Controversial opinion #2: TWOK is not the Best Star Trek Movie Ever. In fact it ruined the franchise by turning it into Star Wars Lite.
That's always a great one to work with!
I don't think TWOK has any resemblance to Star Wars whatsoever. The fact that weapons fire is exchanged between ships in outerspace isn't something that you can tag to turning the franchise into "SW Lite." You'd need to go deeper than that.
I also don't think it's fair to retroactively hold TWOK accountable for a shift in direction of the franchise. It's not the film's "fault" (if I were to accept that such a shift did indeed occur) that future writers and producers looked at the overwhelmingly positive fan and casual viewer reaction to TWOK and tried to re-create that in various ways. It's the "fault" of the writers and producers who were responsible for subsequent iteration of the franchise.
I'd actually refute this whole idea pretty heavily based on 2 almost indisputable data points:
1. What immediately followed TWOK in terms of major franchise products were TSFS (1984), TVH (1986), and TNG (1987). While TSFS was also a faster-paced action adventure movie, that hardly makes it "SW Lite." TVH was nothing like SW whatsoever, being a fish-out-of-water time travel comedy escapade. And, unless I'm totally mis-remembering, TNG was about as far away from the action-adventure (to its detriment I seriously think) sci-fi format as you can get.
2. TWOK was responsible for the
continuation of the franchise, not its eventual decline. Star Trek was essentially stuck in the parking lot after TMP, and the success or failure of whatever "next move" Paramount made would dictate the future of the franchise. So, I guess if you'd rather Star Trek died at TMP (and yeah, I know there are fans who actually feel this way), you can direct ire at TWOK...but otherwise, there's no franchise without it.
I always get confused when people grate against Star Trek having action-adventure elements to it....like every episode was "Measure of a Man" and every movie should have been TMP. Star Trek from the very beginning was built on phaser blasts, Kirk-fu, ripped uniform shirts, witty character exchanges, extended fistfights, special effects set pieces, and space battles. It wasn't until Gene retroactively re-branded the franchise as "thinking person's science fiction" that was made for "the more intelligent segment of the television audiences" <insert eyeroll here> that fans started buying into that line, and then we had TNG modeling a much more self-conscious, slow, pseudo-intellectual approach to the franchise...and suddenly, Star Trek had re-imagined itself as something it initially was not. I actually view DS9, VOY and ENT as a course-correct back to the more dynamic and fun roots of the franchise (resulting quality not withstanding), rather than a gravitation away from the core.
Controversial Opinion:
Star Trek is way better as an action-adventure sci-fi franchise than it is as hardcore, philosophical, deep thinking, intellectually stimulating science fiction. It can certainly do the latter, but it can't sustain it and frankly isn't built to do it consistently. The base premise of Star Trek (explorers on the frontier of deep space) absolutely encourages and invites action and adventure on a regular basis.