Film suffers from practical limitations rather than theoretical ones. In the 1970s Eggleston used dye transfer printing, arguably the finest colour print medium that has yet been invented. I read somewhere that a large professionally made dye transfer print cost $500 in the mid-70s. Today you can have a drum scan made of a 35mm negative that will exhaust every grain of information, but very few people do. In the video Jem Southam said the demise of his favourite Kodak paper was one of the reasons he gave up the 10 x 8 camera. The background to film photography is one of gradual contraction and withdrawal. Even getting a quick turnaround C41 isn't easy unless in most areas, you process the film yourself. The Magnum agency printer (who produced Cartier-Bresson, Koudelka and other's work and whose name escapes me for the moment), said black and white printing was so much more difficult since cadmium rich paper finished.
People persevere with film despite the issues. By contrast a straight out the camera jpeg can be printed on fine archival rag paper at the touch of a button. The theoretical boundaries of any medium of format are much larger than their usual application. The difference between theory and practice can be a costly business.
I agree : this discussion is indeed extreme academical! For normal practice (prints of smaller formats in 5x7 inch for example and with higher format) it has no impact for usual practice!
But (for me) there is a strange background from history of digital!
Around 2000 I was told from a head lighting technician (he owned a digital cam) that the quality
of a 800.000 pixel digicam has best resolution up to 30 x 40 cm prints!
And he was impressed from anountsments that there is next a digicam from 1 Megapixel!
He stated to me : 1 000 000 pixel thats "film quality"!
Aha - I didn't care about!
But one a half year later first professional camera operators shot digital with 2 Megapixel cams
and stated : The quality of their 2MP Nikon is much better than with film (and they had experience from own darkroom) !
I realy wonder about their darkroom experience since 20can't


!
So there is a serious need to clearify that nonsense in 2019!
(And this nonsence proceed )
To me the 20MP class full frame digital cams reached indeed the resolution of best 35mm film!
But 40MP can't double resolution and 80MP digital isn't able to win in comparison with 4times
value!
So my conclusion is format in comparison of the media!
That should mean : More format = more quality (with film and with digital sensors)
Because the restriction isn't from total value of megapixel - it is from total size of sensor space!
And that issue brings me into trouble with discussions about quality of sensors from smaller size than full frame !
with regards
It is like a discussion about the immense quality and resolution of 110 film format!
