It's how I always saw it while growing up, and throughout the movie TWOK Uhura, Sulu, was just visiting and had a helping hand for a training mission and later an emergency situation. After the movie, I was thinking grandeur ideas and the exploration of Kirstie Alley's and Merritt Butrick's characters along with other young upstarts ala TNG before TNG, TMP 2.0. When I saw TSFS, I knew Star Trek would not be going for grand ideas, and as much as I sincerely love TVH, I wanted Star Trek to go beyond Earth, beyond super -Khan-esque villains. When I finally saw VI, I thought it was okay, and kept thinking an intergalactic conflict between the Klingons and Earth should be epic than a predictable murder mystery. Sigh. I digress, it's fine, all of TOS movies are fine except for III, that movie ultimately disappointed me.
Get this through your head; Merrit Butterick was NEVER going to continue as David Marcus-he didn't want to be typecast as 'Kirk's son' for the rest of his life, rightfully or wrongfully, he wanted to do other things, so he asked the producer and director to kill him off. And Robin Curtis didn't want to be Saavik forever (plus the writers probably didn't have any more story for her to be in) -how hard is that to get?

I enjoy Star Trek 3 for many reasons, one of them is having Christopher Lloyd and John Laroquette as Klingons. But let's admit that Kirk using his former bridge crew was an act of pandering to the movie audience more than what the character of James Kirk might have done.
It kinda stings that Spock managed to singlehandedly fool Starfleet and his ship's captain and kidnap Admiral Pike to return him to a forbidden planet like Talos 5, and yet Kirk with all the resources from Starfleet still needed others to help him? So be it, but why use 5 senior citizens when Kirk surely knows a LOT of younger, stronger fighters who probably also owe him a blood debt.
Sure I liked seeing Sulu do some martial arts and Scotty give Styles his comeuppance, but Kirk's plan was seconds away from failing.
Let's not forget it resulted in the death of his son David.
Ironically (for me anyway) this is the same argument I've used to talk to others elsewhere on the Internet about Luke, Leia & Han acting as they used to in the current Star Wars movies (specifically Luke not going full The Force Unleashed as many of them wanted him/Mark Hamill to do in The Last Jedi. On the other hand, Merrick Butterick didn't want to continue as David Marcus, so even if Kirk had younger assistants to help him search for Spock, David might still have ended up dead.
I find that an interesting comment considering who wrote this 2 partner. I'm a huge TOS fan and think Continues nailed it. Comparing it to season 3, it is a worthy successors. My only issues with the finale were the destruction of ships specifically called out in canon production materials. I've considered making some fan edit tweeks to fix that. I found all of Continues to be better in nearly every area to the first season of Discovery.
Yes, a small-budgeted all-white fan show with amateur acting and scriptwriting that's basically a farrago of fan service is better than a modern day million dollar budget TV show with a very diverse cast and a main female character who's not just eye candy but very capable (and more capable than the females on TNG and TOS, IMHO.)

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