He may not have needed to know the specifics of why a small group of people was living on Ceti Alpha V, but his knowing that they were there at all would have averted disaster for him, his ship and crew, the science team on Regula I and the training crew aboard the Enterprise.
Yeah. The real villain in the
Star Trek movies might be Starfleet bureaucracy.
My rationalization is that the Genesis Project was also Top-Secret, as was that long-ago incident with Khan, so that, in this case, Starfleet's top-secret left hand didn't know what its top-secret right hand was doing.
This is absolutely the simplest and most believable explanation.
As to why Chekov didn't say anything about Khan being (supposedly) one planet over . . . well, I had to tap dance around that in my book!
Yeah, as others have said, I think he legitimately just forgot the name of the planet until he saw the "Botany Bay" name on the seat belt.
Terrell was certainly a more laid-back commander than Kirk, but that doesn’t mean he or his crew was sloppy. Keep in mind that Terrell gave his own life so that he wouldn’t kill Kirk.
And don't forget that Terrell was doing this for a man he'd
never even met before. That's pretty fucking awesome. Committing suicide rather than kill a near-stranger while under mind control? That's one hell of a moral code Terrell had.
Don't you think people would have liked to see an original timeline origins story, just for the hell of it, instead of an alternate one? Who wants to see an alternate TOS?
More people than wanted to see literally any other Star Trek movie:
http://www.boxofficemojo.com/franchises/chart/?id=startrek.htm
The order was to find a world that was completely lifeless - not even a microbe - so when they detected life signs on Ceti Alpha, they should have just gone on to the next world.
Terrell thought that the scanner was malfunctioning, so they did the prudent thing and checked it out.
Would I have loved to see a true prequel? Of course. I'm a Trekkie going back to the original series. I'd love to see a true representation of Kirk taking command of the Enterprise with the characters we mostly saw, Dr Piper, Lt. Alden, Gary Mitchell (wonder what happened to him in the alternate timeline BTW) on a set that looked like WNMHGB. A lot of us would have gotten a kick out of it.
You should really read "All Those Years Ago..." in the first DC Comics
Star Trek annual if you haven't already. It has everything you're asking for except for Lt. Alden.
And a Kelvinverse version of Gary Mitchell featured in the first two issues of IDW's
Star Trek comic series.
because, you know, it's a TV show. It's not a historical document, let alone Holy Writ.
Right. The historical document is
Galaxy Quest.
Nor was this without precedent. The PLANET OF THE APES tv series in 1974 had played kinda fast and loose with the movie continuity. Ditto the LOGAN'S RUN tv series. I think there was less of an expectation in those days that everything had to fit into one seamless "canon" or continuity.
And since those shows were made in a pre-home video and pre-internet era, it was a lot easier to play it fast & loose with continuity. Viewers didn't have the ability to go back and double check details immediately. They had to rely on vague memories or wait until a movie or TV show was repeated.
Heck, that isn't even limited to science fiction. The
M*A*S*H TV show is pretty definitively an alternate continuity from the movie. The movie ends with Hawkeye & Duke getting shipped home and Trapper John and Spearchucker staying in the camp. The TV show had Trapper shipping home before Hawkeye, dropped the Spearchucker character within the first half-dozen episodes, and never used the Duke Forrest character at all. Both versions of Frank Burns get a Section Eight, though.
The play and movie version of
The Odd Couple end with CBS news writer Felix Ungar moving out of Oscar Madison's apartment after a few weeks, determined to make a new life for himself as a single man after the end of his marriage to his wife Frances. The TV version has photographer Felix Unger moving out years later when he gets back together with his ex-wife Gloria. The various versions couldn't even agree when Felix's wife threw him out, with the play and the movie taking place during a summer heat wave and the opening narration of the TV show saying that Felix was tossed out of his home on November 13th.