This may belong in "Reality of Apollo" instead but here it is;
It always bugs me when the hoaxies go on about how the film in the surface cameras would have melted, shattered, or fogged until it was unusable. Because it seems to me that if you can protect an astronaut, you can protect film.
But here it is; my gut says the conditions that would actually destroy film would make a similarly-exposed human very sick. I've never heard of film being destroyed on safari; instead it needs to be left on a dashboard for several hours (conditions which kill dogs and babies). In the inverse, they were taking pictures of the Endurance while nearly dying in the cold.
Sensitivity to ionizing radiation is possible -- after all, you can expose an X-ray plate without killing the patient -- but this seems marginal; it is my memory that X-ray film is unusually sensitive. And meeting it from the other side, getting ten full-chest X-rays in one day is more than any radiologist would allow -- so we're within a couple magnitudes of the level of ionizing radiation necessary to make a sick human being.
But I don't have any hard figures, or any good way to look them up. I just don't know photography that well -- my film days were quite amateur and quite a long time ago to boot.
There's no ongoing discussion, no nice new hoaxie at a thread somewhere, just some random thoughts.