One area where I see film having a clear advantage over digital is in natural light. Film is meant to be shot in natural light, and that’s where it thrives. It is much more forgiving when it comes to overexposure, and it doesn’t blow out highlights as easily as digital cameras. Film has a huge advantage in dynamic range and recording highlights. We take for granted the fact that specular highlights and bright sunsets look the way they do in painting and on film. Film records and reproduces a broader range of color. This is important for wild landscapes, and my personal favorite sun sets. I love the raw look you have with film, where as digital it's easy to manipulate an image to the exact way you want it to be. With film its one shot no mistakes, its a risk. Film is great for long exposures, you may have some color shift or loss of speed due to reciprocity issues but the image still has great quality. Almost no digital camera can do double exposure like a film camera can. With digital its easy for files to get lost or deleted but with film your negatives that can last a lifetime to be used over and over again.
References: http://www.slrlounge.com/film-still-better-digital/ http://screenrant.com/movie-technology-film-vs-digital-mikee-105167/
References: http://www.slrlounge.com/film-still-better-digital/ http://screenrant.com/movie-technology-film-vs-digital-mikee-105167/