, impact, impact....
If you really want big pictures ya just gotta shoot big film.
...or just shoot a big idea and have a big print made out of it. This 35mm Tmax 100 shot was printed 30' feet wide...no one complained about it not being a larger format...