Hereâs how it happened.
In the audition, Mann wanted McGill to try things a bit louder
McGill remembers thinking his audition checked off all the boxes. âIt was articulate, it was intelligent, it was lawyerly and understandable, and behaviorally real,â he says. But Mann knew the scene demanded something more, that it should be an inflection point in the movie. So he gave the actor a scenario to embody.
âThis tobacco lawyerâI want him to fear for his safety,â McGill remembers Mann telling him. âLetâs say Ron Motley was just a few years away from playing football at Ole Miss. This lawyer should actually consider the thought that he might rip his arms out and beat him with itâ¦You’ve got to take it up there, because structurally speaking, this is the first time in the film that anybody with any power has come to Wigandâs side.â
As McGill interpreted the new direction, Mann took out his camera and began filming the audition. âI went from 30 miles an hour in the school zone to 90 on the freeway in terms of intensity of delivery,â McGill says. The actor knew heâd earned the part when, in the middle of screaming, he heard Mann doing his best Sickos meme under his breath: âGreat! Great! This is GREAT!â
âWipe that smirk off your face!â was conceived right before shooting began
Two months after the audition, McGill arrived on set (the production shot in the same Mississippi courtroom where the actual deposition took place) and made sure Mann still wanted him to go big. But as they began rehearsing, the director felt something was still missing from the script. âI don’t know,â he said. âWe need something you might tell a nine-year-old kid who’s acting up, to wipe that smirk off their faceâ¦â
McGill perked up. âI said, âWhat’s wrong with me saying, Wipe that smirk off your face?â Thatâs a pretty good old Southern statement.â Mann liked his logic. âThat was, as I put it, the biggest, shiniest bead on the necklace of that character’s arc,â McGill says. âMichael just said, âWow, that is great.ââ
Aware that the line was going to reach for the highest decibels, McGill approached the movieâs sound recorder and gave him his vocal âscoreâ so that his audio (which begins faintly, as he addresses Wigand up close) would never get blown out and distorted. âIf they don’t know you’re going from very quiet to very loud, they’ll turn the volume down and cut off the top of your shiny, bright beat,â McGill says. âAnd they can never get that back in production.â
Mann shot the scene 71 times
âThatâs right,â McGill laughs. âTons.â