Yeah, I do see the star wars influence, and I thought the pics I posted were the final proposal, before they cancelled phase 2, and moved onto TMP. Thanks for clearing that up!
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Personally, I think the TMP version of the refit Enterprise is just fine. In fact, I have always liked the TMP version over the TOS version, though I do like both. Probably my only complaint is that the warp nacelles don't glow in most of the movies. Compared to TNG era, as well as Star Trek Enterprise, they look out of place a little.
Now, I am not an advocate for re-edits and so forth (IE the many versions of Star Wars SE, Blade Runner, etc), but when they retouched TMP, I would not have minded a mild glow added to the nacelles.
I've never been all that fond of all the extra lighting they've added to later Trek ships. Yes, it started in TMP, but there it was more subtle. In TNG and later it became a regular practice and didn't look more high tech to me at all even though it was meant to convey exotic and highly advanced technology. I just thought it looked gimmicky and less serious in terms of design.
Actually, I think the original film makers of ST:TMP put a lot of effort and thinking into making the model seem more like a dynamic and operational machine, much like the TOS Enterprise, instead of the more static lit models that came later.
If you really pay attention to the lighting effects of the ship, you'll see that there was a very logical use of everything.
For example, the deflector dish goes from an amber color at low speeds to the blue we are used to at higher speeds. I believe that this also applies to the impulse engine. There is a shot when it first goes to impulse where the exhaust is red as well as the impulse crystal on top. This would explain why the model is shown with blue impulse engines in many early photos of it. That is the color they would have been at higher impulse speeds as well as a blue impulse crystal. Also, the model had 3 different types of identifying lights: navigation lights that worked like strobe lights, position lights that just alternated on and off, and formation lights that remained on all the time.
In regards to the warp engines, they only lit up when the ship went to warp and at that point the impulse exhaust and crystal are off. Back at impulse speeds the warp engine lights were off and the impulse exhaust and crystal were back on.
The filmmakers also took this level of detail to the interior sets, especially the engine room. Just look at the shots of the engine shaft during different power settings. Its lighting and intensity changes with engine speed and power.
My opinion is those guys really paid a lot of attention to detail just in the use of lighting to convey a more "real" atmosphere of how things worked.