The transporter scene was unnecessarily gruesome and horrific, and as long as we're talking about "not fitting the tone of the film," it certainly failed at that. There was no real reason for the scene in the first place, other than to fill time.
It wasn't mere filler. Filler are the long, tedious effects shots with the crew staring gap tooth.
It fits completely with the tone of the film.
This is a dangerous mission that they may not return from, as stated in the Bridge scene by Uhura. But in that scene we are TOLD about the danger. Same with the scene in the travel pod. Scotty TELLS us that the ship isn't ready. The transporter scene then takes those two statements and SHOWS us the danger to ship and crew. It SHOWS us a ship unprepared for launch, further demonstrated by the wormhole sequence. But unlike that, the transporter deaths give us a sense that anyone of our characters could die. It's supposed to be "gruesome and horrific" because it conveys to the audience the danger of this mission.
Then it's followed up by the wormhole sequence which SHOWS us that not only is the ship faulty, but that Kirk is unprepared for this new
Enterprise. He is stale and may make the wrong decisions down the line.
It's all about narrative process, building on what came before and creating more anxiety in the audience as a result.
As for the "majesty" of the Goldsmith theme, when I hear that I don't hear "majesty," all I hear is the TNG theme. It certainly doesn't convey the message that this is TOS production and it fails to give it the desperately-needed TOS feel. But the TNG/TMP theme is repeated over and over again ad nauseum throughout the film, so it's not like the theme isn't there anymore.
1) TNG took the theme from a TOS movie. So what came first the chicken or the egg? In this case, the egg. The music was written for the first TOS movie, how can it not convey the message that this is a TOS production.
1) Granted the movie lacked the spark that made TOS a great and fun show, but the problems in the movie go deeper than just music. The one thing TMP did excel at is the music. Giving it TOS music doesn't make it any more or any less TOS than it was. You'd have to alter the movie at the script level, and it's too late for that by far.
Hearing the TNG theme instead is retroactively coloring the viewpoint here. Instead of seeing the movie for what it was in 1979, it's being seen through the filter of over 300 hours of ModTrek.
2) Yes the theme is played "ad nauseum" throughout the movie because it's the
theme. Might as well say that the
JAWS theme is overdone in the movie. Goldsmith's theme musically identifies the two most important things in this movie -- the
Enterprise and Kirk, tying both together.
Without it in the beginning, how is the audience supposed to be cued to this.
Here's a thought - how about you watch ALL the edits, the completed work, before you make your final judgement? Just an idea.
If you want someone to continue watching, then being snarky with a smile isn't the way to go about it.