Agreed Mike; the point I was trying to make is that a decade or perhaps a bit more a ago we were creating great images by controling just a handful of variables and now these portable computers we call DSLRs have rather complicated the issue. I still feel that for most shooting, selecting an appropriate ISO setting and either shooting for specific DoF or motion effect (shutter speed) is going to handle most shooting situations. Lighting something correctly is still what makes or breaks an image.
When push processing, you are effectively still pre-setting the ISO, as your would push process the whole roll of film; and of course, push processing only worked for B&W and colour reversal films. Try it with colour negative film and you would get a real mess that could not be corrected in the printing stage.
Filters are a bit more complicated and yes, in theory you could use tungsten film in daylight settings or daylight film under tungsten; but these tended to be general one size fits all solutions, and yes, we could also use warming or cooling filters too. The options when shooting B&W were quite interesting. Frankly, because of the cost, few people had more than a handful of filters (with UV and polarizers still being the most common) and I appreciated that the camera club I was a member of had a good selection that the members could borrow.