I've recently joined a photography club.
Everyone is really friendly, but some of them take every opportunity to tell me how much more sophisticated their digital cameras are than my film ones, and question why I should take such a backwards step. Last time I went, one of them told me I was "misguided", as film cameras were "functionally better in every respect". He didn't mean to cause offence, but seemed genuinely mystified.
Thing is, you still can't repair images that are bad to begin with. When computers can fix bad composition, or out of focus images, then I will consider film dead.
And if you do go out taking photographs with them, they all frame their photo, take their photo, then spend the next five minutes staring at it on the back of a their cameras. It's like those families who go out to dinner but spend all their time at the who spend all their time at the restaurant Facebooking each other. Each to their own, I guess, but if your head is somewhere other than where you are at that moment, what is the point in being there?
For me, film photography is much more of a mindful process. And in a world where everything is vying to get your attention, that's a real asset. Perhaps others are feeling that too.