...Not freaking full-motion video from a rover as it rides for twenty minutes at a time across the landscape!)
Small correction -- that's colour movie film that we see taken from the rover when it's in motion, and it often shows the video camera which was always stowed for trips between stations, mainly because the antenna had to be accurately aimed at earth for the video to be transmitted successfully.
One thing you've not mentioned is the multitude of photos taken by the LMP when travelling between stations. In many cases distant rocks can be seen, along with more photos as the rover approaches them. Apollo 17's Turning Point Rock and Tracy's Rock are just two of many examples, and sometimes video or stills can be seen looking back at the route taken and showing the rover's tracks.
There are three types of things that I think have been underused in debunkings of the "filmed in a studio" claims:--
1. The long video clips taken on the EVAs from the Apollo 16 and 17 rovers. They don't always concentrate on the astronauts and include pans and tilts up, down and around, and they never show any sort of studio environment. No furniture, reflectors, artificial lights, power cords, stands, gantries, or cranes. And most vehicle tracks and footprints can be attributed to either the activities we see or to activities that were otherwise documented.
2. Long-distance photos or video of the lunar module, which included telephoto shots of the LM from a distance, or wide-angle shots that accidentally included it, such as the panoramas at Tracy's Rock (or Split Rock) at Apollo 17's Station 6, which include a tiny LM in the distance to the right of the top of the rock -- see AS17-140-21493 to 21496.
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a17/AS17-140-21493HR.jpghttp://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a17/AS17-140-21494HR.jpghttp://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a17/AS17-140-21495HR.jpghttp://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a17/AS17-140-21496HR.jpgOn the other hand, there are photos that include Tracy's Rock or Turning Point Rock from the vicinity of the LM or the ALSEP site, and there's the upsun video of Jack Schmitt skipping back to the LM when he sings "I was strolling on the moon one day..."
HBs would have trouble describing a realistic studio and setup for the Apollo 16 Grand Prix.
3. Video of astronauts taking panoramas and telephoto shots. For instance, Gene Cernan is on video taking a series of telephotos shots of one of the massifs from close to the rover, and we can see a slight motion of the lens as he presses the shutter. We can also examine the photos he took, and some of them show camera shake because of that lens motion.