film cameras poorly suited? Depends on what part of photography you are trying to learn. If you need to learn composition, or selecting color, or basic exposure then, sure, the instant feedback of a non-film electronic camera will be useful.
If you are trying to learn the nicer points of exposure, of tonal range, of light and dark and balance and why are my shadows so dim, then film is your place to be because trying to manage exposure with a non-film electronic camera, mostly, involves figuring out how to override their controls, which gets in the way of doing what you want.
Really, this is not a mac vs pc thing. there is no right or wrong. learn how you want to learn.
That was kind of my point. A film camera is a terrible tool to try and learn the basics on and see what is actually happening. I should know, I started out with borrowing film cameras growing up. It was an annoying and frustrating experience given that I didn't have anyone on hand to teach me while trying to learn out of simple manuals.
Learning the basics of all the mechanics on a camera that lets me take a photo, see the results, adjust things, see the results, and continue working away at various points and concepts
with zero thoughts or cares given to the number of exposures taken? I learned so much more about photography in the first week of holding a modern dslr than I ever did when trying to use my father's old film camera.
That in turn has translated into such a smoother process and better visualization of what I'm doing with film. Since getting back into working with film the only bad exposures I have gotten have been:
- Taking a shot and then realizing I had bumped my settings. (no ttl meter in my c330)
- Shutter mechanical issues.
- I once let a sync cord work lose while working with flash and didn't notice initially.
I have never once developed a roll and then had to wonder: "Why is that out of focus." "Why isn't that so over exposed?" "Why is that so dark?" - I was very well aware of
why the images with technical faults were that way, because most of them were due to me pushing the boundary of my exposure envelope. (Such as pushing things to see just how low of a shutter speed i could actually reliably handhold with a heavy TLR - answer: At least a stop or two lower than I would have with a non-IS lens on my SLR.)
Learning the initial basics on a digital camera with instant feedback as to what impact your decisions had means that you can move on to more advanced topics of expression when you pick up a film camera, and are far less likely to hit frustrating or confusing problems with regards to basic concepts.
But to bring things more back inline with the direct topic of the thread: The issues of how good a film camera body is to learn exposure is probably a moot point for the most part. Learn exposure, and then learn to use the metering systems you choose to work with, whether those are in camera/through the lens, automated systems, or external metering of whatever kind you prefer.