It is now 2019, and digital photography has been the norm, worldwide, since about the year 2005. It is now fairly rare to encounter people who have no background in digital imaging, and I understand the reluctance to move away from film-based and liquid chemical-based (wet darkroom ) processes, but time moves on. I personally feel that digital imaging is different from photography, which is what I call the earlier craft, photography. Some years ago Popular Photography magazine renamed itself Popular Photography & Imaging,and in less than a decade, went out of business.
Magazines were the predecessor of the web-based photography sites like dPreview, Luminous Landscape, Sport Shooter.com, PetaPixel, etc.
I have no idea where you got the idea of _any_ FILM with 12.7 to 13.7 stops' worth of scene dynamic range capability, since I personally find modern digital far in excess of _any_ film I have ever seen or shot. I shot my biggest amount of film since 2000 i the summer of 2014, in 120 rollfilm in &W and color negative. I was struck by how much _work_ was involved, not to mention money, shooting a 1938 baby Speed Graphic with a 1950's Linhof rollfim back, a 1960's Yashica 635 with 120 B&W film, and a Bronica SQ-A and 50/65/80/150 lens set. I had a lot of FUN, yes, and perhaps that was worth it all.
I made very few photos with the TLR Yashica, and few with the Speed Graphic...and I remember MAKING the photos, and have fond memories of my outings and developing sessions. And that is the main difference between film and digital to me..with film, each click of the shutter is...an experience to be treasured... with a Nikon d-slr, it is just taking pictures...an entirely different experience.
Film is fine, and many great photos were captured on film, and film gives up its gifts to the diligent, and persistent, and the lucky. There were some gorgeous cameras made that took film, over parts of three different centuries. i have a lot of respect for film,and film cameras, and photos shot on film.But I realize now, 4 about 47 years (1972?) that I've left film behind me for the vast, vast majority of my future of my picture-making. I prefer the digitized image and storage/retrieval/sharing methodology. I'm not saying I will never shoot another frame of film, but 99.999% of my future photos will most likely be recorded on a memory card and not on a product from Kodak, Fuji, or Ilford.