First, consider that the actual cost of film and development can run from $6 to 12 per roll. This depending on the type of film and where you get it processed. This includes the cost of the actual roll, and the processing.
Yes, if the camera is in good shape, get it.
It is best to shop around for a good lab. The quickie marts and Wally World are OK for the slap happy stuff, but look for a good pro lab to do the work.
Now. On the obsolescence of film. It has been obsolete for some time now.
But some time back I was asked a question about that very issue:
I remember a magazine article out of an Outdoor magazine from the 1920’s. In this magazine the editor wrote that he had received a letter from an ‘old timer’ who was concerned that cap and ball shooting was going to die out completely. (Black powder firearms.)
The editor stated that by 1929 ALL cap and ball firearms would be gone from use, and would become a ‘wall hanger’ replaced by modern cased ammunition. All remnants of the old way of shooting would be gone.
Sound familiar?
Anyway, if you look at the numbers today, fully one third of all shooting, hunting and competition is done with ‘Cap and Ball’. So much for that theory.
Will film die out? No. Will it be relegated to ‘old timers’ and those with a few screws loose (like myself)? Yeppers. It’ll be around for some time to come.