Trinoya wrote:Bah, this just means the falcon is bigger on the inside than it is on the outside! Star Wars = TARDIS LEVEL TECH!
/Wars wank.
If that's the case, then you have to do the same for Trek and some of the other live-action SF franchise spaceships since the majority of such separate interior sets are far larger than their exterior ones. Only in more recent times with the advent of CGI sets and models has this improved a little bit.
An example for Trek is the
Galileo shuttlecraft exterior and interior sets, both separate. The exterior is built to be 23 or so feet (7 meters) long. The interior sets, including the back engine and storage compartment Scotty goes into to electrify the hull in "The Galileo Seven" and various characters go in and out of to find equipment that can be jettisoned overboard to shave weight off would make the craft well over 30 feet (9.14 meters) long.
Why is this done? Well, most of it is practical artistic license with having to move the bulky cameras and lights available in those days around inside the set and other filming necessities. Something that would not be easily done if everything was built into the shell of the exterior set.
-Mike