No Aristophanes, you are the one who doesn't get it.
You keep asserting conditions A+B+C+D+ etc ad nauseum to keep film production alive. Gotta have motion pictures, gotta have labs, gotta have lots of new cameras, gotta have mass marketing, gotta have mass produced chemicals etc. ... gotta have Kodak!!! ....or else the whole industry will just go *poof* and vanish entirely . Nonsense. This is an entirely new kind of market, post Kodak as we know it, and most of us have already adapted ourselves to that many years ago. And the remaining companies that adapt to that will turn a handsome profit. You keep trying to press a square peg into a round hole- to make the future market the same as the past. Of course that won't work. Isn't that stating the freakin' obvious? :confused: But that does not mean that film will vanish. It means that end-user costs will rise, that there will be fewer suppliers and fewer varieties of film (so what), but those of us who know the value of the products will continue to produce photographs and enjoy ourselves. But at the same time, we shall see the value of our work go up, not down. People who understand that and embrace it will see their film work increase in value.
Obviously, we have 40 pages of you wanting one thing to happen, and most of the rest of us scratching our heads wondering why you keep insisting that we all need to follow you on some incredibly narrow and tortuous slalom down a very steep hill towards the eventual demise of film. If your motive is to say that and make it clear that you think it's an impossible mission and cry about it, haven't you accomplished that already? I mean, has it ever once crossed your mind that we've heard it all before... years ago? And that if you offered one, just one creative idea then perhaps people might be more willing to listen?
If we all need to take fewer shots, then let's make 'em count. Let's print, let's help people understand the worth of what we do, and let's not try to play CEO of a bankrupt company, okay? Plenty of ways we can increase the value of analogue output. Getting teary eyed over every lab that goes belly-up will not help anyone. If I need convenience or speed, I use the other technology. If I need one of a kind output and I want to own every step of the process, I shoot film. Guess what, the vast majority of us do that. Surprise.