Disclaimer: "odd-numbered rule" notwithstanding, The Search for Spock is my personal favorite of all the Star Trek feature films. This is mostly nostalgia, since it was the first movie I saw in theatres at the time of its release.
This time around a couple of nitpicks bothered me.
1. Genesis is a "galactic controversy" with massive permits and security clearance required, yet Grissom can go study it alone, without any kind of tactical support?
2. I can partly understand why Admiral Morrow would reject Kirk's request to go back to Genesis. In Morrow's eyes, Kirk might have been a bit looped out after the extreme stress of the previous couple of weeks, not only the battle with Khan but the loss of his best friend.
But it wasn't just Kirk having a snit -- the same request also came from Ambassador Sarek, and Morrow knew it. After all, only one movie later, Sarek had enough clout to walk in on a public meeting between the Federation President and the Klingon Ambassador. You'd think that Sarek, at least, would have a high enough status that whatever he asked for, he could get -- even if Morrow didn't understand "Vulcan mysticism", wouldn't the fact that it's Sarek making the request be enough?
3. If part of Kirk's "mission" was first to go retrieve Spock's body -- what made them think there was a body to retrieve? At this point in the story only Grissom knew that the casket had soft-landed. As far as Kirk and Sarek knew, the torpedo burned up in the Genesis atmosphere and there wouldn't be a body to recover. (Incidentally, it was kind of creepy of David to actually open the casket, since he expected Spock's corpse would still be inside.)
This time around a couple of nitpicks bothered me.
1. Genesis is a "galactic controversy" with massive permits and security clearance required, yet Grissom can go study it alone, without any kind of tactical support?
2. I can partly understand why Admiral Morrow would reject Kirk's request to go back to Genesis. In Morrow's eyes, Kirk might have been a bit looped out after the extreme stress of the previous couple of weeks, not only the battle with Khan but the loss of his best friend.
But it wasn't just Kirk having a snit -- the same request also came from Ambassador Sarek, and Morrow knew it. After all, only one movie later, Sarek had enough clout to walk in on a public meeting between the Federation President and the Klingon Ambassador. You'd think that Sarek, at least, would have a high enough status that whatever he asked for, he could get -- even if Morrow didn't understand "Vulcan mysticism", wouldn't the fact that it's Sarek making the request be enough?
3. If part of Kirk's "mission" was first to go retrieve Spock's body -- what made them think there was a body to retrieve? At this point in the story only Grissom knew that the casket had soft-landed. As far as Kirk and Sarek knew, the torpedo burned up in the Genesis atmosphere and there wouldn't be a body to recover. (Incidentally, it was kind of creepy of David to actually open the casket, since he expected Spock's corpse would still be inside.)