Joe, that's a very odd perspective in the photo of the Continental, which appears to be a '61. It kind of looks like it's a CGI, and that there's no back seat, or actually no front seat, even though there are four doors, and I'm pretty sure the interior color scheme isn't original either.
For me, my dad's '69 Continental Mark III was even more luxurious to drive than his '65 sedan (one car magazine's review described it as "loafing along at 70 MPH"), but the '65 was a far better built car. The '64 convertible I had could really move. I think it was broken in by a lead foot driver.
And for what it's worth, I wanted a Model A before I even knew how to drive. I learned a column shift and a stick, but never had the opportunity to learn the spark and throttle levers on a Model A. I don't know off hand when Ford finally decided to go with hydraulic brakes, but mechanical ones struck me as kind of scary, so that limited my options.
These days, the old Jimmy is enough of a relic and a novelty to drive, so I'm long over any desire for something older.