I do this for a living and I can tell right now those are two different clips. When we film scenes, you have to have different setups, or camera placements, the best example is the over the shoulder two shot. You set the camera up over one persons shoulder pointed at 1 person from the others perspective. You shoot the entire scene with the script/dialog. Then you give the actors a breather while the production team sets up the camera from the other persons perspective and do shoot the entire scene again. This works when you’re on set or if it’s a fairly short script, but for big productions where there tons of people around and a longer script it’s two separate setups on different days. That’s because you can’t control the sun, and if it takes 3 or 4 hours, you won’t have a choice but to break it down and setup the next day and shoot the other angle(s).
I do this for a living and I can tell right now those are two different clips. When we film scenes, you have to have different setups, or camera placements, the best example is the over the shoulder two shot. You set the camera up over one persons shoulder pointed at 1 person from the others perspective. You shoot the entire scene with the script/dialog. Then you give the actors a breather while the production team sets up the camera from the other persons perspective and do shoot the entire scene again. This works when you’re on set or if it’s a fairly short script, but for big productions where there tons of people around and a longer script it’s two separate setups on different days. That’s because you can’t control the sun, and if it takes 3 or 4 hours, you won’t have a choice but to break it down and setup the next day and shoot the other angle(s).
These are two separate shoots.