10 cents a foot is a fairly low price, but that is still $10,000 if you shoot 100,000' on a feature, and doesn't include stock purchasing nor telecine costs. If you are paying 50 cents a foot for the stock, that's $50,000 plus the $10,000 for the processing, and then telecine may add thousands more on top of that. A feature that shoots 100,000' of 35mm negative will probably spend about $70,000 on stock, processing, and telecine unless they get some great deals, use recanned stock, etc.
A telecine is the traditional way to transfer film to digital (usually to a standard definition video format onto videotape) for offline editing, for a number of reasons (if you get your dailies on DV tape, for example, and then you can digitize the footage into your computer using a DV deck in the editing room, then save the tapes in case you need to re-digitize the footage.) While it's possible to drag your hard drive into a telecine bay and transfer directly to that, most transfer companies are not set-up well to do that and it creates some issues (like if the hard drive has a problem, is it their fault or your fault?) It's hard for them to shuttle back and forth over the recording using their telecine bay controls, etc. Using the decks at the telecine house tends to be more reliable. For small amounts of footage transferred at high resolution (like using a Spirit Datacine in "data mode" at 2K resolution) -- often for special effects work -- they might transfer to a client's hard drive or to a computer tape format.
A film scanner is similar except that it usually is non-continuous (i.e. it stops at each frame and scans it) while a telecine can scan film faster, usually in motion as it moves past a sensor. Film scanners tend to be pin-registered as well. So the general rule is that film scanners are more expensive, slower, but higher quality and tend to be used more for high-end theatrical feature film work like digital effects or digital intermediates, but not for material just destined for video display.