Yeah, if you like removing the head and decoking it and grinding the valves every 20,000 to 50,000 miles; changing the oil two to three times as often as nowadays; adjusting brake cylinders on each wheel; adjusting tappets (doing it with the engine running on some models, which ruined a feeler gauge on the first valve); gutless acceleration; lousy braking on drum brakes; no air conditioning; valve radios that could drain a battery overnight; oil bath steel gauze air filters that had to be washed out as part of a service; filing distributor points and adjusting point gap as part of a reguar service; generators instead of alternators; noisy pushrods with no hydraulic lifters; greasing various lubrication points on the steerig, suspension and body as part of a service; repacking wheel bearings; yellow headlights that weren’t much better than a modern five dollar torch running off two D cells (or worse on a VW 6V system); Prince of Darkness unreliable Lucas electrics on British and other cars; parts with a much, much shorter service interval or life than on modern cars; skinny cross ply tyres with lousy grip; live rear axles on leaf rear springs and all the joys of axle tramp; lousy roadholding; likely to roll where a modern car will just slide; no steering feel; and on and on and on goes the list.
Modern cars are far, far, far better than anything produced even 25 years ago, and much, much better value for money.