'The Dog Who Wouldn't Be Quiet' Review: A Shimmering Vision of Life's Ordinary Strangeness 'The Dog Who Wouldn't Be Quiet' Review: A Shimmering Vision of Life's Ordinary Strangeness A gentle man loses and finds himself repeatedly in the early middle of his life in Ana Katz's superb, deceptively spacious sixth feature. Jessica Kiang, provided by FacebookTwitterEmail Director: Ana Katz With: Daniel Katz, Valeria Lois, Julieta Zylberberg, Lide Uranga, Raquel Bank, Carlos Portaluppi, Marcos Montes, Mirella Pascual, Elvira Onetto. (Spanish dialogue) Running time: Running time: 73 MIN. Courtesy of Luxbox Films The enigma, at the beginning, is that the dog makes no noise. Unless you count the tinkling of his bone-shaped name-tag as he snuffles doggishly around the yard. Neighbors come by, politely, to complain about his whimpering, and his owner acknowledges the problem apologetically, but if he’s noisy, it happens offscreen. It’s that way with a lot of the inferred noise in Argentinian director Ana Katz’s sixth, shortest and strangest film, “The Dog Who Wouldn’t Be Quiet,” a tiny, monochrome miracle of a movie that gives you years of life and change and mystery in 73 calm minutes.