It's a weird situation though of course the whole Eastman/Alaris situation coming out of the bankruptcy was weird too. Can't see how the situation was good for anyone other than people with money tied in the UK Pension Plan... though 'Kodak' nonetheless survived and is still making film, so that's something at least.
Exactly how Eastman has separated themselves from Alaris, and the long term implications is still hard to understand. The latter got sold to Private Equity in 2024 (?) and generally those guys still like to make money (while killing the business in the process usually) so clearly there's some kind of arrangement in place that gives Alaris some kind of value. I read somewhere there's agreements in place until 2028.
I doubt we'll see any meaningful price reductions... even without double-dipping on distribution there's so much going on with silver prices, other inputs, tariffs and the fluctuating US dollar at the moment, plus the fact that Eastman's profit margins are still pretty miserable relative to how the business operated in its heyday.
That said, it's in their best interests to make and sell as much film as possible, given (a) Eastman's production facilities are, to the best of my knowledge, still optimised to produce way more film that current demand and (b) Kodak historically only ever made good profits off selling film at scale. OK, we're never going to see 1980s/1990s film volume again, but AU$40 rolls of Portra and AU$55 rolls of Ektachrome aren't exactly helping encourage the new generations to pick up film.
I really really wish Eastman would offer 100ft 35mm rolls of Ektachrome E100 and Vision3 250D. I realise they're probably terrified of respoolers but if they priced manageable bulk rolls at a fair price they'd take margins out of the respooler market pretty quickly. I'm sure CineStill would take issue too with the latter. But even offering retail cassettes of 250D at less than-Portra 400 prices would be a no brainer. The market's waiting and with the AHU version there's a lot less concern about remjet fouling minilabs.
Anyway, Eastman getting control back should be a good thing, it has the tools to make its market better. Though given it's past 20-30 year track record of shooting itself in both feet... hmmm!