The first assumption in the tread, that digital has surpassed analog, is wrong as wrong can be.
It’s maddening that ninety percent of the time you’ll get touchy-feely, wishy-washy, handwavy answers to the question “why film”?
Some of the reasons are of course true, but only of primary importance for naive, easily distracted people.
These common reasons given, being secondary or further down the list for people actually concerned with images.
Very few people will repeatedly participate in an artistic process where the main attraction and reward is the process and tools themselves.
Films future is bleak in the long term, if that kind of rethoric is allowed to reverberate and become gospel.
Analog photography is superior where it counts. And that’s goes for C41, B&W as well as E6.
Resolution in quality and kind is better on film, dynamic range is incomparably better and colour depth and microcontrast is just on a whole other level.
Have look at the direct output of a sensor before Bayer Interpolation to get an idea of how much is “guesswork”.
Sensitivity or more generally quantum efficiency is lower for film, but for good reason and not as a fundamental of the technology.
Portra and Cinestill will let us work in almost any kind of environment you would reasonably want to.
What’s more, well implemented flash looks great on film and is relatively easy to use, due to the DR characteristics of film.
The primary trouble is a desperate lack of good scanners that are affordable to own. All of the good ones either being rare, worn down, or insanely expensive.
Scanning with a DSLR is a very good option but will never be smooth, convenient and as trouble free as a dedicated setup.
We need great, cheap scanners more than we need anything else, including new film stock or new cameras.