Tarkus, you have made three different kinds of errors in this thread. Others have already pointed these out, but they bear reiteration.
First, you made a source error (identifying video imagery as "film"). Not really a big deal, but it does demonstrate once again your unfamiliarity with the Apollo record.
Second, you asserted that things should be done a certain way for space missions, but you manifestly have no insight into how actual space operations work. This is, again as already pointed out, the "If I ran the zoo" fallacy. You have no experiential or factual basis for your assertions of how things "should be done" or "should have been done". Bluntly speaking, you have no idea what you are talking about, but you presume to tell a group of well-educated laymen and engineers with actual space operations experience (like me) that we are just taking things on faith. That's arrant nonsense.
Third, of course, is the simple error of fact you made in asserting that in-cabin motion imagery was unavailable from various missions. That was simply wrong, and everyone here knew that. You based your claim on this supposed fact, which in reality - quickly demonstrated - was nothing more than your ignorance of the subject. Therefore, your claim immediately failed because its fundamental premise was wrong.
Please explain if being wrong like this ever causes you to reconsider your position, and if not, why anyone should expend any effort in trying to educate you.