I think that what you're missing is that the sound is not recorded onto the film. The sound is recorded onto a separate digital format. The clapper you see visually claps in front of the camera so we can see the clap, and the sound recording hears the clap- when they are alligned the sound and picture are synched.
<font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">Usually shots are set up for one camera so that you can light it properly, therefore one scene would have numerous set-ups- hence continuity errors! Usually the only desirable sound is the dialogue- once you have clean dialogue recorded you can add in effects and music in post-production, also adding to the illusion of one continuous piece of action in a scene.I've always wondered how in movies they were able to change angles so often, with good flowing audio, even while some shots would show where a camera would be
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