(11-20-2017, 03:23 PM)irukandji Wrote: So in essence, it's possible that some episodes in Grimm may have come up short and the extra scenes were edited in seamlessly to fill the entire time slot.
Episodes never come up short. That's what the overshooting of scenes is designed to prevent. It's SOP in the industry to shoot 45-minute hourlong episodes from scripts that are 55-60 pages in length.
Grimm typically shot using two or three-camera placement, so for every episode there was 120-180 minutes of raw footage for the editors to work with. Editing is always deciding what footage to not use.
Very interesting. What did they do for the promos?
The best way to frustrate a cyberbully is to ignore him.
Most promos are shots from the actual episodes, but I've spotted a few that appeared to be different takes or from different camera angles compared to the actual aired episode. And a lot of the promos seemed to cut together shots from more than one episode.