Humm. That's a bit much Ken. I was never able to type worth a damn on a manual (or electric) typewriter, and writing by hand makes my hand cramp in short order, but I can blaze away on a keyboard because I can fix mistakes so easily. I type much faster than most people I know, but I make a lot more mistakes because I learned in the early days of computers that I could overall go much faster if I didn't slow down to be error free but rather made them and fixed them as they happened. The result is no more error laden than before and almost certainly less so. So I think the word processing program enabled me to write creatively when I wouldn't have before. And I'll certainly see shot-on-digital movies. I really don't think it has any bearing on the plot quality as the filming is pretty removed from the writing. I'm not sure if it has an effect on the acting but if it has, I haven't made the association. And besides, with that kind of rule you're going to be limited to older films, for the most part now increasingly so.
Besides, I get them on Blu-Ray and watch them on my home theater projector which is, of course, digital. Now if I stand close to the screen, too close to watch without eyestrain from eyes darting back and forth, then I can see a dot pattern. But from my viewing distance, which is at the inside limit of the THX calculated acceptable distance, it looks great.
I like film but I'm far from dogmatic about it.
OTOH, I totally agree that digital has become so easy that many people just don't pay attention. Then again, most people didn't pay attention in the days when film was their only choice, either. How many snapshots were made with distracting backgrounds, things growing out of people's heads, face dead center in a vertical image with 1/2 the frame above wasted etc? If anything we probably see - not take but see - fewer like that now because the instant feedback allows a slap on the forehead and a re-shoot.
There used to be a saying that "film is the cheapest thing in photography" and editors would go mad trying to pick one frame from a contact sheet of 36 near identical shots. I imagine that's far worse now. But film wasn't that cheap then. The cheapest thing then was a look through the viewfinder and paying attention before you released the shutter. It's just as cheap (free) to do that now, but digital provides a different sort of negative feedback loop, at least with a stationary or posed subject. You can see it reduced to a small screen right away. It would certainly save time and many shutter actuations if those folks would pay attention to the entire frame, the background and the composition before tripping the shutter though.