These images were clearly taken from different windows, the left from Shepard's window the two right images from Mitchell's window. The flag indeed does seem to change but this is from perspective.
Gotta disagree. The flag does change position, but only because the DAC is rotated anticlockwise.
When I looked at those three I believed they were all taken out the same window, but in case I was wrong, checked the caption of the left-hand one, AS14-66-9338, and indeed, it was taken by Ed, and the surrounding ones prove it was -- see also 9337, 9338 and 9340 and their captions. The tracks of the MET match up among all three.
A photo taken out of Al's window would be unlikely to catch the shadow of the right-hand RCS thrusters and (I think) plume deflector, which we can see at bottom left of 9338 and at the top of both centre and right shots.
Also there's the large and two small multiple craters almost at the top of the flag in AS14-66-9338. They are further to the right in the other two. Then there's the shadow of the S-Band antenna in both left and centre photos of the trio. Because the antenna was blown away by the test, it's not in the right-hand shot.
Bigger view of the three shots:
https://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a14/ap14hotfire.jpgAnother good DAC still during the test:
https://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a14/ap14-S71-19500HR.jpg One thing some people might miss in the three shots, and initially had me fooled until I properly analysed things, is that the DAC camera is looking through a different part of the window and possibly closer to it, but most of all it is pointed further down and
rotated anticlockwise about 55 degrees. Check it out -- the only real difference between first and second photo is the different view and the rotation.
Once that's taken into account, the correspondences go on and on and on:-
PLSS behind plume deflector? Same place, both are just rotated clockwise.
Three cat's-claw shadows with two touching flagpole shadow? Same place, just rotated up.
Piece of equipment beyond flag shadow and casting triangular shadow? Same, rotated to top centre.
Shadow of tiny sharp crater just above MET shadow? Same, both are just rotated.
Darkest shadow in S-Band antenna shadow almost touching tiny crater? Same.
Rock at 3 o'clock from flag? Same, right on the edge of the DAC stills.
Flag and flagpole shadows? Rotated to almost where the flag was.
Carry on and you'll find more.