The photon controls meant torpedoes were out, the warp drive meant phasers were out (as per TMP), thus withdrawing was the only option.
It's sort of bizarre, though, that that should come as a surprise: they were attacked by a Federation starship. Of course the Reliant crew would know where to hit them!
Who know what they were actually thinking with the frantic rush to get the script finished. If I had to hazard a guess, I would say it was more a case of Meyer trying to “show, don’t tell”,^ That may not have been intended but, it does make solid sense...
The photon controls meant torpedoes were out, the warp drive meant phasers were out (as per TMP), thus withdrawing was the only option.
What's bizarre about it?
Who know what they were actually thinking with the frantic rush to get the script finished. If I had to hazard a guess, I would say it was more a case of Meyer trying to “show, don’t tell”.
Like having Scotty (inexplicably) bring a dying cadet to the bridge shows audience that crewmembers from the attack.
Or changing the shield graphic from it’s TMP “bubble” to the dots slowly lighting sequentially to show the audience that it takes a few seconds after shields are activated for them to be effective, and that Kirks “Raise shields” order came too late.
That... is a very good point.Not in the context of this movie, though: Kirk can fire his phasers just fine without warp drive. As can Khan, at Mutara, it being something of a plot point that Khan's damage repairs were shortsighted in giving him the ability to fight (at impulse) but not to run, while Spock's partial restoring of main, that is, warp power is what saved everybody's bacon in the end.
Not in the context of this movie, though: Kirk can fire his phasers just fine without warp drive.
What's bizarre about it? If one Federation ship attacks another, it's safe to assume the first ship is no longer crewed by Federation personnel. Kirk's question of who knew gets it across that whoever took over Reliant could not only do that, but also knew enough to essentially cripple a larger, potentially superior ship with little effort. That takes some doing, and is impressive in a very terrifying way.
What's inexplicable about that? Scotty is showing the death to the audience, too. Only he doesn't believe in us Talosians spying on their adventures by eldritch means: his audience is Kirk, the man who killed the lad.
...A decision that sorta backfires in ST3 where the graphic has to be used to display damaged shields, and this means randomly extinguishing a few of the dots, which isn't a convincing way to show the geometry of what's actually going on.
True, and he is highly intelligent. However, many years have passed and he's been stuck on that planet for all that time. He could gotten back up to speed once he got his hands on the Reliant but that's a stretch. Even if he was a quick study, that still doesn't take into account his massive lack of experience. It's a pretty big leap to suggest that he could competently command a star ship with so little lead time and even if you believe that he could, what about his crew? They had even less knowledge and experience than he did. I mean, which member of Khan's group could have functioned as a chief engineer? I think the answer to that is no one.Well, Khan had made a thorough study of 23rd-century starship specs when he was a guest on the Enterprise.
Kor
Not everything that's in a novelization originates from the script. That sounds a lot more like Vonda McIntyre covering what she saw as a plot hole. Heck, about one third of her Search For Spock novelization is all-original material.According to the novelization, and from it we know earlier iterations of the script included this, Khan and his people used the Eels on Reliant's engineering crew.
Also, Joachim's original report to Khan that "We can't fire sir! They've damaged the photon controls and the warp drive..." is meant to imply that phasers were also offline, since it is established in TMP that the Refit Enterprise's phaser energy relies on the warp drive energy. Spock/Sulu knew exactly where to hit them. The impulse drive was obviously damaged in the attack (since we see the entire impulse deflection crystal exploding), but Joachim didn't include this in his original report since he was responding directly to Khan's order to fire and not giving a complete list of systems affected.
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