I know more young people than ever who love to shoot film, in fact 75% of the time, when I encounter a film camera user in my VERY photographed town, it is a person who is 35 or younger and most of the time is not a "Hipster" toting a Holga but a very enthusiastic film camera user.
I just want to confirm this. I am among those below-35s who shoot film. As a former software developer I am very much of a geek as well. An all-in-the-cloud, all-paperless, all-connected, all-digital person who hasn't written on a piece of paper for so long that he is afraid he is losing his handwriting skills. Yet, it took me only a couple of months after buying my first film camera to decide I didn't want my DSLR anymore. I had never took so much pleasure in shooting. A year later, now I have a couple of scanners, four film cameras and an iPhone that does perfectly what digital cameras are good for: recording forgettable moments of life for sharing and then forgetting. I have sold my DSLR and all it's gear. I find film rather expensive in long run, I find it extremely difficult to get credible information on film photography, I find scanning horribly slow and stupidly difficult with horrendous software packages that only obscure the essentials, I find film photography in general out of sync and out of rhythm with the rest of my life, yet I forget all that each time I see the results.
Now film will never take the center stage in the world of photography, but neither do vinyls when it comes to the audio equipment market. Vinyls went nearly extinct at the beginning of the last decade. Now they constitute a niche market that is highly profitable, and geometrically expanding in size (while CDs are losing to iTunes). Vinyls, like film, were saved by a bunch of youngsters (DJs) who took them as a music instrument, and an opportunity for creative work, rather than boring defunct music playing devices. Vinyls, like film, provide a physical affordance as compared to their digital counterparts. They are music engraved in a piece of matter that we can touch, not an intangible icon on an ephemeral screen. Vinyls, like film, have this airy quality to them that apparently precision digital devices cannot easily reproduce. And vinyls, like film, were initially abandoned by most of the big commercial players specially because they were rather costly to produce and perceived as having lower "objective" quality than their digital counterparts. Today vinyl players are upmarket products, and an important component of any serious audiophile system. Every single high-end audio brand produces at least one model of player. I don't see why this wouldn't happen to film.
Now I hope by then Kodak Alaris, and the other film producers, can stay afloat and don't run into the kind of trouble that brought Efke to its knees. But even if it happens, I think as long as there is enough of us shooting film to justify the fixed costs, somebody will produce film for us. There millions of excellently built film cameras from the last 50 years that can still serve us for the next 50 years or so while the imaging market is getting its act together to decide how to make a profitable market out of the film camera market...