For me, it's TWOK by a country mile. TUC doesn't even crack my top 4 TOS films. It's easily, in my opinion, the most over-rated film in the entire franchise.
While TWOK was fresh, edgy, genuinely dramatic and had a totally unique look and feel at the time it was released, to me TUC feels tired, rushed and almost like it's trying too hard. It has some nice moments, but the story is flawed and the "mystery plot" was sophomoric even for Junior-in-HS me back in 1991. I thought Meyer's script and dialogue were painfully self-indulgent ("Hey, I like literature and Shakespeare, so I'm going to make the Klingons...ummmm....fans of Shakespeare and have them randomly quote lines from plays"). Even the title is self-indulgent ("Hey, I wanted to subtitle Star Trek II The Undiscovered Country, but they overrode me, so now I'm going to shoehorn it in as this movie's title...because I like the sound of that title even though it's obscure and really makes no sense."). Everything in TUC feels "winky at the audience" to me, which takes away any feeling of realism or tension...which are feelings that pervade TWOK. I also really don't like the soundtrack. Chang to me is the lest gripping TOS movie villain as well. He's just....boring, despite a nice performance by Christopher Plummer. And even "teenage me" knew, seeing the movie for the very first time, that Valeris was basically just a discount-rack Saavik.
It's not that I don't like it (I actually do, despite my paragraph above), but it just doesn't check a lot of my personal boxes. I know there's a lot of sentimentality tied up with this film across fandom, and I don't know why that never affected me. I'm a huge TOS fan (the other series come as close to TOS as TUC comes to TWOK for me hahaha), so you'd think I'd have a soft spot, but the end with the signatures and final log just sort of fall flat for me. So while I do enjoy it, to me it's very average, undercooked, and could have/should have been so much more.
Meanwhile, TWOK revives an iconic bad guy, has a rousing nautical soundtrack, has genuine (non-winky) tension and drama throughout, plays with an interesting sci-fi concept, has the iconic death of Spock, and ultimately sets the tone for the franchise for years to come.
James Horner's score was a goosebumps of elevating that experience of watching The Wrath of Khan; it was sprinkles and chocolate covered casing on the ice cream. What an incredible score, along with Kirk's story, Singh's rage and obsession, creating pretty interesting new characters, and taking me back to an epic Star Trek adventure, although it had its flaws, by far a breath taking experience. I get caught into the movie and it just doesn't allow me to drift on my phone or laptop, the movie is so engaging and it is engaging to my friends who are not Star Trek fans. The movie works on all cylinders and even when I knew Spock's outcome was coming I still get caught up in the drama. To compare such a very good movie to TUC is a joke, a "super-fans'" compliment within their internal logic.
TUC is okay and gets a pass but misses so many opportunities to make it an epic moment which I thought both the Federation and the Klingons well deserved. Thank Goodness George Lucas did such a marvelous send off for these iconic heroes because what's around it falls very short and empty.
Impossible. Cartwright never held back on his bigotry in his first scenes, maybe not for you, but I saw him as THE number 1 suspect in that conspiracy. Valeris was a given when she was seen by the door of Kirk's quarters when he made his racist Captain's log, and another scene where we saw her observing some ugly picture, talking very fearful subtext, and drinking wine with Spock inside his pad.I was surprised to find out Cartwright was involved.
Last edited: