They are FINE. Considering the best pix ever were taken with lenses with NO coating, they are even better than fine. None of my Nikon 35mm glass is coated. My favorite 35mm lens, my Summar, is non coated AND scratched to hell and it is FINE.
Jeezus H. Christ; you are talking about shooting two rolls of film per year. Quit obsessing and shoot. There is some Internet advice that will actually help all of us. I grow weary of "I read it on the Internet..." I would worry more about capturing and printing good pix and having sound concepts than obsessing about some technical minutiae.
People love to obsess about the theoretical when they should be obsessing about the practical, and then they go write about it on the Internet and people read it and take it as if it is law. I'll bet you that no one in the world, when presented with one of an artist's fine, genius square prints, obviously the work of a new-age photographic master, is even going to be thinking about what camera was used and how many coatings the lens had, nor would the print be any more or less successful with a German versus a Japanese lens.
My point is that if anyone makes any comment about technique, or what camera you used, or how many coatings your lens has right off the bat, then your photo probably stinks. If your work doesn't quite meet those criteria above (fine, genius, work of a master), like most of ours does not, then the lens will REALLY not matter. Show up in any fine art gallery or fine art school talking about crap like that, and they will give you a bored stare and possibly some rolled eyes. Mention that you read it on the Internet, and you will be laughed out of the place.