This reminds question reminds me of a similar question I've had for a while:
In MUM-064 there
this moment in the last scene of the movie:
But the promotional pictures of this scene look like
this:
My initial assumption is that a photographer is on the sidelines snapping pictures as the video camera rolls and as long as there are no cuts in the video (which there are not) I should be able to match up an exact moment in the video with the photo. However, I've tried many times but I cannot find a point in the video that matches up exactly. Sure it gets close but the big outlier is the the guy holding the leash around her neck the and her left arm is not on the guy's shoulder. The only way this is possible is if the photos are taken at a different time from when the video is recorded.
So this leads me to ponder the question: do they really go through the trouble to recreate the scene again at a later time and photograph separately? Is this common practice? Why not just do them at the same time?
I'm going to venture a guess and say that the reason is the shutter sound. In some videos you can hear the loud shutter sound of a DSLR when they are snapping photos. So in order to avoid this noise they film and photograph at separate times. If this really is the reason the crew should look into using mirrorless cameras, they have electronic shutter options which make zero noise. That would save them time and eliminate confusion for the viewers.