You don't understand that, for the vast majority of people (including the vast majority of film-users), digital methods are not inferior, nor are they compromising anything. Digital technology has been enabling. But one of the things it did quite finally was kill film use in industry. No more bulky process cameras, no more miles of lith film, no more need for photos shot on transparency. No more shuffling physical copy from one place to another and back again for changes. All of that tedium was swept away - along with all the skills to make it happen - and along with the vast majority of materials involved.
Then there's the wedding photographer, whose clients want all their photos to have a particular look and definitely want to be able to post their photos on Facebook or whatever. What wedding photographer will get away with handing a print package, no scans of any kind available, to their client?
Then there are all the people who just take pictures. You know what? They don't want prints. They want to send photos in messages, post them on social media, email them to relatives, and maybe get a photo book printed once a year - but otherwise, they're fine just having them on their phone or computer. They don't think much about it.
And then we're left with the idea of a "movement" of just film users, not using any digital methods whatsoever. How are they going to show each other what they're doing?-- meet in person? How many of us on this thread have met in person? Andrew and Matt. There's no channel available for communicating in a purely non-digital way, anymore - no one will do it.
The non-personal use of film will never be resurrected. Be happy so many people are using it the way they are. Kodak and Ilford and Foma and Adox and Fuji surely are very happy so many people are shooting film, scanning it, and posting the photos online.