Noticing we'll fix it in post. Well, if you're a professional filmmaker, you would know never to say that. Not only do most amateur filmmakers tend to think that you literally can fix it in post, but even amateur producers tend to think that post production, visual effects and editing trickery literally can solve everything. Well, no, they cannot solve everything. Here's why. You only have your footage to work with nothing else.
So that means any mistakes made in production will become highly obvious in post. Officially, post production is well known to be the phase where digital effects and film coloring occurs. And of course, let's not forget the sound mixing and music being laid over against the locked cut of the movie sequence. But what really happens is basically editors getting rid of almost half of your captured footage. If they Team messed up and set a simply cutting, editing rearranging the shots captured with little wastage of clips if the team was efficient. Once the final cut is approved, the film is then sent to print, which is basically a term where any digitally processed sequences are now translated into film print, or vice versa, depending on the production and producers.
Post production is probably the second most time consuming parts of film production close to pre production