Are static analysis tools still needed? Absolutely. The warnings emitted by compilers are getting more sophisticated, but there's still the limitation that a compiler generally works on one source file at a time. Each file is compiled (*.c -> *.o), and the resulting object files are linked together at the end. To do truly effective static analysis, you need to look at the whole code base at once, analyzing individual files as well as the interactions between them. Compilers generally aren't designed like that, so a compiler alone usually misses the sorts of things that static analyzers pick up. You wouldn't want to build this functionality into the normal compiler because it's a fairly heavy performance impact. A static analysis run on my current project typically takes 4x the time a normal compile takes. You don't want this extra overhead on every single build, so it's best to farm it off to a separate, specialized tool than can be run when needed (or in the case of some modern compilers, a separate set of command-line options that are disabled by default).
How effective is static analysis? Very. My team finds a large number of potential problems through static analysis tools, most of which would be nearly impossible to find using other methods. It's particularly good at finding complex problems that humans aren't good at spotting, like those that involve the interaction between multiple local and global variables. Even if you have excellent test coverage, static analyzers will find all sorts of things that are difficult to find through testing alone. This is even more true in the embedded world, where testing tends to be more difficult and less automated. In my experiences, static analyzers have even showed us problems that we didn't even know we needed to be testing for in the first place.
I would definitely recommend the use of static analysis tools for any non-trivial software project. I actually run two separate static analyzers (one is built into the compiler suite and the other is a separate utility); you might be surprised what one will catch and the other will miss. I highly recommend that you come up with a customized set of rules/tests for your analysis runs instead of simply adopting a rule set like MISRA. Every project's needs are different, and many industry-wide specs like MISRA include a lot of stuff that isn't needed for most people. The more unnecessary stuff that you're checking for, the more time it takes to analyze, the more false positives you'll have to wade through, etc etc.