gabrielma said:
Terminally.
Would be it more reasonable to say that Film is dying, and not yet dead? One might be led to suspect that under the right conditions - if we all just tap our ruby slippers together and wish real hard - film might not die. It seems more honest to report that film is, for all intents and purposes, dead. It is all over but the shouting.
There is sick from which one will recover. Sick from which one may recover. And sick from which one will not recover. Monty Python's '
Bring out Your Dead' skit seems appropriate here.
"I'm not dead yet."
"Shut up old man, you soon will be."
If people squick at the use of my term 'dead', I posit that they merely wish to avoid facts by pretending the illness that has befallen film is something from which it will recover one day. But I think we agree that film is not going get better, yes?
I also say that 8-track tapes are 'dead'. And yet there are those who still trade them, buy and sell them, plot to make some kind of mythical minimum order with a son of a sailer in a Balkan nation who has a cousin who will make some new tapes for them at an un-named factory. They would say 8-tracks are 'not dead'. Just sick, they'd say. Due for a comeback any old day now. Soon as people come to their senses.
Film is not yet in the condition that 8-track tapes are in, but the tune is mighty familiar. Our final destination is 123 Mockingbird Lane, Twilight Zone City, and there are no detours, no stops, no waiting, end of the line.
We can argue forever about what 'dead' is. We can say that as long as one roll of film sits on one retail shelf in one camera store anywhere in the world, waiting for a buyer, film is not dead. OK, fine. Film is not dead. When I pass away, have me stuffed and prop me up in the corner - I'll never be dead if they don't plant me, right? It's just a word game at that point.
One is more polite when one speaks of people with terminal diseases - and none of us will live forever, either. But that's just being polite to people. Film is a thing, not a person - it has no feelings to hurt. Perhaps people who have a strong emotional bond to the use of film feel hurt instead.
Shall we rage against the dying of the light? Well, certainly, and with zeal besides. But leave us also prepare the stone and look for what's next after film is no longer our alchemical bride.
I shall use all the film that I can. I will enjoy it and try to procure more, and share it with my friends if I can. And when it is gone I will move on. Photography lives.
If it makes anyone feel any better, digital will one day be eclipsed as well, by some newer technology. And yes, there will be a generation of people who rant and rave and cling to their memory cards like they were Sacred Relics. And we'll think they're nuts. Good thing we don't look in mirrors much, eh?
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks