For 5-10 rolls of films it's not perhaps worth while to make a big investment.
I have a Canon FS4000US film scanner for 35mm negatives and slides and works fine 14 years now. Still compatible with Windows 7 and 10. I only use Vuescan for serious image scanning ever since I discovered it.
If you can justify the price, you can get a high-end Epson flatbed scanner (V550 or higher). There are several models ranging from good to not affordable but even better. The can scan larger negative formats, just in case you may need them. I do have some old 6x9 negatives and find that a good flatbed scanner is good enough for my purposes.
For a dedicated negative scanner for 35mm you should have a look at Plustek 8200i, perhaps the best value for money currently.
You may also want to check availability of older filmscanners, like the model I use. It may appear on ebay for very little money. Similar Nikon models, for some reason, have prices up in the sky.
Avoid the cheap $100 Chinese film scanners that claim to scan 35mm, 110, super 8 onto SD cards. Their claimed resolution is, well, not possible to confirm in reality and their optical path is toy grade. An entry level HP or Epson flatbed with negative scanning capability easily outperforms these.
Once you scan, you can either process the entire flow down to jpg with Vuescan or use other tools, like lightroom. VueScan is not an image editing software, it is an advanced scanning tool, but for basic scanning, reversal and color correction, it's good enough.
And only scan in the highest optical resolution offered by the scanner. In some scanners it's 4000dpi, and in the case of the Plustek 8200i, it's 7200dpi.
If you want to read more about scanners, check out this site:
https://www.imaging-resource.com/SCAN1.HTM
and this one:
http://www.filmscanner.info/en/PlustekOpticFilm8200i.htmll