I bought one for a studio prop
Are you one of those people I'm still scratching my heads about who bought a brick of 120 KC64 on ebay? I once saw one go for $250 last year. Still not quite sure what those people were thinking.
I bought one of the bricks for a prop. It's not wasting space in my freezer, and I certainly didn't pay $250 for it. In fact, it's now sitting between two Kodak Brownies. A fitting tribute I think. (OK, so the purists will point out that I should open it and re-roll it onto 620 spools. Get over it. I'm not *THAT* crazy.)
There's also a bit of nostalgia, but I'm not harboring any delusions. If Dwayne's will process it, then I think slitting is a reasonable use for any remaining stocks. It's a lot better than tossing them in a landfill. After all, if you owned the last remaining magnum of Dom Perignon in the world you wouldn't pour it out for spite.
I think Kodachrome in 120 has an even smaller chance of happening than one more master-roll of K64-135. And I'd put another master roll of K64-135 in the under 1/10 of 1% category unless hoards of us got together and agreed to purchase the whole roll from Kodak *BEFORE* production. I don't know how many rolls of 135 come from one master roll, but I don't think I have enough room in my freezer for my share, nor enough money in my bank account to pay for my share. The problem is that we've have to split it among thousands of us to make it feasible, and I doubt we could find thousands of us willing to commit big bucks. I'm not a pro shooter, so there's no way I'm going to buy 500 rolls of film, and that quantity is a mere drop in the bucket of the commitment it would take to even get Kodak's attention.
As I pointed out before, all businesses are in business to make money; they're not in business to make whatever product they happen to sell. The product is merely a conduit to the profit margin. Artists are concerned about the product above the profit. Shareholders want a dividend payment, even if you have completely change the product line to digital images and inkjet paper.
As another glib soul pointed out some scores of postings ago, the thing we have to come to grip with is that *ALL* silver based imaging is now an "alternative" process. I don't say that digital has "won" because I don't think it's a winning or loosing proposition. Electronic/Digital has outstripped Chemical based imaging in the same way that early photography outstripped studio portrait painters, but I can walk into any craft store in town and still find pre-stretched canvas, Grumbacher paints, and row after row of brushes. It didn't die, it just moved into a different niche. The same is happening to chemical based imaging. That doesn't mean I'm changing what I do. I'm still doing what I want, because in this hobby, I'm in the artists role. I care more about the product than a profit.
MB