I used to find the early scenes on Tatooine after the films opening a bit slow when I was kid, now, I think they're just magical and among the best scenes in the film.
Yeah, they work really well. Everything is warm and earth-tones, the technology is a little clunky and worn, the costumes are homey, the music is often light. A big contrast to the cool grays and stiffness of the Imperials.
and you also have the MF inserted into the shot of the sentry tracking something unseen with his sidearm, which was really cool.
Whoa, it took me a second to get that reference. I never got that it was a gun, I always thought it was a hand-held rangefinder or sensor or something like that.
Shared before, but this really illustrates why the cut stuff needed to be cut:
That's a great video. It also reminds me of something else I've noticed: Without someone to rein him in, Lucas seems to put non-serious or jokey stuff where things should stay serious. In the first deleted Luke scene, the treadwell robot comically "overloads" or whatever, undermining Luke's urgency, the mood from the previous fighting and the cut back to the stormtroopers mopping up. The scene with Biggs on the roof is mostly (just) OK, but the "Listen how quiet I am, you can barely hear me" part sounds like the high school kids from
American Graffiti. This tendency gets more noticeable in ROTJ, then the special editions. I am not that familiar with the special editions, but the Jawa slapstick right after Ben's serious Mos Eisley warning is an affront to the whole tone of the movie.
Also, the Tosche station dialogue was terrible, and the actors did not help it.
The CGI X-Wings mess up the wing markings. Luke's Red 5 should have 5 short lines on each wing (as can be seen in the shot when he gets hit just before he says "I'm hit but not bad") but in the CGI shots most of the X-Wings appear to have Red 2's wing markings, including in the shot mentioned in 2.
Whoa again, I never noticed the markings.
That reminds me of something I always wondered about as a kid: "The markings match those of a ship that blasted its way out of Mos Eisley." What markings, some patches of faded paint?
I do like having the Episode IV: A New Hope in the opening titles, though not there initially it is entertaining the thought that this was meant to be starting in the middle of a before-unseen story and series.
Which fits with the Flash Gordon serials it was lifted from (or is an homage to).