More good points.
Since I picked up the camera again and have been out shooting I get asked this a lot. I usually find that they are genuinely interested in film cameras and their simplicity. Only once has someone tried to debate me about the merits of digital compared to the 'archaic' drawbacks of film.
I am amazed at how many folks have high end amateur cameras, even pro models who really don't know how to shoot. I feel bad for them. They have been sold a bill of goods that you can buy an eye.
Its all about composition, you can make award winning images with an Instamatic if its composed correctly.
A 20 dollar ebay special can and will shoot quality images that rival digitals costing well over $1,000.
Digital doesn't match the analog nuances of film, just as CDs don' match analog recordings.They are adding settings to digitals now to behave like certain film.

Sure 24 mp cameras are out there, when you can buy them for 20 bux and they work...
For the difference in price I can shoot a lot film and pay it out 20 dollars at a time. I can get 1100 shots for the price of the digital camera I would buy. Thats 1100 "keepers".
Because shoting digital seems almost free every one over shoots everything, but those shots come at a cost. Every shutter actuation devalues the camera, digital cameras record every shutter actuation.
I can buy used film camera in EX+ condition from KEH today for $300, keep it looking good and in 2 years sell it on ebay and lose at most 20-30% of the purchase price.Buy a $300 digital today new or used and in 2 years its virtually worthless.
I've seen digital in the hands of casual shooters roll up 50,000 shots in a few years, considering the life of the shutter in most cases is limted to about 100k, that 2000 dollar digital is worth about 300 at this point.
I don't like scrolling through menus to select an apeture or a shutter speed, when camera makers added dials to digitals they were harshly critisized for creating "amatuer" cameras.

Digital also spies on you recording all kinds of information on the camera,lens and exposure, yes its conveinent but if it uses gps it also gives away your position. I like my privacy.Will thousands of photographers rush to my backyard to shoot my flowers,wildlife etc? no, but I gauruntee if an image was published in major media there would be at least one geek trespassing.
Its like fishing in a crowd, you catch a fish out of a spot and 3 guys will throw in at the same hole...
There are hidden costs in digital, maybe not hidden but not apparent on the surface.
For $20 I can buy a roll of 24 exp print film and get it processed with prints.
To do the same quality in digital you need a $1200 camera, a $400 printer, paper and ink that costs about 50 cents a sheet to print...
thats 83 cents a picture for film consumables, digital about 25 cents (you can fit 2 images on one sheet)
For kicks heres a run down
Film
Used camera with lens $200 (you can get a ex cond top drawer camera and lens shopping smart)
Film and processing $21 (4x6 prints)
----------------------------------
$221
cost per shot (24 exp) $9.21
5000 images $.87
Digital
camera used 12 mp $1200
printer new epson740 $ 500
computer dell
scratch and dent $500
photo software $80
paper/ink 12 sheets $6.00
---------------------------------------
$2286
cost per shot (24 exp) $95.25
5000 images $.96
I'm sure someone can find a way to argue this, but this is MY perspective on it and won't look at it any other way.Some people have told me not say anything unless I have first hand experience.
In all the above examples I used real prices and I own both film and digital slrs.