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Daily Inspiration Quote by Paul Haggis

"I don't think it's the job of filmmakers to give anybody answers. I do think, though, that a good film makes you ask questions of yourself as you leave the theatre"

About this Quote

Haggis draws a hard line between cinema as sermon and cinema as catalyst, and it is a quietly combative stance in a culture that keeps demanding “the takeaway.” By refusing the role of answer-giver, he’s pushing back against the expectation that films should function like TED Talks with better lighting: clarify the issue, resolve the discomfort, send the audience home reassured they’re on the right side of history.

The subtext is about power. Answers tend to flatter the viewer; they let you outsource moral labor to the narrative. Questions, by contrast, boomerang. They force you to notice your own reflexes: who you empathized with too quickly, what violence you excused because it was stylish, which character’s pain you treated as background. Haggis isn’t romanticizing ambiguity for its own sake; he’s arguing for an ethics of participation, where meaning is co-authored by the audience’s self-interrogation.

Context matters: Haggis’s career sits in the post-90s/early-2000s wave of “serious” mainstream filmmaking - Crash especially - that tried to bottle civic unease (race, class, guilt) into accessible drama. That era was steeped in message movies and prestige problem-solving. His quote reads like a defense against the charge of didacticism: don’t judge a film by whether it supplies policy-grade conclusions; judge it by the lingering cognitive itch when the credits roll.

It works because it redefines success as aftershock. The theatre exit becomes the real third act: not closure, but consequence.

Quote Details

TopicMovie
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Haggis, Paul. (2026, January 16). I don't think it's the job of filmmakers to give anybody answers. I do think, though, that a good film makes you ask questions of yourself as you leave the theatre. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-dont-think-its-the-job-of-filmmakers-to-give-134358/

Chicago Style
Haggis, Paul. "I don't think it's the job of filmmakers to give anybody answers. I do think, though, that a good film makes you ask questions of yourself as you leave the theatre." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-dont-think-its-the-job-of-filmmakers-to-give-134358/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I don't think it's the job of filmmakers to give anybody answers. I do think, though, that a good film makes you ask questions of yourself as you leave the theatre." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-dont-think-its-the-job-of-filmmakers-to-give-134358/. Accessed 1 Apr. 2026.

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Good Films Make You Ask Questions as You Leave the Theatre
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About the Author

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Paul Haggis (born March 10, 1953) is a Director from Canada.

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