"I've never made a film using dialogue or speech"
About this Quote
The intent is control. Without speech, the viewer can’t outsource meaning to words; you have to read bodies, symbols, rhythm, montage. That’s where Anger operates: the cut as incantation, music as mood-chemical, iconography as a kind of private language. The subtext is combative, too. He’s saying that the “talkies” tradition - the prestige of witty scripts and naturalistic performances - isn’t just a style choice; it’s an aesthetic compromise. If you want ecstasy, menace, or erotic charge, dialogue often kills it by naming it.
Context matters: Anger’s work sits alongside postwar experimental film and queer underground culture, where speaking plainly could be risky, and where coded imagery carried community and threat. Silence, in that light, isn’t emptiness. It’s a refusal of polite legibility. The line also flatters his own mythos: Anger as the filmmaker who doesn’t “write” so much as conjure. In a culture addicted to explanation, he’s defending the right to be unreadable - and insisting that cinema can be felt, not translated.
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Anger, Kenneth. (n.d.). I've never made a film using dialogue or speech. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ive-never-made-a-film-using-dialogue-or-speech-170793/
Chicago Style
Anger, Kenneth. "I've never made a film using dialogue or speech." FixQuotes. Accessed February 1, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ive-never-made-a-film-using-dialogue-or-speech-170793/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I've never made a film using dialogue or speech." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ive-never-made-a-film-using-dialogue-or-speech-170793/. Accessed 1 Feb. 2026.


