Scott Sheppard, feel free to chime in here to back me up since you were there, but when we were at Kodak with the VP, then head of marketing, etc. we heard Josh Root of Photo.net flat out tell them that there is no infastructure to digitize film, so since people want to do that for email, flickr and the like, it would do Kodak well to make at least a decent consumer level scanner to make that happen and to make sure the ones at the labs are doing it with some form of quality and consistency. This is what could very well be the nail in the coffin for color film, no way to make a cost effective digital rendering of it. I have a 9000ED and it pretty easy to do color neg or E6 emulsions with it, but most can not afford the flat out crazy prices for it. I really prefer to avoid the hybrid workflow, but since I am still published, I need to do it anyway in terms of color. Ektar and Portra scan crazy good, enabling one to make enormous prints from the 120 versions of it. I am currently doing a (there was a url link here which no longer exists) on Endura Metallic and it looks damn good thus far.
There are a few new scanners coming out including a 120 version, but it is slow to arrive. One thing that might be in the works is with high res cameras like the D800E, they could very well be used in "Slide Copy" mode to help this along, I have talked about this with Nikon for some time now, it would be real easy to create a setting that maximizes range and color consistency and outside of price considerate scanners, this might be the only way forward in terms of color. I also don't think most have any problem sending film out and waiting a few days to get it back, the problem is that through the tired machine of the media, most think that is not even an option. I am out shooting every day, I meet tons of people and when it comes down to it, more people than you might think would use film if they knew that A, it was still available to buy and B, they can send it off to fine labs like Dwayne's and get back good prints, a CD and little proof sheet. It's baffling, no one has any problem buying books on Amazon, but when it comes to film, they just accept the doomsday message and instead, buy into the digital hype.
It's not that people do not want to use film, if anything some wish for when it was that simple, shoot and someone else does the rest. One of the biggest problems is that people are either too lazy to seek out the truth or just assume that what they read on dpreview is gospel.
How bright or how dark is the future for film, depends on who you talk to, especially here. I have my concerns but figure why keep beating the crap out of those issues when I can do my part to show good work, get the message out and get people excited about film again. It does work, I even have magazines covering the tab for film and soup lately...