For medium and large format photography, there are still advantages to film. For general purpose 35mm photography, anyone that thinks that film is superior is just a luddite.
There are a lot of pros with a lot invested in knowledge of the film world. They hate to let that go. I remember long lectures from draftsmen talking about how CAD was inferior and ruining things.
If you hate working with PCs and are more comfortable messing about with strips of film, that's OK. There are still people that like rotary phones. Just don't expect to be taken seriously when you claim that the old way was superior.
I hate seeing and criticing (sp?) each shot.
You don't have to look. You don't have to delete.
When I look back at all the pics I have of my two boys it is just awful to think how many of those I would have deleted because its not perfect.
I see the opposite problem. The last pre-digital trip I took was three weeks. I shot about 50 rolls of film. That works out to about 50-60 shots a day. It was expensive (about $400 for film and developing). Even at 60 shots a day, I was conservative with my shooting.
With digital, on a typical trip, I shoot a couple hundred shots a day. It costs almost nothing for the extra shots. When I shoot people, I typically fire off a 2-3 shot burst. If I look at the photo and see that I've blown it, I can still take another shot.
I look back at old photos and rue the fact that the only shot I got of some special moments was marred by photographic mishap - wrong exposure, motion blur, people blinking, etc. With digital, that happens far less often.