I don't see how cutting out a minute and thirty seconds would take away from the experience of seeing the ship for the first time
I've already said I'd be okay with trimming that really long travel pod turnaround shot. I'm not trying to negotiate its running length. I'm just trying to explain why that sequence was more than just "starship porn" to viewers back then. Or rather, it's
totally starship porn, but it was special because of
which starship it was and how revelatory it was, and so the indulgence was not as unjustified as it seems to viewers in this day and age when that kind of spectacle is commonplace and devalued. It's exactly as
Damian said -- we're all so used to seeing the refit for the past four decades that it's hard to imagine how different it was to see that gorgeous ship for the first time.
Besides, films were often slower-paced and more deliberate back then. Directors were more willing to take their time and let the audience savor a moment rather than rushing on to the next thing. (And why not, really? They paid to be there. They're a captive audience. I've never understood why modern filmmakers feel so rushed.)
And I realized a while back that TMP has something in common with another Robert Wise film:
West Side Story. Both films rely heavily on lengthy sequences driven by music and visuals with a minimum of dialogue.
Which makes TMP stand out even more as an oddity compared to what came out before and after. It wanted to be a film like 2001, and nothing else in Trek has ever tried that again on that level because filmmakers knew Trek doesn't work as a movie like 2001. Heck, Trek barely even works as a movie series when accounting most of the films. At least IMO.
I don't think that's quite fair.
2001 was far from the only science fiction film in the '60s and '70s that was in the vein of a deliberate, thoughtful, intellectual film rather than the kind of action-adventure spectacle that
Star Wars pioneered. There was Robert Wise's earlier SF film
The Andromeda Strain, whose stylistic precedents for TMP are strong and clear. There was
Silent Running. There was
The Illustrated Man. There was
Soylent Green. Even
Planet of the Apes was kind of a highbrow film series in its slightly cheesy way, a dystopian satire on the follies of human nature and an allegory for racism, fundamentalism, and class warfare. And it's not like they stopped making films in that vein after
Star Wars came out -- see
Blade Runner, for example. TMP wasn't just "trying to be
2001"; it was just trying to be a smart, adult science fiction movie of the sort that was common in the previous decade. And that was a natural thing for
Star Trek to do, because TOS itself was the first adult-oriented non-anthology science fiction drama. Sure, it had plenty of gratuitous action under network pressure, but there was plenty about it that was a lot more intelligent and sophisticated and thought-provoking than almost anything else in SFTV of the time. So TMP chose to emphasize that side of what TOS was, the adult and thoughtful side, and so they got a director who had experience in adult SF and had him do the same kind of film. Then TWOK came along and chose to emphasize the other side, the more action-driven side.