In short, no.
In long, maybe, with a few caveats.
The distance between the mount of the lens and the sensor is very short with these lenses, there is no way to get an SLR-style mirror in there to focus it.
The other way to focus accurately with short-mount lenses is with a rangefinder, like a Leica / Bessa / etc. But then the lenses and camera both need a 'rangefinder coupling' cam, and those lenses do not have one.
The only way to shoot these on film would be by 'scale focussing', ie looking at the distance markings and stopping-down to cover any errors, best used on wide-angles only.
Then there's the fact that those lenses only have 19mm sensor-to-flange distance, to use them on any existing camera via adapter the distance would have to be less than this: no such film cameras exist with as short a flange distance.
Or you'd need to get an adapter with glass in it. But they don't exist so you'd have to design and build one yourself.
Also, these lenses only cover a small Image Circle, ~22mm, which will cover a 110-frame, but not a 135 full frame or even 135 half-frame (~30mm).
And as far as I know, those lenses have electronic-apertures so they will remain wide-open until the camera stops them down to take the photo, and may even have electronic focus on some of them.
Finally, I've read reviews that said some of those lenses have very bad and uncorrected barrel-distortion and/or CA in the glass, this is auto-corrected and baked-in the RAW file so most users wouldn't even know (except for the mushy corners from the correcting).
And micro 4/3rd sensors also have 4mm of glass stack on top of them, most digital sensors have 2mm, Leica have >1mm, film has 0mm. Changing this glass thickness will change the performance of the lens (especially wide-angles), they've all been tuned to their specific thicknesses.
So some of them might be rather sharp in the centre, but they probably wouldn't look too good on film.
So, you'll have to build your own camera that takes 110 (or minox) film, including all the electronics to stop down the aperture, and scale-focus at small apertures because there's no RF cam OR build a lens adapter to a bigger film camera like a Leica, with glass in it so that it can focus to infinity, plus aforementioned electronics, and put up with the tiny image circle on 135 film.
Or you can take $20 to ebay and get some very nice second-hand cameras and lenses that were designed and made for film...