Cameras imbue a grain onto what they shoot, both in the physical sense of grain in analogue cameras and the digital grain of the iPhone camera (The technical high quality but AI smearyness and color grade of modern iPhones is it's own grain) and that iPhone grain is now the aesthetic of almost all social media content so anything filmed in it has the same feeling as every janky social media video shot with it.
If you're creating art and easy route to differentiate and not feel like everything else in the timeline is to use an entirely different "grain" and you'll stand out from the mass.
It's not as simple as "old stuff better" it's more "other stuff feels different".
I try not to be this guy, but actually your terminology is a little off.
Film cameras have grain. Literally, there are tiny physical grains of photo-sensitive material on the film. Those grains, which are distributed semi-randomly in a film across the medium determine the limit of film's resolution and give it part of its organic, non-digital feel.
Digital cameras have noise. That's the term for randomness injected in a signal from the effect of physics: Brownian motion, heat, quantum effects on photons, etc. Noise means that while each pixel on the sensor is in principle quantizing a measurement of the real world, that measurement has some random error that can never be fully eliminated.
A digital image recorded from a digital sensor has no grain. There was no film, and no grains of photosensitive media involved. (It might have simulated grain from some "film effect" look applied to the image.)
The distinction matters because they look different. It's one of the key reasons film looks like film and digital looks digital.
Thought it was clear I was using "grain" as a blanket term for the affect a tool has on it's output in the same way a analogue cameras film stocks have unique literal grain.
In the sense that the iPhone sensor > internal AI process > Apple Camera app post-processing choices imbue an iPhone Camera Image "grain" to what you shoot.
If you're creating art and easy route to differentiate and not feel like everything else in the timeline is to use an entirely different "grain" and you'll stand out from the mass.
It's not as simple as "old stuff better" it's more "other stuff feels different".