As Tolstoy said, "All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way."
It is in that sense that I don't fault Kodak for where things are today. Their revenue fell off a cliff. Their market all but disappeared. History provides little reason to expect that companies in such circumstances will handle it gracefully. There are a handful of counter examples of course, but I'd call those situations where "the exception proves the rule".
Surely, well before the digital revolution, Kodak exhibited all the traits of a typical, ossified, inward-looking big corporation. The traits of their corporate culture that proved (nearly) fatal when the digital revolution took hold had surely been causing them to suffer in the market for decades. They had a good thing going, and they milked it well, and then it went away.
What confuses me is the presence of what seems like anger and bitterness directed toward Kodak on the part of film aficionados. I don't see any possibility, really, that even a metaphysically ideal management team/culture at Kodak over the past 30 years would have been able to guide the company to a place where film availability today would be all that different from where it actually is.
Actually, the opposite is may very well be the case. It may very well be that Kodak's "leviathanic" nature kept/keeps film going where a more nimble management team would have bailed out completely years ago. Its hard to imagine a forward looking, unsentimental, nimble management team assessing the situation in the mid to late 1990's and thinking anything other than "we have got to find another business to be in, and fast."
As things stand, I can't help the feeling that, as someone who returned to film in 2013, I've jumped onto a sinking ship. Sad, really. I'm not at all informed on the subtleties of either emulsion design or digital sensor design, but to my eye, the guys who designed film did things that the digital guys haven't yet figured out. There is a quality to the images I am getting from my RB67/Portra/Scan workflow that I never achieved shooting digital (despite endless hours of fiddling in Photoshop with countless plugins and techniques). Film just suits my eye better. I can see the difference. The aesthetic that the digital world has pursued just doesn't work for me. I can't get images like this from digital.
For the moment, I'm pleased that I can still get Portra 160 at what I consider ridiculously cheap prices. If that ever becomes doubtful, I'll buy as much as I can and freeze it. I'm also fortunate to have a local lab (shoutout to
Rockbrook Camera here in Omaha) that still does in-house developing and scanning. The fact that they are right off the highway on my drive to work makes it even nicer.