Trust No-One: Mulder never went and saw Men in Black,
which may explain his extreme poker face when trying to make a case to the FBI
committee about aliens trying to take over the world. Fortunately a
revolutionary process has been developed that will allow him to restore a large
portion of the documents that were lost during the fire, a long arduous process
but one that he would willingly pursue now his belief in extraterrestrials has
been restored. Once again we get to see Mulder with pie on his face, building
his rather fanciful argument about alien colonisation up to revealing the proof
that Scully singularly fails to produce. There is still a spark between him and
Fowley and he is willing to believe, for now at least, that she is acting for
his interest on the X-Files.
Brains’n’Beauty: For Scully to admit that she saw very
little in the movie is true, but for her to even begin to suggest that nothing
abnormal happened to her is a joke. After the way she has been treated I am
surprised that she manages to stay so calm about the whole ordeal. Hurrah for not
ignoring the development between these two during the Fight the Future. I was
scared that that might be the case as we return to episodic storytelling and
that Carter might not want to deal with the aftermath of their breakthrough but
Scully grabs Mulder’s and repeats the words he said to her before their near
kiss, highlighting that their relationship has definitely stepped up a notch.
As much as Scully wants to protect Gibson, she can’t help but think about what
scientific discoveries they can learn from him. He points out that one
effectively counteracts the other.
Smoking Man: With the Well Manicured Man out of the picture
(thank goodness I will never have to type out that name again – even something
as simple as Bob would have sufficed), the Smoking Man is back on top and
running the show again. Only he would deem it appropriate to suck down on a
cigarette in the middle of a vital surgical procedure. The man is a menace to
public safety, in more ways than one. He is looking forward to breaking Mulder’s
spirit and he’s perverse enough to think that is going to be a beautiful thing
to see. It would be nice for Carter to slip in another episode that explores
with this guy on a more personal level (along the same lines Musings of a
Cigarette Smoking Man but different because that was a one trick pony) and Two
Fathers/One Son and season seven’s En Ami fit the bill perfectly. Before the
series is out there is an extremely rounded picture of a man that William B.
Davis considers to be the protagonist of the series.
Sinister AD: There is a very sinister pause when Mulder and
Scully are informed that they are now to report to Assistant Director Kersh,
rather than Skinner. James Pickens, Jnr is a fine character actor and another
feather to add to the shows hat. He is introduced at the climax of this episode
and so we barely see what he can do but he is going to be with us now until the
end of the series. Just wait until you get Pickens Jnr and Robert Patrick in a
room together. Sparks will fly.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Agent Mulder, I’m reading here a very
pie in the sky report about global domination by vicious long clawed
spacelings…’ – well when you put it like that…
‘So if that were true it would mean that Gibson is in some
part extraterrestrial?’ ‘It would mean that all of us are.’
The Good: As if to emphasise the move from Vancouver to LA,
Kim Manners kicks starts the episode on a blinding shot of the sun now that the
production team have some to work in. Who knows how this is going to effect the
moody look of the show but after five years of damp forests it is so refreshing
to enjoy a more cheerful aesthetic. I have always praised the show for it’s
excellent production values, particularly it’s location filming but since the
movie it seems to have stepped up to a whole new level. The nuclear facility on
Long Beach deserves to be seen on the big screen, it fills the television with
it’s moody, atmospherically lit splendour. Rule number one when being sent to
check out a mechanical failiure – do not poke at a potential alien lifeform
with a wrench. We don’t actually get to see what happens to this poor extra but
the hideous screeches and the luxurious pull away down the corridor (I love it
when directors take that approach, leaving the grisly details to our
imagination) suggests it isn’t a harmonious meeting of cultures.
Pre Titles Sequence: See above for discussion of the memorably
icky opening sequence.
Moment to Watch Out For: Watch out for the moment where
Scully asks Mulder, indirectly, to choose between her and Fowley.
Mythology: ‘So the plot…I’m just trying to get this
straight. The plot is for these spacelings to take over the planet aided by a
group of men here on Earth. Who are growing corn in the middle of the desert
which features pollen which was genetically altered to hold a virus which will
be taken away by bees whose sting transmits the virus causing the growth of an
extra terrestrial biological entity inside the human host.’ Two great
things come from this speech. One is that Carter is actively acknowledging how
far fetched his arc plot has become and is poking fun at it in a very post-modern
way. Secondly is that the comprehensive gathering of all the arc information in
the movie means that the narrative is far more comprehensible and the details
can be openly discussed in way that keeps us in the know and not scratching our
heads wondering where this is all heading.
Foreboding: Gibson Praise is left at the mercy of the alien,
who is shedding his skin in the reactor. I don’t recall how this was followed
up (beyond that fact that I know Praise appears in season eight) so it will be
interesting to find out.
Drive written by Vince Gilligan and directed by Rob Bowman
Trust No-One: Sniffing out X-Files whilst on routine
assignments is his thing now and it is lovely to see him painted in the role of
a maverick even more than he was in the past. It is almost as though he is
actively seeking the disapproval of his superiors the way he deliberately
flouts his orders. It’s a far more interesting approach to his character than
his crisis of faith last year (I bet he looks back on that now he can’t
investigate the paranormal anymore and cringes), and paints him in a
rebellious, nonconformist light that is easy to admire him for. Drive is
dependent on the audience buying into the fractious relationship between Mulder
and Crump and wanting to follow their development from abductor and abductee to
one man trying to save the other mans life. Duchovny and Cranston commit to
selling the material, you genuinely believe that there is a strong level of
distrust between the two of them at first (he is holding a gun on him for a
start) but by the end of the episode there is a sense of a relationship that
has grown from their adversary and desperation. Drive allows Duchovny to play
an action hero and he loves that, he’s more alive in this episode than he has
been in over a season. Crump is a man who has lost his wife, who is facing
imminent death and who is refusing to go down without a fight. It is easy for
Mulder to sympathise with him.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘That was an apology, right? Gee I don’t
know if I can see to drive my eyes are churning up so bad.’
‘Mulder are you okay?’ ‘Yeah, apart from terminal cell phone
withdrawal. That and I’ve got to pee.’
‘You two obviously relish the role of martyr.’
Ugh: Sometimes Scully must wonder why she has come to work.
Asked to poke around in a corpses inner ear and examine the cause of her
injury, she has the delightful experience of the canal burst and spraying blood
and pus all over her tunic. Charming. It says something about our love for our
animals that I had far more of a reaction to the dogs ear exploding than I did
to Crump’s wife.
The Bad: The actual science behind this condition might be
plausible but it sounds pretty rubbish, but that isn’t what’s important here.
Moment to Watch Out For: Although this is an episode with
plenty of memorable moments, particularly the downbeat ending, I think my
favourite moment is Mulder’s deadpan reaction to Scully’s enquiry that he is
okay. The camera suddenly reveals that he is being held at gunpoint and forced
to drive and you realise that the shit has well and truly hit the fan. I like
the trust in the audience in this sequence too. We go from the car that is
transporting Crump swerving on the road to Mulder being held at gunpoint with
the audience being trusted to do the legwork and figure out the events in
between.
Fashion Statement: Mulder has been looking like a fashion
model since season four but has now has his hair chopped off and is sporting a
much more relaxed look. Scully takes up the slack, her hair giving her a much
more stylish appearance that lives up to Gillian Anderson’s number one placing
as sexiest woman in the world as voted by the readers of FHM magazine.
Triangle written and directed by Chris Carter
Trust No-One: Despite his rough handling, Mulder is giddy
with joy at the thought that a ship might have glided through a time fissure
and into the future. For once he has completely misjudged the situation and the
sort of danger that he is in. His ‘oh shi…’ when he realises the truth,
that he has stepped back in time and is at the mercy of history, is delightful
because it comes at the same time that the ship is under attack by the Nazis.
Mulder has now had definitive proof of alien life and time travel, I bet he
feels really silly over his crisis of belief last year now. Does Mulder
realise what he is doing when he casually lists the events of the next fifty
years to a bunch of British soldiers? The Doctor most definitely would not
approve of this casual disregard for the potential ruin of future events with
this kind of foreknowledge. Fortunately nobody is listening to his rambling. In
case history is altered and Mulder never gets to see Scully again, he grabs
hold of the alternative Scully and gives her a smacker on the lips in pure cinematic
style. For his trouble he gets a smack around the face before he jumps into the
water to try and get back to his own time. This isn’t deep stuff like their
near kiss in the movie but it is a hell of a lot of fun. Wonderfully Mulder is
made to sound like a complete nut job going on about changing history and
dicing with Nazis. I don’t know if Duchovny’s knowing smile in the last shot is
because Mulder has finally told Scully how he feels or because the actor is
pleased to have made it through the episode.
Smoking Man: For William B. Davis to learn German and speak
it convincingly whilst trying to time his movements so the scene plays out in
real time shows that he is an actor of no small talent.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘You come out on the side of history
with no small amount help from us with not much to apologise for except for
maybe the Spice Girls.’
‘Hey Scully…I love you’ ‘Oh brother…’
Pre Titles Sequence: Has Mulder been involved in some kind
of ship wreck? The camera glides through the waves, looking up at the floating
wreckage and finally settling on Mulder, stiff and lifeless. What the hell is
going on?
The split screen madness as both Scully’s wander around the Queen
Anne sees Carter at the apogee of his directing fervour. He is having so
much fun putting this together with as much imagination that is at his disposal
and it spills over onto the screen in every shot. To choreograph so much action
in a sequence that is filmed live must have been a nightmare so once again
kudos for pulling off the apparently impossible. And I can’t mention this
enough times, Snow’s sax score fills my veins with sunshine. The two Scully’s
crossing paths across the edge of the split screens is the apotheosis of what
Carter is trying to achieve with this episode and it still gives me a little
tingle.
Fashion Statement: Pretty much every marine on display in
Triangle is a hottie. The Smoking Man’s Nazi thug takes me to uncomfortably
horny places, as I’m sure Scully in period in dress does to others. The dodgy
Jamaican accent aside (‘Trust no-one, man!’), whoever knew that Kersh
was packing away all those muscles underneath his business wear?
Orchestra: One of Mark Snow’s most formidable scores and
given his general lustre that is making quite a statement. Once again he seems
geed up when the show tries something a little different and this is probably
the most memorable soundtrack since last seasons Post Modern Prometheus, and
potentially his most remembered of the nine year run. The gorgeous jazz version
of the theme tune that plays as Scully explores the deserted ship whilst her
historical counterpart attempts to escape the Nazi’s with Mulder is just
divine. The gentle piano version of the theme at the conclusion delights as
well.
Dreamland Part I written by Vince Gilligan, John Shiban & Frank Spotnitz and directed by Kim Manners
Trust No-One: Duchovny seems to be getting all the best
opportunities so far this season; indulging in a biological remake of Speed,
tripping back through time and dicing with Nazi’s and now body swapped into the
life of a middle aged Man in Black with a terrifying domestic life. Whilst I
find he gives his most memorable performances when he is pushed into more
intense character drama (One Breath, The Field Where I Died) you cannot help
but notice how much he enjoys playing comedy and it translates into something
highly addictive on screen. Despite the shock of finding himself in the body of
another man, Mulder quickly adapts and lays along to the best of his ability.
Rule number one when inhabiting the life of another man, do not return to his
house in the dead of night and fall asleep watching pay-per-view pornography.
That is never going to end well. Just as Mulder feels as though he is getting
through to Joanne (or rather she thinks that he can’t get it up) Scully turns
up at the worst possible moment to ruin things.
Faux Mulder: Michael McKean might not have been the first
choice to play the role of Morris Fletcher but after watching this two parter
several times I simply cannot imagine anybody else in the part. McKean could
also be seen as another step into parody because he is known for his more
comedic roles but he judges this story perfectly, enjoying the lighter moments
whilst understanding exactly when he needs to play it seriously. As much fun as
it is watching Mulder trying to handle the family from hell, I found much more
amusement in Scully’s reaction to the obviously out-of-character Mulder. What a
shame we couldn’t have seen Duchovny play the scenes where Fletcher toadies up
to Kersh as I’m willing to bet he would have gone to town with it. To start
with Scully thinks that Mulder is having something of a mid-life crisis because
he is behaving like a first year university student who has had his penis
padlocked throughout puberty. Fletcher
is a cunning old fox, blowing the whistle on Mulder in his body to the
government and securing his permanence in this cushy new life.
Ugh: I’ve only seen one other show where a person is seen
jutting out of a rock in this fashion (DS9’s Heart of Stone) and it wasn’t
handled in any near as graphic a fashion as this.
The Good: It is actually quite exciting to be on the inside
for once, Mulder has an all access clearance to the sort of locations that he
spends entire episodes trying to penetrate without success. Photoshopped
pictures of Morris Fletcher hanging out with Saddam Hussein are just tongue in
cheek enough to work, suggesting that this man has rubbed shoulders with some
powerful men. Nora Dunn as Joanne Fletcher cannot be said to be giving an
understated performance but when you look at her list of previous credits she
is linked to all manner of variety and entertainment shows and her one-note,
sitcom routine suddenly starts to make more sense. I’m not criticising though,
her rants at both Mulder and Scully prove to be some of the most amusing
moments of the entire two part story. Kersh’s secretary is back but not quite
as the sour puss she was in the last episode, this time melting like ice to
Fletcher’s molten advances in Mulder’s body. She is a right floozy, tossing the
fact that she has slept been canoodling with Mulder in Scully’s face as she
stumbles past her in the hall, her lipstick smeared. What a pair of darling
kiddywinks Mulder has to contend with, clearly the delightful products of a
dysfunctional family. Terrance has that can’t be arsed attitude that all boys
develop at some stage during adolescence and Chris is her mothers daughter,
flying off the handle at the slightest thing (and trying to bluff his way
through giving her permission for nose ring – mistaking the request for plastic
surgery! – definitely counts). Continuing this story’s obsession with the
unusual, the appearance of geriatric Native American with personality of a
butch armed offices recruit certainly raised an eyebrow. Julia Vera really
throws herself into the atypical role. To think, that was empty desert before
they constructed that petrol station. You would never believe it was a
construction but that it had been there all along. You can always count on The
X-Files to blow things up real good as well, the devastating explosion that
lights up the desert is captured to great effect. It isn’t the most gripping
cliffhanger of all time but it does leave you wondering how the hell Mulder is
going to get out of this one.
Pre Titles Sequence: Excellent, the pre-titles sequence
plays out exactly like a similar scene in Men in Black. The writing even
adopts its humorous tone. It really feels as though this show has found the fun
in its sixth year. What really makes this insane idea of a body swap work is
how Morris accepts the situation so calmly, walking away with Scully precisely as
he planned and leaving Mulder dumbfounded. The audience is left think ‘what
the…?’
Fashion Statement: It has been far too long since we last
saw Mulder in his boxers and vest.
Dreamland Part II written by Vince Gilligan, John Shiban
& Frank Spotnitz and directed by Michael Watkins
Trust No-One: Sweetly Mulder takes Joanne out for drinks
because he wants to try and salvage something of Morris’ marriage despite his
abuse of his lifestyle. His first reaction when he catches up with his alter
ego though is to kick his ass, figuring that he has done more than enough
damage to deserve it. Mulder handing Scully sunflower seeds is a touching
indictment of their friendship without it getting too mushy.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Hey Grandma Top Gun, will you
shut the hell up?’
‘Special Agent Dana Scully’ Special Tramp Dana
Scully!’
‘Baby me and you’ll be peeing through a cafeter!’
The Good: I’m pleased we get to spend more time with Julia
Vera’s geriatric soldier boy because she is so much fun (‘you’re my bitch
now!’). Huge kudos to the director and editor who ensure between them that
several scenes cut from Mulder to Morris and back again in various mirrors to
keep the audience apprised of the body swap situation. This is the first
meeting of the Lone Gunmen and Fletcher but he would go on to be something of a
thorn in their side in their short lived series, and turn up again in their
final appearance in the series, Jump the Shark. Amusingly he belittles their
pathetic attempts to uncover his work and an instant tension develops between
them. Fletcher is delighted that the Gunmen not only believe the bullshit propaganda
they create to turn peoples heads away from what is really going on, but they
broadcast it too. The idea that Saddam Hussein is a dinner theatre expert
called John Gilnetz that Fletcher co-erced into become a figure of hatred to
rattle a sabre whenever they need a distraction. I love the fact that Mulder’s
shag pad remains intact – a lovely touch that would come back to haunt him in
the later episode Monday.
The Bad: The idea of all the players in this story winding
up at the diner is supposed to be hilarious and is staged like some kind of
awkward French farce but the sequence is overlong and nowhere near as funny as
the writers intended. It’s the first instance where this narrative feels
overstretched across two episodes. A US General with a crisis of conscience who
wanted to expose their work in the twilight of his career? I don’t buy it, but
I guess this is just an excuse to stage the crash and get to the fun. To give
them credit, the writers could have omitted an explanation altogether. Everybody
assembling out in the desert in exactly the same positions as they were at the
beginning of the first episode immediately informs the audience that everything
is about to return to normal. With crushing predictability, it does not
disappoint. I supposed everything had to be rewritten otherwise Scully wouldn’t
have a place on the show anymore.
Pre Titles Sequence: ‘Once upon a time there was a guy
with the improbable name of Fox Mulder. He started out life happily enough as
these things go. He had parents who loved him, a cute kid sister, he had a roof
over his head, got all his flu shots, had all his fingers and toes. And aside
from being stuck with the name Fox, which probably taught him how to fight, or
not, he pretty much led a normal life. But the worst thing by far, the biggest
kick in the slacks this kid Fox ever got was what happened to his sister. One
day she just disappeared. Now Fox buckled down and worked his butt off,
graduated top of his class at Oxford, then top of his class at the FBI academy.
None of that hard work made up for his sister though. It was just a way of
putting her out of his mind. Finally the way I figure it, he went out of his
mind, and he’s been that way ever since. Fox Mulder pissed away a brilliant
career, lost the respect of supervisors and friends and now lives his life
shaking his fist at the sky and muttering about conspiracies to anybody who’ll
listen. If you ask me he’s one step away from pushing a baby carriage full of
tin cans. But now, all that’s gonna change…’ This must go down on record as
the most amiable pre-titles sequences in the shows history, a fun poke at the
shows central protagonist, his absurdly geeky personality and how he fails to
take advantage of his life because of his uptight obsession with flying saucers.
I just knew Mulder was a Star Trek fan when he was younger and the cine footage
of him dressed up as Mr Spock confirms it.
Orchestra: Snow is having a field day scoring what seems to
be a modern day version of a seventies porn film as Fletcher tries to
infiltrate Scully’s defences and get her to have some fun on his water
bed.
Result: ‘If I shoot him is that murder or suicide?’ ‘Neither
if I do it first’ It’s best to just go with the flow with the second part
of Dreamland, which cannot be taken at all seriously, but instead takes its
body swap premise about as far as it can go without events speeding up and the Benny
Hill theme tune kicking in. What surprised me wasn’t Fletcher’s sex games
or the ludicrous scenes hanging out in the men’s room but the moments of gentle
drama that creep up on the audience unexpectedly because we have been promised
little more than high camp. Joanne is such a shrieking one-note character that
you don’t anticipate anything deep from her and yet her scenes with both Mulder
and Morris become rather poignant as the story progresses. There’s even a point
where it looks like Mulder will be stuck in Morris’ life forever and he and
Scully have to face the possibility that they have to part company forever.
It’s these moments of heartbreak that pepper that story that give it a little
more substance than the synopsis would suggest. The last fifteen minutes or so
feature a pretty lousy explanation of why the body swap occurred and a Star
Trek: Voyager reset (I know Voyager isn’t the only show to use this unfortunate
device but it is certainly the most prolific as far as I am concerned) to put
everything back in place for the next episode. It is clear that once the fun
has been had it is simply a mechanical process of having to put all the toys
back in the box again. However I am not writing the second part of Dreamland as
a loss; quite the contrary as there are more than enough amusing moments, witty
lines and heightened performances to make this piece at least as entertaining
as the first part. The only problem is that we’re used to the joke by this
point and so it has lost a little of its sparkle. Certainly there are far worse
X-Files episodes and for it’s best moments, Dreamland Part II scores a high
end: 7/10
What’s it about: Mulder and Scully explore a haunted house
on Christmas Eve…
Brains’n’Beauty: Scully objects to being called out by
Mulder to go ghost hunting in a haunted house on Christmas Eve but we have been
hear a hundred times before. Whether it is the man or the mission (my bets are
on the man), something will always draw Scully out into the night behind Mulder
to join him in his work. Despite the terrible conditions, her ailing reputation
and the disrespect of her peers and family, something has seduced Dana Scully
into working with this man no matter what the cost. It is nice to see an
episode directly address that issue, and try and explain why, whilst having
great fun at the same time. Scully tries to convince herself that she isn’t
going to follow him into this haunted house, that that is going to be
her New Year’s Resolution. Who is she kidding? Instead of simply limping in
behind him she contrives and excuse to follow him (something about missing car
keys). Scully refuses to admit that she is scared walking around the bowels of
the creepiest house this side of Bates Motel but she isn’t fooling anybody. She
can talk about the mind playing tricks based on clichés from stories and horror
movies all she wants but she still screams her head off when she comes face to
face with a ghost. Anderson knows precisely what she is doing with this
episode, walking a fine line between the grave character she has played for the
past five years and a slightly heightened version that fits in with the goofy
tone of season six. She eventually stops talking an admits she is afraid, but
that it is an irrational fear. The idea of Mulder and Scully being trapped in a
haunted house together and having their anxieties heightened and manipulated so
they turn on each other and re-enact the lovers pact that brought Maurice and
Lyda to a sticky end is utterly bewitching. It’s painful to watch Scully’s
terrified reaction when Lyda in Mulder’s guise starts shooting at her,
convincing her that he has gone insane and that they are going to end their
days together beneath the floorboards. For once, Scully is genuinely afraid for
her life.
The Good: Scully suggests that our need to tell ghost
stories says more about the living than it does about the dead, about our
refusal to let go of the idea that those we have lost are no longer with us. I
think she has a very good point, even if she is using it to try and distract
herself from filling her trousers. The split level library/dining hall set
might just be my favourite piece of design in this entire series. How the camera
pans backwards as Mulder opens the door to reveal the space and splendour of
the set is beautifully done. It is the sort of space that is begging you to
tell a story in it. Echoes of Poe’s the Tell Tale Heart with a terrible banging
coming from beneath the floorboards shows that Carter is sufficiently read up
on the genre to gently mock it. Who else would be under the floorboards but
desiccated, shrivelled up remains of Mulder and Scully. I love how slowly it
takes them to comprehend that it is them, at first noticing the similarity in
clothing before the truth dawns on them and they realise they are in very real
danger. Mulder’s ‘how embarrassing’ to the corpse wearing Scully’s
outfit before realising the man is wearing his makes me crack up every time. Like
rats in a maze, Mulder and Scully go from room to room and keep finding
themselves in the same place (actually it is more like an Escher painting in
that respect). Carter waits until a third of the way into the episode where the
tricks start to wear thin to introduce his ghostly characters. Cast this deftly
(Tomlin epitomises sardonic indifference and Anser plays up the grumpy old
codger to the nth degree), they interact marvellously with Anderson and
Duchovny to create one unforgettable scene after another. The choice to have
Maurice and Lyda attack not with cheap horror tricks but with cod psychological
reasoning was a very deft move on Carter’s part because it allowed him to
script some highly probing and yet hilariously caricatured sequences where Mulder
and Scully’s flaws are examined. Once
the psychobabble starts to grate Carter throws in another surprise – as Scully
asks the ghosts to put their hands up we get to see the full extent of the
wounds that finished them off. The gaping hole in Lyda’s stomach is horrific
enough but the way camera slides behind Maurice’s back so we can see Scully
peeking right through the hole in his head reveals a ghoulish sense of humour
that cannot be faulted. The suggestion that brings with it not just joy and
peace to all men but hopelessness and depression to those who have nobody sees
Carter giving the holiday season some real thought. The dancing books are like
something out of Tim Burton and Mulder looks appropriately bewitched. Two old
ghosts sitting by the fire and reminiscing about the good old days when
haunting was less complicated whilst Mulder and Scully crawl from the house in
their own sticky red blood manages to be both uplifting and unpleasant at the
same time, a tonally jarring mix that somehow works a treat to create an
outstanding conclusion. This could have been woefully misjudged by Carter
pitches everything flawlessly. Maurice and Lyda holding hands as they let this
pair go suggests a love that stretches through the ages.
Pre Titles Sequence: Doors slamming and locking in a haunted
house, lightning streaking through the hallway, cobwebs flickering in the
light…it’s not like Carter to cut back to such a simple idea like a haunted
house tale and it’s all credit to him that he has pitched this at exactly the
right tone. It’s hard not to be delighted by something that is so drenched in
cliché and yet manages to rise above and revel in them in the most stylish way
possible.
Moment(s) to Watch Out For: As amusing as Mulder’s
psycho-analysis by Maurice is, Scully bumping into Lyda is one of the
highlights of the season. To see the usually unflappable Scully screaming her
head as though she is auditioning for the role of a Doctor Who companion and
waving her gun screaming ‘I’m armed!’ has me rolling in the aisles every
time I watch this. Anderson is just sublime and should be able to play comedy
like this more often, it is much more fun than her graver than a burial at
night performances. ‘Please…I’m a little on edge!’
The final scene of Scully visiting Mulder on Christmas day
might be my favourite moment between the two characters, one which suggests
that warmth and depth of feeling that they share better than any other. I love
the way Mulder first reaction to the banging is to think it is the neighbours upstairs
complaining about the noise, rather than believing that somebody has come to
see him. She admits that there is more to her than just proving him wrong and
he questions whether that has ever been the case. She admits, somewhat
grudgingly, that she did want to be out there with him. They are like a pair of
excited kids opening up their presents that they promised not to get each other
and it is a joy to watch. It’s the sort of television that gives you a great
big hug.
Result: Carter was clearly riding quite high after the
movie and the move to LA and it lead to a run of experimental but massively
enjoyable episodes from a writer that I had come to find synonymous with
mythology folly. How the Ghosts Stole Christmas is probably the most delightful
episode the guy penned for the entire show (season nine’s Improbable comes a
very close second), a hilarious, chilling and best of simple ghost story
featuring some amusing dialogue and great camera trickery. It conjures up the
feeling of Christmas better than practically anything else I have ever seen on
television and I love how it goes for the jugular rather than sentimentality,
and leaves that for the delicious final scene. It’s a winner however you want
to look at it and whilst it might be the cheapest episode of the season thanks
to its confined location and small cast that doesn’t mean that it doesn’t look
gorgeous, the haunted house genre is plagiarised and perfected with some
fantastic set design, another terrific Mark Snow score and edgy performances
from Duchovny, Anderson, Tomlin and Anser. The only downside I can see to the
positioning of How the Ghosts Stole Christmas (unavoidable since it needed to
go out near Chrimbo) is that this is the fourth humorous episode in a row (Triangle
might not meant to have been a comedy but it is impossible to take seriously)
and there are still a number to come up before the show remembers how to scare
again. Whilst all of these episodes have been of a consistently high quality (a
sharp contrast to this time last year), a little variety is always nice.
Aesthetically this what the X-Files has always been about but tonally it is
something utterly unique, and it seems perfect that the Mulder/Scully
interaction should reach its apotheosis (it really doesn’t get any better than
this) during such a quirky, oddball episode. Amazing that an episode that
jettisons all the usual X-File tropes (expensive production values, a large
cast, overcomplicated and ambiguous plotting) should prove to be one of the finest
installments of the shows sixth year. A ghoulish, rich and heart-warming
Christmas X-File that goes down a treat all year round but is especially
delightful when viewed on Christmas Eve with a warm mince pie and a glass of
mulled wine: 10/10
What’s it about: Wayne Weinsider just wants a normal child…
The Good: I’ve only ever seen Campbell camp it up as Ash
Williams in the Evil Dead series so I had no real idea what to expect
from the actor when approaching Terms of Endearment except that he sure can
pitch his performance at a hysterical level. Imagine my surprise then when he
delivers a sensitive and considerate turn as Wayne Weinsider, a troubled devil
that just wants to have a normal child. Even when Wayne is doing the most
terrible of things (like convincing Laura that she was possessed by something
and murdered their child), Campbell pitches his performance at a relatable
level, showing the torment of a man who wished things could have been
different. He even manages to make the scene where he tries to get Mulder off
his scent by heading to one of his insurance clients house a compassionate
moment, watching her children playing and marvelling at the delight of human
life. Rob Bowman could get atmosphere
out of a trash can, I’m convinced of that by now. Watch as the camera slides
past the furnace in the yard, the house dominating the backdrop and Wayne all
set to burn their dead baby alive. It’s a shocking scene regardless but in
Bowman’s hands it oozes with malevolence. Wayne has been portrayed as a
genuinely agonised father who has done a terrible deed in order to protect his
lineage so it comes as some surprise when he turns up at another house and
starts cradling another woman’s stomach. You start to wonder just how many
other women are out there, incubating his seed. Anyone who might be complaining
that season six has gone too Hollywood would be appalled at the sight of Mulder
and Wayne racing in sports cars down a highway to an energetic dance track…but
let’s be honest, the show has never looked as hip as this before. Wayne looks
crestfallen when Laura pulls back his collar and reveals his appendages,
saddened that he has to kill her to keep her quiet. How he has to fake his
rapturous surprise when she survives his attack is another golden moment. We
learn that Wayne came to America to continue his lineage, meeting prospective
mates through his work. It is amusing to think that Wayne has diced with an
even smarter devil this time, and one who will stop at nothing to keep her baby
alive and away from him. The fact that Wayne gives his life for Laura’s in the
end is a final selfless act that proves that in the right circumstances he is a
nice guy.
Moment to Watch Out For: When Wayne discovers that his baby
with Betsy has complications as well the episode looks like it is going to play
out along predictable lines. The events that led up to the pre-titles sequence
are repeated exactly (Wayne drugging her with milk, the devil at the end of the
bed) until the point where Betsy grabs him throat and demands to know ‘what
are you doing Wayne?’ It comes so out of the blue (and I was so certain
that this was going to wrap up in a predictable fashion) that it really floored
me when I first watched it. It’s not a jump out of your seat twist, but a great
subversion of my expectations.
How the Ghosts Stole Christmas written and directed by Chris
Carter
Trust No-One: Mulder starts by telling Scully a creepy ghost
story about the house and its occupants and coupled with the excitement of
being able to explore the house where this terrifying tale unfolded would be
enough to get me going too. It is not enough for Mulder that the house is
haunted, it has to be cursed too. You can’t help but laugh at the
bastard when he scares the bejesus out of Scully, holding his torch under his
nose. Does Mulder have a pathological condition pertaining to the paranormal?
Or is he just a narcissistic, self righteous ego mainiac? Single minded but
prone to obsessive compulsiveness, workaholism and anti-socialism. Maurice
might be trying to get inside Mulder’s head and he’s clearly had a good look
around. Is Mulder a lonely man chasing para-mastubatory illusions to give his
life meaning and significance that he cannot find elsewhere? Passionate,
serious and misunderstood. Does he listen to Scully’s endless droning
rationalisations because he is afraid of being alone? Like a metaphor for where
his work has led him, Mulder walks straight into a brick wall. Duchovny’s
‘here’s Johnny!’ moment of madness, fake Mulder screaming hysterical inanities
at Scully whilst he fires his gun, sees the actor cutting loose and enjoying
himself immensely. Maybe this episode should have been called Folie a Deux
– a madness shared by two?
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Wait, is that a hound I hear baying out
on the moor?’ ‘No actually that was a left cheek sneak.’
‘Most people would rather stick their finger in a wall
socket than spend a minute with you.’
‘I don’t show my hole to just anyone…’
Orchestra: Snow gets in the mood immediately with his
cod-Dracula score, pouring all of his frustrations into a church organ and
opening up the episode with no illusion that this is going to be another
amusing episode. Soon he has turned on the electric keyboard and we are in
mock-horror territory with a synthy organ taking most of the duties as Mulder
and Scully explore the house that time forgot. The playful tinkling of the
piano as they realise they are being manipulated by the ghosts is another
memorable Snow refrain.
Terms of Endearment written by David Amann and directed by
Rob Bowman
Trust No-One: The shot of the shredded X-File that Mulder
has stolen out of Spender’s bin (I imagine a sequence of Mulder peering endlessly
around the corner whilst Spender pisses his day away before finally heading off
for his lunch and Mulder tip-toeing his way into the office disguised as a
cleaning lady and nabbing all the shredded files) and glued together is a sight
behold. It is clear that Mulder knows precisely who the culprit is from his
first conversation with Wayne, gently probing the man trying to make him bite.
I realise Mulder is doing good work but sometimes I think he doesn’t know what
is good for himself or his career. Even when the whistle is blown on his
pursuit of Wayne he persists, leaving Scully to deal with the consequences. You
have to wonder why she stays so loyal to him sometimes.
Brains’n’Beauty: We were given some clue of how tedious
Mulder and Scully’s new assignments are now they have been relieved of the
X-Files (although to be fair wouldn’t anything seem boring after
investigating cases of the paranormal?) but to witness one of Scully’s
interrogations (with questions as leading as ‘have you ever smoke marijuana?’)
even Gillian Anderson cannot make her character sound excited about this line
of work. Mulder is off chasing demons (literally) whilst Scully is left with
the dog work. She might whinge about that but how this is different from the
status quo when they were on the X-Files beats me.
Faux Mulder & Scully: It is great to finally catch a
glimpse of what Agents Spender and Fowley are up to when X-Files turn up in
their in-tray. Straight into the shredder by all accounts, without a glance at
the details.
The Bad: Mulder’s ‘I’m sure you’d hate like the devil for
that to happen as well’ so deeply unsubtle it stands out to all and sundry that
he is trying to send a message. Surely there was a more delicate way Amann
could have scripted this?
Pre Titles Sequence: It is a clever opening because once you
have seen the whole episode it takes on a whole new complexion. Whereas Wayne
appears to be a selfish husband who cannot find it in himself to comfort his
wife when they have been handed unfortunate news about their baby, the truth is
he has been through this conversation many times with lots of different women.
He has been trying propagate for some time and is now coming to realise he is
the one at fault. You would think that the imagery of a giant devil, backlit by
flames, would be a ridiculously camp start to an episode but as directed by Rob
Bowman this sequence of bloody baby snatching as the mother screams for her
husband is genuinely nightmarish. The devil baby screaming as he is torn from
Laura remains one of the nasty creations on the show and it is a welcome touch
of horror from a show that has gone all razzmatazz of late.
Fashion Statement: Grace Phillips has the most crystal blue
eyes I have ever seen. You could really lose yourself in them.
Result: ‘Because they’re demons, and he wants a normal
child…’ David Amann is a funny one for sure. I always like to see fresh
names popping up in a series and he turns up at something of a creative
renaissance for the show and produces a script that is both deadly serious in
its implications but also blackly comical in its realisation. It’s a
potentially dodgy mix that he judges perfectly and the result is another winner
for the (so far) untouchable season six. Amann would go to produce scripts that
are domestic (Chimera), forgettable (Rush), overloaded but spooky (Invocation)
before finally finishing precisely how he began on a gem (Release) and the
highlight of the shows final season. You can’t pin him down as a great writer
or a poor one, he seems capable of both ends of the spectrum and everything in
between. Evil of the Dead stalwart Bruce Campbell gives a superb
performance and manages the almost impossible, to make a baby murdering devil a
sympathetic character. That’s what saves this from being more routine because
aside from a few twists that genuinely trip the audience up (Betsy revealing
her true colours is a phenomenal moment) Terms of Endearment follows Mulder
hounding Wayne’s footsteps, turning the protagonists into the antagonist for
one week. An inversion of Rosemary’s Baby with a real dash of atmosphere (that
has been somewhat missing this year), this is another unique and inventive
episode of The X-Files in a season that is proving to be markedly different
from all the rest: 8/10
The Rain King written by Jeffrey Bell and directed by Kim Manners
What’s it about: Is a man with the improbable name of Daryl
Mootz really controlling the weather?
Brains’n’Beauty: Scully walks through this episode with an
air of superiority and disinterest that really plays with my tickle bone, not
at all interested in the romantic machinations of Kroner and appalled that
Mulder has dragged her so far for the most lunatic of reasons. The running joke
is that she wants to leave town and there is something that continually stops
them because the weather is being controlled by one of the citizens of the
town. Everybody mistakes Mulder and Scully for a couple in The Rain King, much
to Scully’s chargin (she is often referred to as ‘the missus’). Ever the
sceptic, Scully suggests that rather than making it rain Daryl might have just
followed it from location to location. Scully has often ridiculed Mulder for
his zany beliefs but she has never looked quite as incredulous as the moment
Mootz starts performing his cringeworthy rain dance. What’s brilliant about
this scene is the egg that she has liberally slavered on her face as the
heavens open and prove her doubts wrong. When Mulder tells Sheila that he and
Scully specialise in these kinds of cases, check out the look on Scully’s face.
It says ‘this is what my life has been reduced to…’
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Look at that…and you wonder why your
ass is so big!’ – Daryl’s Valentine’s Day charm offensive needs a little work.
The Good: You truly know you have arrive in the sticks when
visitors of Mulder and Scully’s stature (so low in the FBI chain right now the
cleaning lady of the building gets an invite to the Christmas party before they
do) are greeted with a young majorette twirling her baton. Scully baulks at the
idea that anybody could take the claims that one man is controlling the rain
seriously, especially after she witnesses Daryl Mootz’s handicapped rain dance.
Moving aside from the improbability that this man has Godlike powers, the
authorities on Kroner believe that Daryl is causing the drought so he can
charge people for the rain. Only in America! There is something so mundane
about Mootz opening up a little office in a washed up (actually quite the
reverse, that’s the problem) town and actually turning the incredible gift of
being able to manipulate the weather into something commercial. The fact that
his receptionist is a young impressionable thing, the furnishings are as tawdry
as you can imagine (in a town suffering a drought he has a water feature which
shows off his ability to attract the rain) and the most important stipulation
upon his visit is that there is a big old bowl of jelly beans with the green
ones removed says everything you need to know about this pitiable man. It’s not hard to predict where this episode
is going as soon as we get to meet both Sheila and Holman in the TV studio, a
pair of socially handicapped individuals who are clearly made for each other if
only some Romeo could make them see it. I like how this episode has a built in
get out clause in the shape of Holman. He’s the one that convinces both the
audience and Mulder that Daryl is genuinely controlling the rain and he is also
the twist in the tale, proving himself to be the unwitting culprit at the
climax. God bless the sequence that displays Sheila’s apparent effect on the
weather, everything from tornados at her senior prom, a blizzard on her wedding
day and smiling clouds in the sky when she got her divorce. Holman turning the
rain off when he realises that Daryl was drink driving on the night of his
crash is a great ‘oh shit…’ moment for Mootz, a character it is easy to
be happy for when bad things happen to him. The trouble with turning rain
summoning into a business is that when you fail to deliver, the lawyers aren’t
far behind – compensation being another popular distraction of America.
Confirming that Holman is the culprit, a well timed streak of lightning splits
the sky when Sheila admits to him that she has fallen for Mulder. The ending is
about as perfect as it can be – the ugly duckling gets his swan (that’s
debatable but okay) and they all live happily ever after with their little
kiddie under a rainbow. That’s enough twee to power an entire season of Glee
but in the context of this episode it works beautifully. Sometimes it’s nice to
know that all is right with the world.
Moment to Watch Out For: I don’t know what is funnier; the
idea that a tornado could pick up a cow from a paddock and drop it on a hotel,
the fact that we actually get to see said act in all its glory or Mulder’s
hilarious reaction when it is mooing its way towards him. It all leads up to
one of the most glorious lines in TV history: ‘I’m telling you, that cow had
my name on it!’
The Rain King written by Jeffrey Bell and directed by Kim Manners
Trust No-One: If Scully is straight man, Mulder is having a
great time in this episode. For once not taking anything too seriously and
revelling in the impossible notion of the controllable weather. I love his
puppy dog expression when he realises that Holman has contrived the pea souper
to prevent their plane from leaving the ground so he can help him in matters of
love. Scully calls Mulder helping out Holman in matters of the heart the blind
leading the blind. Holman is astonished that Mulder and Scully aren’t a couple
given the way they gaze at each other. Watching Mulder (and especially Scully
who is deeply uncomfortable in the role) trying to manipulate Sheila and Holman
into some kind of romantic clinch is delightful. Check out the hilarious cut to
the two of them dancing in sync at the school reunion party, admiring their
handiwork.
‘It’s like looking in a mirror…’ says Mulder as he and
Scully come face to face with the Watch the Weather competition winners, the
Gundersons, who they have been mistaken for.
‘He wants advice. Dating advice’ ‘Dating advice? From whom?’
‘Yours truly…hello?’
‘Where’s you leg?’ ‘Cindy took it…said I’d have to crawl
back to her’ and later on ‘I brought you a leg…’
The Bad: Let’s try and put aside Victoria Jackson’s
homophobic diatribes and loyalty to the Tea Party Movement and try and
concentrate on her acting ability. Nope, there isn’t a great deal of that
either. However I would argue that in case of The Rain King that isn’t much of
a deficiency because (this is a back handed compliment if ever you heard one)
the episode is written with Sheila as a bit of a social leper; an awkward,
desperate, societal cripple and I’m pleased to say that Jackson fits the bill
perfectly. You like Sheila because she is treated so appallingly by Mootz and
the script is tailored to giving her a happy ending (and its rather lovely) but
it isn’t really anything to do with Jackson’s flighty, over pitched
performance. There is one scene where the characters of Sheila and Daryl (who
are caricatures at the best of times) cross paths at the studio which is
supposed to build to a very funny fight to smash in Mulder’s pretty face but
isn’t directed with any subtlety so the effect is an awful lot of shrieking
noise and badly staged action.
Pre Titles Sequence: Technically (for me) this is one of the
scariest X-File opening sequences despite being nothing of the sort because the
unpredictability and relentlessness of the weather is something that I have
become all too aware of as I have gotten older. The thought of rain that can
turn to hail and smash its way through a mans car window is a terrifyingly real
prospect. Of course this being an genre show it puts a creative slant on the
idea and it appears that the hail is a manifestation of Sheila’s tears that
streak the coffee table. There is a brilliant shot of the hail bouncing off the
road in slow motion, every single piece in the shape of a heart. It was at this
point I knew I was in for a good time with The Rain King.
Orchestra: Going for the heartstrings rather than the
jugular, this is another superb score from Snow in season six and along with Triangle,
Two Fathers and Field Trip one of my favourite soundtracks. To help sell the
idea that this is a romance playing out Snow enlists the help of some superb
songs (including The Carpenter’s Rainy Days and Mondays, an absolute classic of
a tune).
Result: I cannot be overly critical of The Rain King because
I have watched it many times over the years and it has always given me such
joy. I love the fact that in season six the show is just going for broke with
some genuinely kooky (but not always spooky) ideas and the notion of a man
being able to shape and manipulate the weather is brought to life with such a
thread of imagination and delicacy that the resulting episode is pure sunshine
(hohoho) to watch. If you include
Triangle and Terms of Endearment (both of which have an whiff of light
entertainment about them), this is sixth light episode on the trot and I can
understand why fans might have wondered at this point if the show had
metamorphosed into something quite different since the move to LA. Pleasingly,
some good old fashioned scares were just around the corner. On the other hand I
have found this one of the most engaging runs of episodes since the show began
with each one proving funny, intelligent and full of creative touches. If the
show has to sacrifice its scares to remain consistently good, is it a sacrifice
worth making? The Rain King is treated with a lightness of touch that is rare
for this series that makes it a joy to watch (more often than not the comedy’s
on this show are full of smug winks at the audience or impenetrably
sophisticated) and it is rare for the stakes to be so low and for Mulder and
Scully to have to deal with little more than a lovers spat in a backwater town.
I’ll knock a point of for Victoria Jackson’s deeply unsubtle performance (I
know the character is supposed to be socially inept but Jackson takes this to
the nth degree by just playing herself) but this is a great example of what the
show can do when it turns away from all the mythology complications; a simple,
touching, heart-warming piece of drama with a very creative premise. As with
How the Ghosts Stole Christmas it celebrates the Mulder/Scully relationship and
showcases at its best. Anybody who criticises this show for the inability of
its leads to promote warmth and good feeling I suggest they watch the two
episodes back to back and eat their hats. The soundtrack is phenomenal, there
are witty lines aplenty and the overall impression is of a show that is still
innovating to keep its audience interested. I love Jeffrey Bell’s episodes,
they are unique little sub genre all of their own that I call X-Files-lite: 9/10
What’s it about: Skinner has something under his skin…
Assistant Director: Skinner has been somewhat imperceptible
of late given the shift away from mythology episodes (where his presence is
usually a given) and that Mulder and Scully are no longer his responsibility.
The only way to give this guy some screen time (aside from him turning up in
Nazi uniforms in historical/dream episodes) is to devote an hour to him. The results
of which have been mixed in the past, with Avatar failing to open any personal
avenues for the character and Zero Sum proving an action packed delight. Mitch
Pileggi is a fine, charismatic actor who is sometimes wasted in the role of
Walter Skinner, a man so wrapped up in red tape he is practically futile so it
is always nice when the writers push him off in new directions and give him
something different to do. More often than not, cutting him free of Mulder and
Scully equates to his best material. Now we know why Skinner is so buff
underneath all those crisp white shirts he wears – he’s a pretty decent boxer
who takes all his aggression out on the bag. Clandestine meetings in the Bureau
with his former charges suggest and intimacy that has been nurtured over time
(it is certainly preferable to the constant ‘can they trust Skinner?’ thread
that ran on for far too long). We get to witness a brief day in the life of
Walter Skinner and yes it really is as boring as it seems. In a beautiful
moment Skinner confesses to Scully that he wishes he had made the X-Files more
of a priority, that he had something to show for his life’s work. Scully
endorses their friendship, admitting that he has been their ally more times
than she can say. At the close of the story the agents have reason to doubt the
Assistant Director (what again?) because he effectively tears up the
investigation into his sickness at the behest of the man who is now in control
of his mortality, Krychek. They aren’t in league, but Skinner is now in his
pocket thanks to Krychek’s homicidal advantage over him.
Ugh: Green worms wriggling beneath the skin as a man screams
to death, his veins on fire.
The Bad: Senator Matheson turns up so sporadically in this
show that I have to remind myself of who he is every time he makes an
appearance. He has certainly not etched himself in my mind as well as the other
semi-regulars on this show, even the ones who have only had one or two appearances
like Gibson Praise and Diana Fowley. That tells me that something was missing
when they conceived this character, something that allows him to slip out of
sight for entire season without the audience even noticing. Bizarre that
Skinner seems to be being stalked by a voice that sounds like a hybrid of the
speaking clock and Steven Hawking. You would have thought Krychek would have
found a more sinister voice than that.
Pre Titles Sequence: There’s a nice little trick played on
the audience being led down the garden path into thinking that Mulder is the
one laid up in hospital when in fact it is Skinner. The effect of the veins
bulging out across his body is achieved brilliantly, it looks genuinely ghastly
to experience. I’m never convinced when shows attempt to open episodes where
characters are killed off like this because it is such a sudden, inconspicuous
way to go. If Skinner were to die then I would expect something a lot more
dramatic than a quick two minute sequence in a hospital. Mind you the voiceover
that kicks in after the pre-titles sequence gave me reason to pause – was this
episode going to lead up to his departure from the series after all?
Result: This is the sort of po-faced episode that The
X-Files used to deliver every other week but amidst the more charming, amusing
offerings of season six it sticks out like a sore thumb. Saying that it is
quite refreshing to get back to some serious storytelling and you can always
rely on John Shiban to wipe the smile off your face. S.R. 819 is more Zero Sum
than it is Avatar and seems to have been brushed with the Midas touch of season
six since the resulting piece is breezily paced, gorgeously directed and gives Skinner
a terrific role after being a minor presence in the series for some time. Don’t
get me wrong this isn’t a deep or meaningful piece of drama, it’s function is
to intruige and excite but on those terms it provides some neat entertainment
and a terrific ambiguous ending. We’ve had an episode where Mulder tries to
penetrate Skinner’s personal life, another one where Skinner is playing rogue
and trying to hush it up and this is a fresh spin on a Skinner-centric tale,
one where Mulder and Scully rush to try and save his life. Beautifully
orchestrated action, a muscular Mark Snow score and Mulder in full on Rambo
mode; there are plenty of treats in S.R 819 that distract you from the fact
that the narrative is actually pretty empty. Mitch Pileggi once again proves
why he is such an asset to the show and the make up for his nanites hell is
genuinely ghoulish. Minus points for the use of Senator Matheson, a dead end
character that has failed to generate any interest and whose involvement in
nanites technology comes as no surprise (all shady government types are up to
no good in this show). Not the finest of X-Files but much more entertaining
than it would have been in an earlier season before Shiban cut his teeth on the
show and honed his writing skills: 7/10
Agua Mala written by David Amann and directed by Rob Bowman
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘You ever have one of those days,
Scully?’ ‘Since I’ve been working here, yeah.'
S.R 819 written by John Shiban and directed by Daniel
Sackheim
Trust No-One: Mulder immediately assumes that Skinner has
been hurt because of his previous allegiance to the X-Files. Even Skinner
claims he is too paranoid.
Brains’n’Beauty: It is nice to see Scully working as a
scientist once again. Given her propensity for doing background checks and
indulging in comical machinations this season I was starting to wonder if her
professional credentials were being bypassed for good.
The Good: Orgel’s abduction is directed with more adrenalin
than we have seen this show for some time, Daniel Sackheim proving quite a find
when it comes to staging action. Skinner’s secretary shows more than a little
interest in the well being of her boss, which is quite appropriate considering
she is being played by Mitch Pileggi’s wife. The whole idea of somebody’s life
being controlled by remote control from afar terrifies me, the powerlessness of
the situation knowing that there are technological bugs swimming inside that
could turn against you at the touch of a button.
Moment to Watch Out For: It seems inevitable that Krychek
should be the one behind all of Skinner’s health problems but it’s still a
great moment when it comes, the long haired hippy revealing himself. The idea
that he holds Skinner’s life in his hands at the press of a button chills the
blood. That should be revisited at some point.
Tithonus written by Vince Gilligan and directed by Michael
W. Watkins
What’s it about: A man who has cheated death for so long is
hot on its heels…
Trust No-One: You’ve got to give the writers some credit for
not allowing the series to settle back into the status quo. This is the ninth
episode (and the movie) since Mulder and Scully were stripped from the X-Files
and they are still stuck in the quagmire of boring background checks on
suspected criminals whilst Fowley and Spender take over their work. Mulder
refuses to work because it would make way too many people happy way too
quickly. Mulder looks like a kicked puppy when Scully heads off to work with
Ritter, acknowledging that if she does a good job they aren’t going to put her
back on the dog work.
Brains’n’Beauty: Kersh looks to be playing dirty tactics and
attempting to split up the dynamic duo by assigning Scully to work with the
rather dishy Agent Payton Ritter. I hate to say this since it is the chemistry
between the leads that makes this show so damn entertaining at times but from a
outsiders perspective, Scully would be much better off being lead in this
direction by Kersh, salvaging her career and partnering up with somebody far
less reckless than Mulder. It goes to show that Kersh isn’t all bad, he is
dangling a carrot in front of a promising Agent and trying to give her a chance
to redeem herself. Scully might suspect Fellig but she is still a medical
Doctor and she treats him like she would any other patient. Rather than giving
Ritter a chance to prove himself, Scully is straight on the phone to Mulder
when she wants to discuss the case. She would be similarly cold with Agent
Doggett when he first arrives on the scene. At first Scully thinks that Fellig
is taking her to stalk his victims but she soon realises that things a lot more
complex than that. By apparently saving her life from an aggressive client,
Scully inadvertently causes the prostitutes death as she steps in front of the
trunk. For somebody who is devoutly religious she must have a problem with a
man pre-determining how people are going to die and seeing her part in the
operation. Scully figures that there is too much to learn and experience for
anybody to suggest that they have had too much life…but I guess if you saw all
your loved ones grow old and die you would change your opinion. Are you
supposed to replace in a perpetual loop of happiness? Scully was told by Clyde
Bruckman that she was immortal herself and so when death comes knocking at the
end of this episode it has no choice but to claim another victim.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘The how is always a surprise…I just
always know when.’
‘We’re talking about a guy with whom life in prison carries
some pretty weighty connotations.’
‘You live forever, sooner or later you start to think about
the big thing you’re missing hat everybody else gets to find out about but you’
‘About love?’ ‘What does that last forever?’
The Good: Trust Gilligan to take hold of the idea of
immortality and put a unique spin on the idea, not being facetious with the
notion (as shows like Buffy often could be) but instead highlighting what a
curse it would be. Tithonus sports several spine chilling notions that add to
the terrible blight of immortality; Fellig can tell who is about to die
(realised with piquancy by highlighting the victim in black and white) because
he has been around long enough to recognise the events that lead up to a
fatality. To that end he is actively pursuing and photographing peoples deaths,
trying to capture the moment, to understand it, in the aim to one day achieve
that finality himself. Even if Gilligan had never contributed any other
episodes of this show (let alone most of the top quality ones) I would have
lauded him as one of the shows most promising writers because of this fascinating
set up alone. Some episodes stutter at the starting line because the ideas are
so dreadful (The Jersey Devil, Genderbender, Our Town, Chinga, Badlaa) but
others scream of storytelling possibilities and ooze potential to be explored
beyond one 45 minute episode. Tithonus is a classic episode in its own right
but this is the sort of premise that has legs and could drive a series. The way
Fellig stands before people like a ghastly spectre of death (they cast the part
beautifully, Geoffrey Lewis looks on with a mixture of sadness and longing)
burns in the mind. This is the first sign that there could be life after Mulder
for Scully, foretelling the events of season eight where she would be partnered
up with a new, fresh-faced and exciting partner. Whilst Ritter’s journey isn’t
as thorough as Doggett’s and the character is not as well defined, he’s still a
likable character with plenty of potential for further study (especially in how
both Mulder and Scully react to her re-assignment). Despite being a terrible
advertisement for the New York tourist board and almost devolving into cliché,
the knife attack down a back alley is grippingly handled and you know it is
only a matter of time before that whine of the camera will kick in. You get to
experience what happens when a man who cannot die is stabbed in the back
repeatedly. I love how the evidence is very quickly stacked up against Fellig
so the episode is not about proving his innocence or guilt so that around the
halfway mark when Scully confronts him rather than running or trying to argue
with he, he passively asks her to join him on one of his death hunts. He’s not
your typical antagonist (I would argue that he isn’t the antagonist at all,
just the man who is gifted with foreknowledge) and it pushes Tithonus out of
your typical monster of the week episode into something far more interesting.
It allows him to form a relationship with Scully. Fellig considers death to be
a tangible presence, he personifies it by treating it as a person rather than a
series of circumstances. Fellig’s gift is given as much explanation as is
necessary – ‘How is it you know when people are going to die?’ ‘When you
chase it long enough you pick it up.’ Ritter isn’t a government plant like
Krychek was, but a man who refuses to be dicked around by Scully and his
actions are dictated by his integrity. That’s why when Mulder confronts him
with the news of Fellig’s immortality he doesn’t push for more information but
simply follows his instructions to catch up with the man. Fellig has lived so
long that he cannot remember his wife’s name, that’s a haunting thought. The
blood appearing to ooze from the camera is another striking image. The build up
to the appearance of Death is strong that you might wonder how they would pull
such an incredible concept off – instead it is Ritter who invades the scene
with a bullet that almost claims Scully’s life and fulfils Fellig’s prophecy.
The look of contentment on Fellig’s face when Death steps from Scully into him
absolutely sells the beauty of the moment.
Pre Titles Sequence: The creepiest teaser for many a season
which expertly wrong foots the audience into thinking that the mail lady is
going to be the victim of the man who is following her when in fact he can
sense that her death is imminent and he is simply remaining close by so he can
photograph her once she has been expired. If you have a fear of lifts (or
confined spaces) then this really isn’t the set piece for you, as we witness
with dramatic swiftness the cable snapping and the metal box free falling over
20 floors and plunging its occupants to their death. The whine of the camera as
Fellig prepares to take his shots sent a chill down my spine and the final shot
of the black and white hand consumed with ruby red blood is a potent image. Vince
Gilligan might be more well known for his lighter X-File episodes but I think
some of his strongest work is achieved when he ditches the humour ad goes for
the jugular (Paper Hearts, Roadrunners).
Moment to Watch Out For: With a sudden certainty we realise
the only reason that Fellig has let Scully in is because he can tell she is
about to die herself. With his usual despondence, he doesn’t even try and hide
the fact. Scully’s reaction is naturally dramatic as the whine of the camera
builds….
Result: ‘I can’t tell you how many bridges I have jumped
off and all I get is wet…’
Chillingly good, Tithonus is the strongest Scully-solo episode to date
and has a premise so rich it could happily stretch to exploration in at least a
mini series, possibly more. I would go as far to say that Tithonus would serve
as an unnerving pilot for a series that would have as much (if not more)
potential than Millennium. An immortal who cannot die, predicting when
people are going to die and chasing down the moment of death and photographing
it in order to understand it. Fellig is a fascinating character, sometimes
creepy as hell, others times achingly sympathetic and Geoffrey Lewis has been
perfectly cast to bring to life the many broken facets of a man who longs for
death. There are echoes of Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose (the premise,
the relationship between a man who can see predict the moment of death and
Scully) but the tone of the episode is completely different, sorrowful and
sinister rather than knowing and jocose. However the net result is the same, a
drama with greater meaning than the average X-File. The first half of Tithonus
is devoted to giving the audience insight into Fellig’s sinister pursuit of
death, giving Scully cause to discover his secret so that a dialogue can open
up between them in the second half and the ideas can be intimately explored.
The climax picks up on an ominous suggestion in Clyde Bruckman’s Final
Repose that Scully is immortal; an idea that this episode makes abundantly
clear would be a curse, not a blessing. I haven’t even discussed the excitement
of seeing Scully partnered with Peyton Ritter (Fox Mulder/John Doggett…why
can’t any of these guys have normal names?), a blueprint for season eight and a
separation of Mulder and Scully that yields interesting results. It will be
interesting to explore this further when Mulder departs for places unknown.
This is the first properly scary episode of the year but also one of the most
substantial. You can always count on Gilligan to deliver something worth
watching but he has excelled himself here: 9/10
Two Fathers written by Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz and
directed by Kim Manners
What’s it about: Are the Syndicate’s plans about to fall to
pieces?
Trust No-One: Interestingly, Mulder and Scully don’t turn up
in this episode until ten minutes into the action. Proof that even if you don’t
like the mythology episodes, that the writers have managed to amass a large
enough supporting cast to take the weight of the leads when the story requires
it. The Smoking Man admits that he has deliberately ruined Mulder and chosen
his son to replacement him when he became too difficult to control. Mulder’s
father wanted to resist the aliens rather than work with them but was out voted
by the Syndicate.
Brains’n’Beauty: For once this year it is Scully trying to
encourage Mulder to break the rules and take on an X-File rather than the other
way around – because it could lead to information about her abduction and
treatment and because they owe Cassandra Spender their attention. The warmth
that comes from the scenes the two women share is lovely, you would think that
the two actresses had worked together for much longer than two previous
episodes.
Smoking Man: It is long past time that the Smoking Man got
to tell his story and seize control of episode, not only because it makes the
whole conspiracy angle clear to have the man in charge recounting the events
but also because he is a superb character that deserves the time in the
limelight. It goes to prove that you don’t need elaborate, flashy set pieces
(although this episode flaunts those too) to tell a gripping story, the Smoking
Man sits and smokes in a dark room (where else, this is the last Syndicate tale
so that tradition should be maintained) and tells his story to an unknown
colleague and it is gripping. Not just because he is being the events
themselves are so shocking, but because the writers are finally letting us in
on everything that they have kept hidden for so many years. The Smoking Man
(somehow I just can’t get used to calling him Mr Spender) could never have
foreseen how the events would have played out, just as he never suspected that
their plans would ever reach some kind of climax. They have been at this for so
long now, the end seemed unfathomable. Finally the personal consequences of his
work have caught up with him. He chose his ex-wife as the subject for alien
experimentation never for a moment thinking that those experiments would be
successful. Now with the power balance so precarious and Cassandra proving the
catalyst for huge changes, he has to order her execution. It is the first
decision that he has hesitated to make, one where his own feelings have some
consideration. It is with clear regret that he switches off Openshaw’s life
support, some unspoken affection through years of work together hanging in the
air. With all the blood on his hands, he cannot kill the mother of his own son,
a woman that he never event loved.
Faux Mulder & Scully: One trick that was missed with
this otherwise superb opening run of episodes in season six (these two episodes
are numbers eleven and twelve and we haven’t had a duffer yet) is the lack of
Spender and Fowley exposure. When they were shoehorned into Mulder and Scully’s
roles I was hoping for some X-Files being told from their POV but aside from
their involvement in The Beginning and Spender’s brief appearance in Terms of
Endearment they have been strangely absent whilst we catch up with Mulder and
Scully on routine assignment elsewhere. Skinner catches us up with what we all
suspected, that Spender hasn’t been following up any leads, hasn’t been filing
any reports, he’s basically slacking off in Mulder’s old office and
concentrating on one case only – his mothers. Jeffrey refuses to believe the
truth about his mothers abduction and turns his nose up at Mulder’s help even
when it is clear that he is at sea without him. When he starts making demands,
his father puts him in his place a few well earned smacks around the face.
Spender tries to prove himself to his father by taking on assignments of his
choosing, finally stepping over the mark from a disinterested observer to an
active player. Jeffrey is appalled learn that he has been helping protecting
his fathers secrets so he can continue to run experiments on his father. He
walks away from his work, determined to be his own great man and protect his
mother from his father.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘A man should never live long enough to
see his children or his work destroyed.’
‘You pale to Fox Mulder’ – the Smoking Man cuts his son down
with the one insult that will keep him down.
Ugh: The sown up faces of the rebels really give me the
wiggins – any approximation of a human face with fixed emotions does (include
clowns and countless Doctor Who monsters – Voc Robots especially - in that
selection). There is a marvellously chilling moment that is ripped straight
from the Doctor Who story Spearhead from Space where one of Syndicate leaders
is confronted by a replica of himself when he opens his front door. This being
The X-Files they go one step further by showing the Elder ripping his imposters
face off and revealing the stitched up nightmare of a face underneath. They
didn’t need to show us the image of a man combusting, lighting effect and
screams do all the work for us in an unusually tense off-screen death for this
show.
The Good: Cassandra proved to be a smart move on the part of
Carter and Spotnitz because it finally gave the work that the Syndicate
were carrying out a human face. Because
so much of their work was being kept secret we couldn’t really see the
implication of what they were doing to the wider world. With Cassandra we could
see the obscene experiments that were taking place and what would ultimately
become of the human race if the plans went ahead successfully. It is fortunate
too that the sublime Veronica Cartwright was chosen to play the character as
she brings with her a real sense of tenderness and good humour (‘I think I’m
going to pee the floor!’) that makes her very easy to warm to. Cassandra
has learnt her lesson the hard way, now refusing to tell anybody of her
experiences until she can trust them to believe her. The rebels infiltrate the Syndicate and try and manipulate
circumstances so they switch their allegiances to them rather than the aliens
they have worked with for the past fifty years. Carter has always loved
injecting a domestic angle into his conspiracy stories’ usually involving
Mulder and Scully’s family and pour on the soap operatics (or murdering a
member of their families off for shock effect). However with the Spender family
he has finally struck upon a winning combination, the Smoking Man pulling the
strings, Cassandra providing tricky complications and their son proving a
disappointment to them both. It’s hard to imagine them playing happy families
at any point but as anchors for dramatic storytelling this unit works a treat.
The twist that the Smoking Man isn’t merely soliloquising but telling his tale
to Diana Fowley, the only person who hasn’t betrayed him, is a great twist. I
wondered where she had got to and it promises a greater role for this devious
femme fatale in the second episode. The cliffhanger is fantastic because it
brings the events to the edge of a cliff with the possibility of plunging
overboard into chaos – if Cassandra is demonstrated as a successful alien/human
hybrid then the invasion of the Earth begins. She has to die in order to
prevent that and she stands before Mulder and begs him to kill her and it looks
for all the world as though he is going to go through with. Kudos to the
writers for building the episode to such a spectacularly dramatic moment, but
all praise to the actors too that make this cliffhanger work as well as it
does. It gives me goosebumps every time I see it.
The Bad: Cassandra says that Samantha is ‘out there with
the aliens’ but we learn in Closure that that isn’t the case at all. Carter
is still making it up as he goes along at this point when it comes to Mulder’s
quest.
Pre Titles Sequence: ‘Dr Openshaw, congratulations. Your
work, it’s been completed…’ From the ominous first scene it feels like
events are coming to a head, that the plans that have been so meticulously laid
out are starting to gather momentum. Take the train carts for extraterrestrial
experimentation from one episode (Nisei/731) and an abductee from another
(Cassandra Spender from Patient X/The Red and the Black) and you have elements
of the mythology arc drawing together to tell a more complete story. Add in a
dash of the stitched up faces of the rebel faction and their combusting weapons
and you are confronted with a teaser that is pure mythology but feels fresh and
relevant for it, and tensely directed by stalwart Kim Manners. Why are the
rebels so determined to destroy the Syndicates work? What is it that has
finally come to fruition? For once, all will be revealed…
Moment to Watch Out For: Jeffrey’s botched assassination
attempt is fantastic moment because he learns with grotesque certainty that
alien life does exist and it has infiltrated the planet. The look of sheer
horror on his face as he tears the face from his victim is excellently played
by Chris Owens. The aftermath as Spender watches the aliens face dissolve is
quietly played between him and Krychek, as the latter treats this whole affair
like some kind of intimate initiation into a secret world.
Mythology: ‘We had a perfect conspiracy with an alien
race. Aliens that were coming to reclaim this planet and destroy all human
life. Our job was to secretly prepare the way for their invasion. To create for
them a slave race of human/alien hybrids…’ That’s telling us more in 30
seconds than the show managed in the first five years (unless you dissected the
conspiracy episodes hardcore and examined every subtlety). ‘Plans that would
have work had not a rebel alien race come to destroy them…’ Cassandra later
tells Mulder: ‘…only now I know what the aliens are here for and it isn’t
good. (Their here) to wipe us off the planet. They’re taking over the universe.
They’re infecting all other life forms with a black substance called Purity.
It’s their life force, it’s what they’re made of. The Doctor’s were burnt by
another race of aliens, a rebel force that are mutilating their faces so they
wont be infected.’ Krychek chips in with: ‘Collaboration has allowed you
time to prepare, to stall colonisation. How close are you to developing a
human/alien hybrid? That alone ensures your survival. What about your vaccine?
By collaborating you’ve bought yourself time to secretly develop a way to
combat the aliens, to fight the future!’
Foreboding: Everything is to play for in the second part…
Result: ‘This is the end…’ Easily two of the most
baffling writers in terms of consistent quality (you literally don’t know from
one episode to the next if they will produce a classic or a duffer as the
pendulum swings precariously back and forth), Carter and Spotnitz pull off a
massive coup with Two Fathers/One Son in managing to successfully and
rivetingly write off the conspiracy arc in a story that piles on the clichés
(boxcars, neck piercing weapons, abductees, alien/human hybrids), does
something exciting and bold with them and is bursting to the seams with
memorable set pieces and twists. It is by far my favourite of the mythology two
parters (although season four’s Tempus Fugit/Max and seasons eight’s
Existence/Essence come dangerously close to matching them) and it builds to an
impressive cliffhanger that had me on the edge of my seat when I first watched
this. What I find fascinating about this tale is how Mulder and Scully are
sidelined for much of the first part, always present but the important action
given to the rest of the ensemble, those who can impart the secrets that have
been hidden for the past six years. I am so used to this show obfuscating that
to have everything spelt out so precisely is dizzying. It’s impressive that the
myriad of elements that have made up the conspiracy arc have finale managed to
converge into one coherent story. It is proof that Carter knew the story he was
telling all along, he just got a little muddied along the way. The feeling of
excitement that builds as you realise this is all building to a dramatic
crescendo is unlike anything the show has ever attempted before and you can
only cling on to the seat of the pants and hope that the pay off is as strong
in the second part. Expertly scripted, acted (William B. Davis and Chris Owens
have never been better) and directed; Two Fathers is another standout episode
this year. This is one of those perfect moments on The X-Files where everything
comes together magnificently: 10/10
One Son written by Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz and
directed by Rob Bowman
What’s it about: The Syndicates plans come to a close…
Trust No-One: It has been a long time since Mulder and
Scully (or should that be David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson) have been
treated as objects of lust (possibly down to their increasing say in the series
such its popularity has soared) and the shower scene where they check each
other out (and look away apologetically) raised a smile (nothing else). Clearly
Mulder has changed his outlook on life to ‘Trust no-one unless they have a
pretty face.’ As soon as the Smoking Man turns up at Fowley’s house, her
allegiances are clear and yet Mulder still allows her to seduce him.
Brains’n’Beauty: I wonder if whatever excuse Fowley came up
with that Scully would pick holes in it. As it turns out Fowley is up to her
neck but it’s obvious that Scully doesn’t like her because of her previous
connection to Mulder. Even Mulder remarks with an arched eyebrow that she hides
her feelings towards Fowley very well. Scully is determined to bring her down
and confronts Mulder with some pretty damning evidence but he causally swots
her concerns away because he thinks that he knows the woman. A personal
interest in his work is all she has left and if he takes that away from her
then she’s no reason to continue, actively threatening him to believe what she
is telling him or she will walk.
Smoking Man: There is a moment of paternal love when the
Smoking Man gives Mulder a gun and suggests that he ‘saves himself’ before the
alien colonisation begins. After he has put her through so much, Cassandra’s
husband cannot look her in the eye and kill her. The Smoking Man turns up to
take his place in the exchange but his devious bit on the side turns up in time
to whisk him away. Let’s be honest it would have been heartbreaking if we had
said goodbye to the character here. He couldn’t kill the woman he never loved
but he has no problem with shooting the son who disappointed him – this is a
complex character for sure and I’m pleased that he survived the cull to tell
more stories. Whether or not he still has a place on the show now that his
masterplan has failed so spectacularly remains to be seen.
Faux Mulder & Scully: Jeffrey thinks he is doing what is
best for his mum by co-operating with Fowley but doesn’t realise that she is
working at the behest of his father. Watching his mother plead with him
desperately as he walks away is quite affecting. After the death of his mother Spender
finally comes around to Mulder’s way of thinking. His eyes have been well and
truly opened and he firmly believes that The X-Files needs somebody at the helm
who can give it their full attention. Jeffrey’s character development in this
two parter has been extraordinary and his apparent murder at his fathers hands
is my only disappointment. He would have been a welcome to ally to the X-Files.
Ugh: Not only is it a shocking turn of events given that it
brings to an end the past six years of arc storytelling, but the mass execution
of the Syndicate and their families (that have turned up to reunited with their
abducted loved ones) is one of the most horrific moments in the series. The
panic, the flames, the screams…we don’t have to see everything because the
implication is so well achieved. The fact that Cassandra makes her curtain call
in such a shocking moment is fitting, she was a great character and deserved a
memorable exit.
The Good: Nice to see that the Syndicate hasn’t lost their
touch in giving their nefarious activities a ‘reasonable’ excuse, the abduction
of Cassandra Spender from Mulder’s flat being played as a decontamination
procedure from the CDC. Laurie Hooper is probably a name that people are much
more familiar with these days because of her starring role in the
stratospherically popular The Waking Dead but it is worth remembering
that she took part in an equally popular show in the nineties. Her trouble was
that she was given an obscure and vacant character to play, one who followed in
the footsteps of two others (Deep Throat and Mr X) but whose only defining
feature other than the fact that she was equally mysterious was that she was a
woman. However all that is about to change as Marita Covarrubias no longer
holds an esteemed position in the Syndicate’s plans but has instead become one
of their victims, experimented on as things have escalated and they have needed
definitive results. Now she is a tragic character, scarred and slightly
dangerous and ready to do anything to get back at her traitorous paymasters.
This is a far more interesting direction for this character and had she been
pushed this way sooner she might have made far more of an impact. Diana has
been a busy woman, monitoring (or some might say controlling) the MUFON subjects
that have been experimented on at the behest of the Syndicate. As Cassandra is
prepared it looks as though her time is well and truly up and she aims one ‘the
biggest bastard of all’ to her husband for all the years of pain ignominy
he has caused her. Rob Bowman’s direction always comes into its own when he is
directing action, he somehow manages to turn chaos and carnage into an art
form. Watch an delight at the sequence where Mulder and Scully try and stop the
train from delivering Cassandra, he employs every trick up his sleeve (the
camera swoops around the train, he fixes another to the car as speeds alongside
the train) to make the scene as dynamic as possible. There is lovely symmetry
to how the scenes in the hangar play out in the modern day in exactly the same
way they did in the 70s. Except this time the project is brought to a homicidal
end. It feels like the shit has well and truly hit the fan, that the rebel
force has all the cards and there is no way out for the Syndicate anymore.
Pre Titles Sequence: Despite the fact that Mulder is back
making pretentious speeches, we get the chance to witness the first appearance
of the aliens en masse meeting with the Syndicate. Amazing how they manage to
make so many of the syndicate members look thirty years younger with some make
up and hair dye. I have always complimented The X-Files for its cinematic
locations but this one must take the biscuit, an aircraft hangar so large you
house an entire community in it. Even the aliens which so often look rubbery on
this show appear ethereal and unnerving backlit and silhouetted. You can
immediately tell Rob Bowman is back in the directors chair.
Moment to Watch Out For: ‘You gave them your children!
You gave them your wife! You sent them away like they were things!’ We’ve
seen confrontations between Mulder and the Smoking Man countless times, usually
all very good, but this meeting of rivals on the eve of the potential invasion
of the world carries more gravitas than usual. Suddenly all the pretence drops
away and these two men are talking honestly and openly about the secrets that
have been kept for so many years. The Smoking Man has nothing but contempt for
how backwards Mulder’s thinking is with regards to their work and Mulder thinks
he has the moral high ground throughout their conversation, throwing their
dirtier experiments in his face.
Mythology: The Smoking Man admits that Bill Mulder
sacrificed his only daughter because he knew the day when the aliens came to
take over would arrive and he was determined to hold that back. Marita has not
only been infected with the black oil but also injected with the vaccine
against it to see if a human host can withstand the contamination. The results
are not pretty to say the least. William B. Davis has always been cocksure that
his character is the hero of the show and not the villain and whilst the
Smoking Man’s methods are appalling (as exemplified over and over again with an
extreme loss of life) it does transpire that his ultimate goal is to save
humanity from an alien takeover. So technically he is the hero. We
finally get to see the moment when the family members of the Syndicate were
taken away by the alien race to be tested on. They fully expected for them to
be returned after the tests. It was a decision that wasn’t taken lightly but it
seemed like a small price to pay to hold back the invasion of the planet and
buy themselves time to develop a vaccine to the black oil. Mulder’s father
refused to give up one of children to the alien colonists and that was why Samantha
was taken from his home. That was why she was taken from their home that night,
rather than being brought by Bill Mulder to the hangar. Once they had
sacrificed one person each they were to be given the alien foetus (seen in The
Erlenmeyer Flask in season one) and they could work on their cure. How
rewarding to hear all this spelt out so precisely, and to explain away so many
apparently random elements of the conspiracy arc. Why couldn’t Carter have been
this concise throughout? ‘There will be a sequence of events. A state of
emergency will be declared because of a massive outbreak of the alien virus and
the takeover will begin.’
Result: ‘The future is here and all bets are off…’
Spellbindingly good. Somehow Carter and Spotnitz pull off the incredible coup
of completing a six year long storyline without leaving any boxes unticked or
any sense of dissatisfaction. It feels as though Carter was keeping us so
deliberately in the dark for all these years so that the point where he finally
spells everything out in such a rich fashion it achieves a feeling of piquancy
unmatched at any other point in the series. One Son brings the Syndicate’s
plans to a dramatic conclusion, once again given the Smoking Man the
opportunity to tell his tale and watch as their carefully plotted schemes
spiral out of all control and they land up face down in their own blood. Bowman
really manages to whip a real feeling of anticipation, as thought this is
precisely what events have been building to for the past six years. Once again
Mulder and Scully are on the periphery of events as the Spender’s take centre
stage with Jeffrey in particular going on an incredible journey before exiting
stage right. I love the fact that most of the information in this two parter is
merely re-packaged from previous episode but because it is suddenly a coherent
narrative that is reaching some kind of resolution it grips hold of you in a
way that the show never has before. Rob Bowman’s direction matches Kim Manner’s
from the previous episode and everything climaxes on a memorably nasty set
piece that finished off the Syndicate for good. At least the Smoking Man got
away. If I haven’t made it abundantly clear yet, I love this blockbusting
double length story and will wax lyrical about it until the cows come home. I
must have seen it dozens of times and it still gets me just as excited as my
first viewing. The point is…where do we go from here?: 10/10
Agua Mala written by David Amann and directed by Rob Bowman
What’s it about: A giant snotty sea monster made out of
water. No I’m serious…
Trust No-One: How comes Mulder seems to spot every crackpot
story that turns up on the front page of the Enquirer and yet when the founder
of the X-Files gets in touch and informs him of a genuine supernatural occurrence
he is nowhere to be seen? Mulder attempts to gee up Scully as they battle their
way through the most horrendous of conditions by suggesting they will laugh at
all this one and think on it as the day that they took on the worlds natural
elements. It makes you wonder if Amann has ever watched the show before, Mulder
is talking absolute garbage.
Brains’n’Beauty: Mulder has to find an excuse to have
brought Scully along and he admits that she does have a knack for getting to
the bottom of things. I think there are plenty of tales that could have opened
Scully’s eyes to the mysteries of the world but an adventure with a mutant
octopus creature probably isn’t the most subtle among them. Given her fathers
love of the ocean and that he shared that passion with her you would think that
Scully would be a little more open to the possibility of impossible creatures
existing beneath the depths. Dales admits that if he had had somebody as savvy
as Scully by his side he may never have retired from the X-Files.
The Good: Rob Bowman is directing this story so you know
that no matter how lacking the script is that it is going to look good. He’s
the perfect director to shoot this sort of tough assignment, going hell for
leather tossing as much water at the sets and actors as possible to make
conditions look as turbulent as possible. He utilises all of the visual
trickery he has to make this as dynamic as possible, especially shooting all of
the scenes without natural light. To his credit he gives Agua Mala a strong
visual look (I remembered the water logged scenes if nothing else when
re-visiting this story).
The Bad: Much of this episode is Mulder and Scully exploring
what is technically a haunted house – or at least a house besieged by a
creatures from the deep. What this translates to is a lot of wandering around
dark rooms and getting very wet, the sort thing we saw time and time again in
the shows first five years in Vancouver. Chris Carter showed how this sort of
thing can be done so it is hugely entertaining in How the Ghosts Stole
Christmas, buoying up all the horror clichés with plenty of fun interaction and
shock moments. Agua Mala feels like we have taken a step back to a time before
the show found the fun and it proves remarkably lacking in substance. You know you
are getting a little desperate when you start going for false scares just
before a real one – if you are going to try this it has to be really well done
and not just a wet T-shirt stuck in a drain. When the creature is finally
exposed, ignominiously wrapped around its victim sitting on the toilet, it
looks like an almighty lump of slimy snot with oozing tentacles. It isn’t scary
so much as indefinable. I fail to understand the purpose of Arthur Dales’
involvement in this episode beyond the fact that the production staff wanted to
employ Darren McGavin again. It is such a shame that his stroke should have
prevented him from taking part in an episode that is crying out for his
participation (The Unnatural) and yet he should be shoehorned unnecessarily into
a ropey old tale about a snotty sea monster where he sits squarely on the
periphery of the action. The inclusion of some broadly drawn and performed
residents from the apartment block fails to add the intended humour. It feels
like a bunch of caricatures stomping their way through a dodgy b-movie
(especially the over the top pregnant Hispanic lady). I never got a sense that
any of these characters had a life beyond the confines of this story, that they
existed purely to serve the narrative. It appears that Amann is so unsure of
how to wrap his story up he has Mulder guess how the creature gained access to
the apartments. Rather than backing that up with evidence we are supposed to
take his word for it because Mulder is always right. That’s pretty careless writing.
As soon as the pregnant woman is introduced I was just waiting for her to pop –
if she hadn’t by the episode’s conclusion there would have been no logical
reason for her to have a bun in the oven. The final scenes facing up to the
attacking creature lack any tension because it can be stopped by simply turning
off the sprinklers. Ooh, scary. The toast at the end is a little too
self congratulatory for my tastes, the sort of thing that Voyager did on a
weekly basis for no good reason.
Pre Titles Sequence: It is sure dramatic and there is plenty
of water spewing about the place but I’m not sure that I ever really got hold
of what the threat actually was. Is the show so desperate for new ideas
(clearly not, given the form of season six to date) that we have to turn to a
mutant squid?
Moment to Watch Out For: Scully has never delivered a baby
before but she proves rather effective in the role. This shows much promise for
the upcoming twist of her own pregnancy and the fact that she is going to be
out in the sticks and forced to pretty much walk herself through her own birth.
Orchestra: Snow doesn’t seem quite so sure of his tone this
week, veering unconvincingly between comedy and horror with alarming frequency.
When the musician is at sea like this and he is supposed to be leading the mood
of the episode, we’re in trouble. He introduces a memorable sonar-like theme in
the final fifteen minutes of the episode as the creature advances which helped
to distract me a little from the mundanity of events.
Result: Despite some effective moments, it is interesting to
note that the episode that tries the hardest to emulate the style of the shows
first five years (dark, moody, wet) is the least successful in this seasons
otherwise unbroken run of good to great episodes. It almost feels like this is
a deliberate trip into the past to appease those fans who feel that the show
has become too Hollywood of late. The trouble is it is hard to pull off an
effective monster tale if your marine creature is as ineffective as this. Water
is hardly the most chilling of foes when it is trying to strangle you with an
oily tentacle. If it had been filling rooms and drowning people that might have
been a different matter. What you are left with lots of wandering around in the
dark and wet which gets increasingly tiresome the less frightened you are.
Halfway through the episode the narrative is so empty that Amann is forced to
toss in a bunch of unconvincingly drawn characters to stretch out the running
time (what was the deal with the kleptomaniac all about?). Mulder does an
astonishing amount of guesswork and because it is always the case he turns out
to be right, Scully objects and tries to fight his explanations because that is
what Amann sees her role as being, despite the fact that she has come so far
the past five and half seasons. This is pure X-Files by numbers which can be
effective when the scares are present (check out The Host or 2Shy) but when it
is lacking even slightest flicker of novelty it drags interminably. The show
had to drop the ball at some point: 4/10
Monday written by Vince Gilligan and John Shiban and
directed by Kim Manners
What’s it about: Mulder has a leak and visits the bank. And
dies.
Trust No-One: They always say that despite whatever occurs
during a Monday it is always the least appreciated day of the week because it
sits squarely after the weekend and Mulder’s day from hell looks set to break a
new record of mundane, unfortunate occurrences. It is easy to sympathise
because we have all had days like this where nothing goes right. Ingeniously
self referencing the timey wimey madness of Dreamland, Mulder still doesn’t
know where his water bed came from and thinks that it must have been a gift. I
don’t think Mulder has ever looked more cute than when he is trying to tackle a
tiny leak in his water bed with a saucepan.
Brains’n’Beauty: Wouldn’t it just be galling for Mulder and
Scully to have survived so many threats and indignities only to be taken out by
a third rate bank robber packing high explosives? Anderson plays the bank
scenes for real, a far cry from some of the sitcom (in all the best ways)
performances she has given of late.
‘I woke up, I opened my eyes, I was soaking wet…’
‘This never happened before.’
Ugh: Not one drop of blood spilt, and yet still gripping. It
can be done.
The Good: Because of the potential monotony of the
repetitive nature of the scenes in the loop director Kim Manners chose to shoot
each block from a variety of different angles and as such this is one of the
most inventively realised episodes of the shows entire run. Carrie Hamilton and
Darren E. Burrows show how to come onto a show in a guest role and to really
make something of it. In some ways their jobs are made a lot harder insofar as
they have to find new ways to play out exactly the same events but within their
limited roles (neither of them leave the street that the episode is set in and
they talk to relatively few people) they create two memorable characters in Pam
and Bernard, so much so that by the end of Monday you know exactly who they are
and where they have come from. Pam is especially impressive, the only person
who is aware that the loop is recurring and having to live in the nightmare
that her lover is dying on a continuous loop. I always admire actors who are
willing to play pathetic characters and Burrows highlights just how awkward and
unfortunate Bernard is so that his flick of the switch is almost a relief when
he sets the bomb off. Even the way he says his name sounds pitiable. To find an
abandoned old bank and dress the place up as stylishly as this…only The X-Files
commands such deliriously expensive set design. Suranne Spoke deserves a round
of applause for finding so many different ways to say ‘Oh God!’ and fall to the
floor in a hysterical heap. By the end of the episode she is practically a
comic highlight. Pam sits in her car like she is directing the episode,
pre-empting dialogue and action before it takes place. Manners paces each
sequence of the loop differently, cutting each successive one faster so we
gather real momentum towards the climax. There is so much fun you can have with
this kind of episode as soon as the audience is in on the game and recognises
how the loop plays out because you can start playing about with the events
(such as Pam approaching Mulder) and see how they diverge from previous
sequence. Unfortunately it soon becomes clear that Pam is trapped inside what appears
to be a pre-destination, that whatever she does to try and change the outcome
she will always end up causing it. Debris whipping up around Pam as the bank
explodes again, this might be the most affecting shot of the entire episode.
Perhaps every time we experience déjà vu we are in fact trapped inside an loop
of events going around and around. I just hope yours is a good day. Even when
it looks as though Mulder and Scully have triumphed by shooting Bernard in the
chest, he still manages to rip his shirt open and set off the bomb in a cruel
twist. Mulder’s sense of déjà vu and the repeated action of his ‘he’s got a
bomb’ spells out to an attentive viewer how he is going figure his way out
of the loop. Even when he has the chance to change his fate (and is explicitly
told so by Mulder), Bernard still takes what he considers to be the only option
left to him. The tragedy of this man is that he was always fated to murder the
only person who ever gave a damn about him, but there had to be a perfectly
stacked sequence of events take place so all the players involved knew about
his intention to blow up the bank in order for that to happen. In that way,
even the loop itself was fated. It also makes perfect sense of why Pam is the
only person that can see the repetition of events since she should never have
seen beyond them.
The Bad: It is done deliberately so this is not a criticism
of the episode…but the fiscal meeting at the FBI must be the dullest gathering
of individuals ever committed to film. Scully looks like she is going to drop
off at any minute. So dull that going to the bank is the preferable option, and
being consumed by an explosion too in all probability.
Pre Titles Sequence: As well as being dramatically well
staged, Monday’s opening sequence takes the unusual step of taking place after
the central events and then heading back after the titles to explain how we got
there. In other shows that is a technique that is often used but The X-Files
has mostly shied away from it, preferring to open at the beginning of a story
and setting up the latest menace. I love the fact that we can come to the bank
siege late and not have to hold up a cue card of EARLIER THAT DAY because the
repeated actions are built into the nature of the episode. More to the point this
is the only pre-titles sequence where both Mulder and Scully are murdered and
like TNG’s Cause and Effect before it that is a shock to the system that the
director exploits to the max. So many questions to answer? How does Pam know
Skinner? How did the bank robbery get so out of control? Why is Mulder lying in
a pool of his blood (and I love how the camera pulls away from that image
slowly so we can get a good look at his injuries)? Once again the production
values on this show are extraordinary – it looks for all the world as though
they have genuinely used explosives to take out a bank on a thriving Washington
street. Easily one of the best ever X-Files pre-titles sequences.
Moment to Watch Out For: I know it should be something more
profound but Mulder’s comedy pratfalls as he trips over his shoes get better
and better until I was wetting myself.
Fashion Statement: Mulder topless in a water bed might be a
dream come true for some…until it appears he has wet his pyjama bottoms. One of
the many joys of this episode is that you know that we are eventually going to
cut back to a shot of Mulder’s hairy chest in morning sunlight. Swoon.
Orchestra: A great Mark Snow score, and one that underplays
the drama of the bank robbery and helps build up great tension. The screaming
stings as the bomb is revealed sounds like a massive intake of breath (the
audience joins in) before the detonation.
Result: ‘If it wasn’t for you nobody would die…’ One
of the highlights of a very strong season, Monday encapsulates all that has
worked so well ever since the show moved to LA. It is a move away from monster
of the week stories into something much more entertaining and ingenious and at
the same time recycling an old premise but innovating it in unique X-Files
style. So far this year we have enjoyed time travel, body swaps, a ghost story
and now the Groundhog Day (or rather The Twilight Zone because
they did it first) time loop. Kim Manners has worked extremely hard to make
each sequence unique unto itself and writers Gilligan and Shiban manage to play
by the rules and introduce much originality to this well worn concept. Monday
is an episode that manages to be laugh out loud funny, fast paced
entertainment, genuinely shocking and tinged with real tragedy. This is The X-Files
subscribing to the notion of pre-destination, that events are written in a
particular way and if they don’t play out as intended they will be repeated
over and over until we get it right. What this means in dramatic terms is that
the show can kill off Mulder and Scully a handful of times in a shocking
explosion and we can witness them trying to figure a way out of this scenario
without ever knowing the erroneous fate that is awaiting them. I can remember
watching Monday with a group of friends on its first transmission on Sky One
and everybody being blown away by it. In my own personal time loop of quality I
must have seen it a dozen times since and it still excites me. It’s The X-Files
thinking outside the box and pursuing a different kind of episode and long may
the show continue to do so. If these are the lengths that the series has to go
to in order to keep the audience interested I wish we had reached the monotony
of season five a few years back. Top notch television: 10/10
Arcadia written by Daniel Arkin and directed by Michael
Watkins
What’s it about: Mulder & Scully are betrothed…
Trust No-One & Brains’n’Beauty as The Odd Couple:
Brilliant fun, what a great idea it was to have Mulder and Scully posing as a
middle class couple moving into the neighbourhood. It is such an obvious idea
and so ripe for comedy that I am surprised that it has taken somebody this long
to work it into an episode. Mulder is the over enthusiastic, macho city boy
moving to the country and Scully his long suffering wife who is always trying
to rein him in. After so many episodes in season six splitting Mulder and
Scully up and tearing them away from The X-Files it is lovely to get back to a
good old fashioned investigation, and one that throws them in at the deep from
the very beginning. Mulder is loving himself (‘Woman, get back in here and
make me a sandwich!’) and Scully suffers his sarcasm. Rather than going at
their suspects with attitude and pointing a gun, they have to hide their
interrogation behind false smiles and a cheery demeanour. It makes for a very
different kind of episode, and a massively entertaining one. It’s our one
chance to see Mulder and Scully living together as a couple and it proves that
they would be at each others throats just as much as any others. He nearly has
the shock of his life when she departs the bathroom with a face pack on and she
is constantly reminding him about putting the toilet seat down and to stop
making such a mess with the toothpaste. During these domestic moments they
reminded me strongly of Simon and I and just about any other married couple in
existence. Mulder hates the rules and regulations that run these peoples lives
but Scully feels quite comfortable with boundaries, that says a lot about both
of their characters. She’s willing to play ball until he tries to entice her
into bed and then she reclaims her usual name and kicks him out of the bedroom.
Mulder is having real fun trying to bait the neighbours out of hiding,
displaying hideous garden decorations, kicking his mail box askew and putting
up his basketball net – I love this juvenile, playful side of his character
that comes out when he is told what to do. When he doesn’t get anywhere with
that he calls in an enormous digger to churn up the land so he can put in a
reflecting pool, something that he has fastidiously checked the rules to see if
there is a ban about. Which there isn’t.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Every community has its dark
underbelly, don’t you think?’
The Good: The whole idea of these planned communities with a
million rules and regulations are fairly sinister and well worth parodying in a
show like The X-Files. Sometimes you can compensate too much for a sense of
security, and there comes a point where you erase all spontaneity and
unpredictability from your life by regimenting a community in order to keep
them safe. You become as much the Stepford Wives that this episode has a
strong feel of, soulless automatons being told how to live your lives. Forcing
other people to conform to your wishes under the label of ‘just trying to
neighbourly…’ Oppression with a
smile is the most insidious of all. I’m not going to lie though, these houses
are gorgeous and the location chosen is just about the pinnacle of domestic
bliss that I can imagine. Maybe it would be worth selling my soul for after
all. Living myself in a sheltered community of sorts (please don’t think that I
am amongst the geriatrics just yet) I understand how rules can be a little too
fixated on keeping everything just so (I was once asked to remove a charity bag
from the front of the property because it wasn’t ‘aesthetically pleasing’,
naturally I told them where to go) and it amuses me to think that the writer of
this episode suffered the same as Mulder and Scully, moving in so close to the
curfew and being fined a thousand dollars for breaking the rules. There is
something very sinister about a committee of people sitting down over a meal,
all mock politeness, and deciding the fate of the new couple that have recently
moved in. Tom Gallop gives a lovely performance, initially I had him pinned as
the one responsible for the murders but it is soon unearthed that he is hiding
a whole world of pain behind those false smiles, trying to keep as many people
alive as possible by making them conform. The twist that domestic paradise has
been built upon a garbage dump is a delightful turn of events. You make things
look as pretty as possible and try and keep things that way but the effluence
below will squeeze between the cracks and infect that perfection.
The Bad: Mulder thinking up some kind of logical but last
minute explanation for the creature – a Tibetan thought form willed into
existence by Gogolak – is the writing desperately clutching at straws to give
the monster some kind of rationalisation. Given the amount of pleasure this
episode offers, I would have let it slide had its origins been left obscure. I
would have figured it was just a meticulously tidy garbage monster that had
something against garden ornaments. I have no idea why Gogolak would want to murder
people for failing to obey his rules, nobody could be that anal about
aesthetics. And would the creature murder him because he is cuffed to a mailbox
– couldn’t he whisk it away if he was the one that summoned it into existence?
Pre Titles Sequence: Utterly ridiculous in its premise of
putting out a garden feature that has forced a community to call upon a giant
slimy monster to rid them of this wooden abomination and yet still rather
frightening in its execution (the creature itself is horrible and the noise it
makes as it stomps up the stairs would be enough to make anybody crap
themselves). It is another season six episode that offers up an intriguing
teaser, both light and dark and great fun to watch.
Moment to Watch Out For: It just goes to show that it all
comes down to how you shoot the monster. The actual costume is no more
realistic than the oil slick monster that flailed around ineffectually in TNG’s
Skin of Evil but Armus was overlit and overexposed. Michael Watkins only ever
shows part of the creature, often shooting its advance from the point of view
of the victims and utilising dramatic sound effects to make its approach as gut
wrenching as possible. It could have been hideously b movie but instead it
becomes a genuinely frightening creation. Kudos.
Fashion Statement: It has to be said – Mulder and Scully in
civvies posing as a married couple is the cutest thing. Especially Mulder in a
polo shirt with his jumper wrapped around his shoulders. It feels like he has
finally come home.
Result: It’s time to settle down for an evening of domestic
bliss with Mulder and Scully as they move into the picturesque planned
community, the Falls of Arcadia. If you are still watching the X-Files in it’s
sixth year there is a big chance that you are a fan of the Mulder and Scully
dynamic and so when the producers decided to have them pose as a yuppie married
couple with all the gags that come with it you surely cannot fail to be charmed
by such an idea. I’m not sure what has happened to David Duchovny and Gillian
Anderson this year but the pair of them have loosened up beyond recognition and
the result is a season that is very easy to enjoy. A far cry from the previous
year where they were pulled in so many directions because they were
simultaneously filming the TV series and touching up the movie that their
attention was divided and their hearts felt like it wasn’t quite in it. Arcadia
delights in it’s mundane setting and b-movie oil slick monster, The X-Files
take hold of both potentially dodgy ideas and turning out a gloriously
entertaining episode that manages to make you smile and tuck your head under
the covers when the creatures makes an appearance. Mulder behaves like the
neighbour from hell while Scully plays the long suffering wife with some aplomb,
both publicly and privately. It is only when it comes to wrap up Arcadia that
script writer Daniel Arkin falters. He dreamed up such an enjoyable scenario
that he has run with it and is left desperately trying to explain it all in the
final, unconvincing, five minutes. Sill in an episode where Scully calls Mulder
‘poopy bear’ and he tries to lure her beneath the sheets promising a fun
night I can’t be too harsh. Arcadia continues the run of lighter episodes this
season but is very different from any of the others before it: 8/10
Alpha written by Jeffrey Bell and directed by Peter Markle
What’s it about: Elim Garak turned slavering dog man…
Brains’n’Beauty: This feels like a real retro episode with
Scully sighing disdainfully at Mulder’s wild theories (which of course turn out
to be right on the button) and Mulder dishing out a fair amount of sarcasm
because of her scepticism. We’ve been here too many times before for any of
this to feel interesting. Scully seems genuinely miffed that Mulder is
contacting other women online (and after she was so unimpressed by his domestic
habits in the last episode too!) and starts her own investigation into Karen to
make sure she isn’t leading him up the garden path. This might have been a fun
distraction had Culea bothered to inject any life into the scenes but Anderson
seems infected by her slumber and they turn what could have been an
entertainingly bitchy relationship into something snoozesome.
The Good: Proof that it all comes down to the script and
character you are handed, Andrew Robinson is a fantastic actor and turned out
one of the most memorable creations in science fiction with the character of
Elim Garak in DS9. Transferring to The X-Files for an episode, it is an
intriguing experiment to see how he fares with a new character but Detweiler is
such an underwritten part that he does well to salvage it as much as he does. I
dread to think what somebody with half his talent would have made of this. Some of the giddy shots from the dogs POV
were quite snazzy. I’m getting a bit desperate now.
Pre Titles Sequence: It’s time for the impossibly stupid
people to make an appearance in the show again. Of course the first instinct
when dealing with a feral and clearly pissed off animal is to unpadlock the
crate it is trapped in to check if it is still alive. Sometimes people behave
in such a brainless fashion that they are asking for the fate that befalls
them.
Alpha written by Jeffrey Bell and directed by Peter Markle
Trust No-One: Mulder thought he met some kind of kindred
spirit in Karen (who has clearly been checking out his work also) until he
meets her face to face and she turns out to be the least charismatic woman on
the planet. I’m not sure what Bell was trying to say with these scenes beyond
Mulder having to turn to the internet to meet like minded women rather than seeking
them out in social situations. Originally this was to have been a romance
plotline, or at least one where the two of them were attracted to each other
(they would have had to have cast the part differently had that been the case)
but that was lost entirely due to Frank Spotnitz. It leaves the relationship a
cold one and the actors share absolutely zero chemistry.
Ugh: To give Peter Markle some credit he does manage to
generate some tension with the dog attacks, especially when we get a good look
at its slavering, snapping incisors. Feral dogs are scary and I’m sure if was
face to face with one I would be shitting my pants (I have had an incident with
a pissed off dog and I was genuinely frightened) but you soon start to realise
that we are going to be witnessing the same set piece over and over. It’s too
predictable by far. Scully discovers the particularly bloody corpse of a man
who has been mauled to death by the dog.
The Bad: I have a friend whose geekiness I would say manages
to go one step beyond even my own. Recently we were having a discussion about
which title sequence is our favourites for our favourite TV show (like you do)
and he made the spectacularly geeky remark that the font in which the story
title came up is what clinched it for him. I was slack jawed that this would
even be a consideration. Until I started watching Alpha and was thoroughly distracted
by the horrid, yellow, blocky font that they chose to use for the subtitles.
Normally this sort of thing would pass me by but thank to my discussion about
fonts with my friend clearly that is going to become something worth commenting
on. Paul, what have you done to me? How could Bell imagine that the audience is
so stupid that they wouldn’t make the connection that a character named
Detweiler is the wild dog that everybody is chasing? It would appear that
Melinda Culea (who I still remember from The A-Team) got the part because she
was the wife of the director but I would question whether she was suitable for
the part given that she seems spectacularly unenthused by the whole affair.
I’ve discussed people sleepwalking through the part but Culea’s disinterest is
in a league of its own, she looks like she is constantly waiting for the
director/her husband to shout ‘cut!’ so she can grab her pay check and run.
Orchestra: As soon as Mark Snow starts blowing down those
tribal pipes I start to get worried. It brings back unfortunate memories of The
Jersey Devil, Our Town and Teliko. Alas Alpha is poor enough to add to that
list of unfortunates quite comfortably.
Result: ‘Dogs are the best judges of characters I know.’
The trouble with old school episodes like Alpha that would have fit comfortably
in seasons one and two is that the show has moved on in leaps and bounds beyond
this kind of simple monster of the week nonsense. I mean, an evil, man killing
dog? How can you countenance something that mundane with evil in suburbia and a
man who can walk through walls on either side of it? Even horror purists would
be hard pushed to find something compelling to say about Alpha, one which lays
all its cards out on table in the pre-titles sequence and then plays the same
set piece out ad nauseum to a point where a slavering, murderous dog is the
most boring nasty you’ve ever seen. Alpha isn’t helped by the especially
yawnsome subplot about Mulder discovering a kindred spirit online and
discovering that she doesn’t quite live up to his expectations. There was the
potential for this to be a cheap but massively entertaining subplot about
Scully and Mulder’s potential new squeeze feeling each other out (not like that
you mucky devils!) but it is sabotaged by a terrible performance from Melinda
Culea who renders every scene with the character as frigid as the artic wastes.
The truth of the matter is that if The X-Files was a 13 episode season show
then Alpha would be the first story to be culled. This is the sort of dreary
nonsense that is filmed to pad out the season and even Andrew Robinson cannot
raise it above the level of lifeless: 3/10
The Good: If this had just been about the murderous activity
of a man who could walk through walls I might find myself less inclined to talk
about it but the writers understand that an episode cannot rest on it’s premise
(unlike Bell in the previous installment) and introduce a weightier than usual
guest cast to add some depth to the story. Everybody deserves a second chance
after making mistakes in the past, especially when it is falling into the arms
of the wrong man June Gurwitch has managed to wipe the slate clean by starting
a relationship with a nice, clean, respectable man with a great deal of cash.
The only trouble is she has neglected to mention her shady past with Pinker
Rawls which leaves their relationship based on a foundation of lies. You can
see where this is heading, right? Catherine Dent gives an excellent performance
as June, a woman trapped by her past that is about to infect the happy nest she
has made for herself. When she is reunited with Pinker, June is genuinely
terrified of him and that goes some way to passing on to the audience how
dangerous this man is. It is the reaction of Robert that surprised me the most,
rejecting his fiancé outright because of her past rather than accepting that
sometimes you make bad turns in life. His inflexibility proves that he was no
kind of man to build a life with. Pinker is right, there is something fantastic
about putting on a brand new pair of socks. Next time you are doing this
mundane task take a moment to savour the feeling, it is glorious. Maybe I was a
dunce for not realising sooner but when I first watched Trevor I was convinced
(mostly because of the attitude injected into the character by the actor but
also because the script goes out of its way to point out that Trevor is June’s
nephew) that Pinker was after the money rather than his son. In retrospect it
makes perfect sense (and when you question what the title means) and proves to
be one of those X-Files that is built on a solid premise that is adequately
explained rather than a story that fizzles out into obscurity. That alone is a
reason to lavish some praise. Pinker using the agents to gain access to his old
squeeze sees the character using his brain rather than simply acting on
instinct. Actually having to score I WANT WHAT’S MINE into a wall might seem
like a simple effect but it must have been time consuming and the resulting
message is a memorable one (still pointing the audience in the direction of the
twist ending). What raises Pinker from being a conventional nasty is that although
he uses some appalling methods to reach him, once he finally gets to meet his
son he genuinely wants a relationship with him and treats him very gently. He’s
a mass of contradictions, this man, and that makes him fascinating. As he
smashes his way into the phone box Scully is using to protect his son and
Trevor looks at his psychotic father through fearful eyes, you realise with
some sadness that Pinker is also a man who is trapped by his past. He will
never have the relationship with his son that he desires.
Result: ‘ET steal home!’ Sometimes it is a case
of a show jumping the shark when they start to let their actors take hold of
the wheel and write and direct episodes but David Duchovny manages to prove
with The Unnatural that that isn’t always the case and sometimes things can
work out very well indeed. This is probably my favourite episode of an
extremely strong season, the sort of episode that would have been unthinkable
during the shows gestation period (it barely features the two leads) but which
shows how far The X-Files has come since then in terms of mature storytelling
and confident themes. The story of Josh Exley, the alien that fell in love with
humanity through baseball, is beautifully told and the performances by all of
the guest cast are on another level to anything we have ever seen before in
this show, really helping the drama to come alive in unexpected ways. Duchovny
doesn’t just judge the emotion in the script flawlessly but he has an excellent
ear for witty dialogue too which left me having to be quite ruthless in only
selecting my absolute favourite examples. The episode is bookended by two of
the finest Mulder/Scully scenes you are likely to witness, showing that six
years on that the characters were in love with each other more than ever and
the chemistry between the actors had simply sweetened over time. The last time
I saw an actor take up the mantle of writing an directing an episode this
successfully was Avery Brooks in the DS9 episode Far Beyond the Stars.
Bizarrely enough they both share a theme of racism but also have a very similar
tone of warm sentiment and biting injustice. The fact of the matter is that if
you took away a few fleeting glimpses of an alien and the annual appearance of
the bounty hunter and this needn’t be an X-File at all. However I am sure glad
that it is; standing out in a season full of standouts The Unnatural is
funny, enchanting, charming and might just break your heart before the credits
roll. I love it to pieces: 10/10
Trevor written by Jim Guttridge & Ken Hawryliw and
directed by Rob Bowman
What’s it about: I want what’s mine…
Trust No-One: ‘Dear diary, today my heart leapt when
Scully suggested spontaneous human combustion…’ In complete contrast to
Alpha, here is an old school type investigation where Mulder and Scully are at
the forefront of the investigation and scripted with a great deal of vim and
vigour. It makes all the difference and the distinction in the performances of
Duchovny and Anderson is palpable. Mulder’s reaction to Pinker’s incredible
strip of condoms is a scream. Rather wonderfully, Mulder does a double take
when they discover a stomach turning corpses, looking for all the worlds as
though he was hoping that it was just a figment of his twisted imagination for his
cursory examination and that it would vanish upon close inspection.
Brains’n’Beauty: ‘Mulder, shut up!’ They have been
working together for so long now that Scully has starting thinking like Mulder
(whilst not necessarily agreeing with him) and leaps to his fantastic
conclusions for him. Whilst men spontaneously combusting is outrageous, there
are well documented cases and Scully has just enough facts at her fingertips to
rationalize her suggestion.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Shall we arrest David Copperfield?’
Pre Titles Sequence: Most other shows would shy away from
trying to realise a tornado on screen but not The X-Files, that’s the sort of
challenge that this show thrives on. When the script resorts to criminals
talking the talk and winding each other up in the first scene I was sure we
were in for another bore like The List and The Walk. But after Pinker drove a
nail into the hand of the man that is trying to bait him I began to suspect
this would be something a little more interesting than that, and it was a
grisly example of how far this man is prepared to go to stick up for himself.
Putting a man in a wooden box in the middle of a sand tornado is a very special
kind of torture and it is easy to see why a man like Pinker, who doesn’t like
to be disrespected and deals with that by lashing out, might go on a killing
spree to avenge his near-murder. It’s lovely to have a teaser which is humour
free and intriguing, it seems that in season six it either has to make you
laugh or bore the tears off you. The physical effect of the man cut in two by
the waist is superbly realised, and stomach turning.
Moment to Watch Out For: The final set piece is brought to
life with typical Rob Bowman skill; there is a potentially horrific effect of a
pan of boiling water heading for Pinker’s face that slips right through him
thanks to his ability. The ensuing fight is vicious and Scully’s attempts to
save Trevor in a phone box both dramatic and excellently thought through. The
use of a car to murder Pinker is inspired, he slips through the bonnet but is
splattered against the windscreen. Just charming.
Orchestra: In a season that is packed full of my favourite
Mark Snow scores comes this gorgeous example of his work. It doesn’t have the
comic excesses of some of his other memorable soundtrack this year but instead
shows how much he has learnt scoring so many episodes of this show. The
chilling, whiplash theme that plays throughout Trevor makes brilliantly
pre-empts the reveal of a spectacular stunt on Pinker’s part or the reveal of
another grisly corpse.
Result: One of the great things about Chris Carter’s
approach was that he was never afraid of consistently trying out new writers on
the show. Sometimes they would stick around and contribute to a few seasons and
other times (like the writers of Trevor) they would only pen a single episode.
It is a shame that Jim Guttridge & Ken Hawryliw are an example of the
latter because Trevor is very good indeed, and far better than you might have
heard from previous reviewers. There’s a list of things that Trevor gets right;
the script is old school but well explained, witty and with a nice surprise
ending (which the title has hinted at throughout), Duchovny and Anderson are
excited by their peppy dialogue and are back on season six form, Rob Bowman
cracks open the memorable set piece jar and sprinkles several examples about
the episode and Mark Snow is enjoying the chance to score something this
traditional but with a trendy flavour. Don’t get me wrong this is not a story that
is going to win awards but at the point in the season where The X-Files usually
coasts, Trevor is a strong installment that proves that in every area season
six is going to buck the trend of this shows usual pattern. It’s not easy to
underplay a criminal to the extent that John Dhiel does here without it become
a chore to watch but with a script that gives hideous examples of what he is
capable of and his sudden unpredictability, Pinker becomes one of the more
memorable nasties of the season. I really like this, it’s not perfect but it is
trying very hard to be a standout ‘traditional’ episode: 8/10
Milagro written by Chris Carter and directed by Kim Manners
What’s it about: Mulder’s neighbour develops and obsession
with Scully…
Trust No-One: Mulder and Scully simply cannot agree on
anything, can they? If the script declares that Scully is endorsing the Milagro
charm then Mulder has to take the opposing view. Fate has it so that when she
alters her opinion, he does too so they still have something to argue about but
from the opposing view. Mulder seems a little disturbed that somebody is taking
an interest in Scully but it isn’t as forceful or as obvious as she was when
Fowley walked into their lives. Mulder’s concern seems bourne of protecting his
friend, rather than trying to stand in the way of a potential rival.
Brains’n’Beauty: Are we supposed to buy into Padgett’s
commentary as being Scully’s genuine thoughts or just the thoughts that a
writer would put in her head whilst observing her. I’m inclined to believe the
latter since it’s Hawkes voice that we hear in the voiceover and not Anderson’s
and as such it is a fascinating experiment in giving Carter giving himself a
voice, allowing his own thoughts to spill on screen and reflect on Scully’s
character. To be thought of as simply a beautiful woman was bridling, but she
was beautiful. Stunningly prepossessing and yet she yearned to let someone in.
If somebody approached me in church and offered an intimate summary of my
character and body I would probably run a mile but whilst Scully is perturbed,
she is also intrigued by this stalkish stranger. Trust a man who doesn’t fall
for anybody to be taken by an ice queen like Scully and trust Scully who only
falls for the wrong people it seems to be attracted in return. It’s a
relationship that could probably work if given enough time and nurturing, the
twisted ones are always the connections that run the deepest. Despite the
disturbing nature of his approach, Padgett painted a pretty picture of Scully
and it was one that she found rather beguiling. Me thinks that Scully doth
protest too much about Padgett’s innocence, clearly he has wormed his way into
her affections despite her trying to fight those feelings off. I love her
embarrassed reaction to Mulder reading the novel and learning of her night of
wild romance in Padgett’s head. She’s such a prude.
Dreadful Dialogue: ‘But the images came and she let them
play…let them flood in like savoury, or more a sugary confection from her
adolescence when her sense were new and ungoverned by fear and self denial…’ –
Carter indulges in word porn, with awkward results. You shouldn’t try and be
sexy, either you’ve got it or you haven’t (as somebody should have told
Stephanie Meyer a long time ago).
Ugh: Padgett fills his way into his own body and removes his
still beating heart. Well it’s certainly memorable.
The Good: John Hawkes is one of those well known American
actors that you know had to have turned up in The X-Files at some point. His
film and television listing is like the most fulsome shopping list of credits
you have ever seen and there can only be one reason why an actor is in such
high demand, because he’s bloody good. Obviously Carter saw something special
in him and he crafted the character of Phillip Padget specifically for Hawkes
to play, a rare honour for an actor. He delivers in spades, not actually
speaking for the first ten minutes but still making quite an impression with
his simplicity and elegance. By The X-Files standards this is an amazingly cheap
episode, with most of it taking place in Padgett’s apartment which by a stroke
of lucky (given they are neighbours) looks exactly Mulder’s with the furniture
removed. The idea of the responsibility of the writer, thinking about something
and then turning it into a reality, is explored and given a unique X-Files
twist by having Padgett’s novel become a reality. Naturally his manuscript
leaves him as the only suspect, a novel detailing every detail of the grisly
murders. Nobody can predict human behaviour with that amount of accuracy, even
Mulder as a criminal profiler could get those kinds of intimate details right.
As she reads his novel, Scully starts imagining Padgett as the killer and we
see him stalking a victim in a graveyard. Padgett conversing with his own
character, having to take responsibility for his actions, is a fascinating
place to take this episode. Do writers realise they creating real people in the
minds of their audience? Are they liable for those characters behaving in a
perverse or criminal way?
The Bad: Are we seeing Scully’s fantasies as she romps about
with Padgett, or his as he narrates the tale? Or is this the fantasy of Chris
Carter the omnipresent narrator of the story? For a more entertaining yet
paradoxically a more fulsome take on the responsibility of the writer to his
creations, check out the Doctor Who audio drama The Forth Wall by John Dorney.
Here it is barely touched upon but in the Big Finish drama the idea is handled
with gorgeous humour and expertly dramaticised.
Pre Titles Sequence: The first scene represents something
that all writers must go through at some point in their career, staring at a
blank page and waiting for the inspiration to fill it with something profound.
Pacing the room, looking over plot points, giving in to desires to relief the
stress. This opening sequence plays out like a chapter from Russell T Davies’
The Writer’s Tale, right down to the blood and the removal of organs – or at
least that was how torturous he made writing sound at times! It is a bizarre
way in to the episode because it doesn’t tell you anything about the hour ahead
specifically, which is rather a novelty. I love the cue cards on the wall
prompting the writer because that is exactly how The X-Files production staff
used to work when plotting out the stories that would form a season. It’s a
little occasion of life imitating art.
Moment to Watch Out For: When Padgett floors both Mulder and
Scully with the news that it would be impossible for her to fall in love with
him, because her heart already belongs to another. Thank goodness we cut away
from that awkward conversation, but their expressions are priceless.
Fashion Statement: If you were the sort of person for whom
this was a requirement, Gillian Anderson is perhaps not the kind of blonde,
buxom babe that studio execs usually like to front a television series. Indeed
Anderson had to prove herself for that very reason when Carter was determined
to get her for the part in the first series (although how she acted her way out
of those shoulder pads remains a mystery). She is, however, a naturally
beautiful woman and Milagro sets out to voyeuristically exploit that
attractiveness with long, slow shots of Padget admiring her many attributes.
Orchestra: One of the more subdued soundtracks of the
season, appropriately so, but still compelling in its own quiet way. Snow can
tease a piano better than any other musician I know.
Result: ‘Then what’s the end of my story?’ Chris
Carter has a stab at something completely different again and this time with
curious results. That is the nature of being such an sundry writer who is
willing to try new things, sometimes they will suit your style of writing and
other times they wont. I have read passionate write-ups of Milagro on both ends
of the scale and I’m somewhere in the middle, agreeing with parts of the
arguments of those who love it and those who hate it, but edging more towards
the former. Carter has always had a penchant for purple prose and what he has
struck upon is a framing device that allows him to pollute an episode full of
the stuff. Given the intimate nature of the script, Manners tones down his
usually fashionable direction to something a lot more sedate and allows a lot
of the work to do carried out by the actors. The idea of Mulder’s neighbour
becoming obsessed with Scully sounds like one that has come from the mind of a
desperate writer but it works far better than it should because Carter cleverly
uses the opportunity to put his own thoughts and feelings in the mind of Phillip
Padget and we get a greater insight into the creator of this incredible show.
Sometimes it is a shrewd commentary on the responsibility of a writer, and
others times it is toe curlingly juvenile (‘…or had Special Agent Dana
Scully herself become simply aroused?’). I think your appreciation of
Milagro lives or dies on the strength of John Hawkes’ performance. If you are
the sort that prefers big, broad sitcom performances then this might be a
little too subtle but if your taste is for something understated with shades of
grey then Milagro might be right up your street. I thought he was excellent and
the only damaging fault wasn’t one of his making, in the occasionally awkward
dialogue he asked to narrate. His finest work is probably in the first ten
minutes when he is working purely through body language. This episode is a
fascinating experiment with many cracking moments (the ending is gripping) and
exposes some cracks in the Mulder/Scully relationship by introducing an
attractive (if sinister) third wheel. I just think the script itself is in need
of one more draft to weed out some of the self-indulgent dialogue and to
determine a stronger authorial voice – sometimes it is impossible to figure out
whose the authorial voice is. Perhaps that’s the point: 7/10
The Unnatural written and directed by David Duchovny
What’s it about: A man who fell to Earth and fell in love
with baseball…
Trust No-One: ‘Did your mother ever tell you to go out
and play?’ Proof that nobody knows these characters quite like the actors
themselves, Duchovny writes for Mulder and Scully like a sweet old married
couple, attracted to each other despite themselves. Season six has been a great
year for shippers (I hate that term but I have to concede that the group
exists) where the Mulder and Scully interaction has soared to a new high.
They’ve kissed and he has told her that he loves her (Triangle), with another
man in his body he has tried to woo her into bed (Dreamland), the lack of
passion in their relationship has been discussed (The Rain King) and they have
set up house in suburbia (Arcadia). When he leaps at her and takes a bite out
of her ice cream, I have never felt a stronger bond between these two
characters. If there was ever a time for them to sweep aside all the paranormal
bumph and having hot sweaty sex on a desk, this was it. Mulder examines
baseball scores from the past because it reminds him that even though the
universe is an every changing entity, some things stay the same. Arthur Dales
might have told his brother that Mulder was the biggest jackass in the Bureau
since he retired…or he might not (Arthur Dales the Second is quite the
dissembler).
Brains’n’Beauty: Scully wonders why the pair of them aren’t
living their lives in the real world at the weekend instead of being stuck down
in the basement going through dusty old records. Mind you, she can talk.
Instead of chowing down on a delicious ice cream she indulges in some godawful
none fat ricycle version. Sapping all the fun out of ice cream, very
Scully. Watching Mulder give Scully an early birthday present of teaching her
how to lay baseball reduced me to a great ball of gooey goodness. Seriously,
Anderson and Duchovny have never looked as comfortable in each others company
and it is a delight to watch the character enjoying their time together before
it runs out.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘I don’t want to be no famous man. I
just want to be a man.’
‘Mulder it is such a gorgeous day outside. Have you ever
entertained the notion of trying to find life on this planet?’
‘My brother started the X-Files in the Federal Bureau of
Obfuscation before you were born.’
‘Maybe you’d better start paying a little less attention to
the heart of the mystery and a little more attention to the mystery of the
heart.’
‘Speaking metaphorically is for young men like you, Agent
McGyver. I only have time to speak the truth.’
‘This is my true face.’
‘Shut up Mulder, I’m playing baseball.’
The Good: Given that racism is still rife in
certain parts of America – if that upsets you then stop burying your head up
your ass, there are elements of racism that are alive and festering all over
the world – this was quite a brave piece of writing on Duchovny’s part. He
handles the issue with real sensitivity, encouraging the audience to emphasise
with Exley from the start (played as well as he is I think I would have fallen
for him anyway even if the script had been clunky and obvious…but it isn’t it’s
delicate and subtle). It is unfortunate that Darin McGavin was too ill to play
Dales in The Unnatural since it is the one episode where he would have had a
decent guest starring role (and unlike the last attempt to include actually has
a good reason for him being there) but ultimately I prefer M. Emmet Walsh’s
gloriously sardonic style of acting. Duchovny writes Dales’ brother a
deliriously cranky and no-nonsense old man with so much wit at his fingertips
he might be a direct descendent of Noel Coward. The last minute change of
casting left Duchovny desperately trying to re-write his script and he comes up
with a brilliantly lazy explanation (‘Our parents weren’t exactly big in the
imagination department’). Can passion make you shapeshift from one person
to another kind of person? That is a deep philosophical question that requires
much more time than I have to answer but needless to say I would answer a
resounding yes. Have I seen men and women behave in a completely different way
once they have fallen in love (not necessarily with a person, but with hobbies,
pets, etc)? Oh yes. How Arthur Dales the younger is initially mocked by the
Negro community as their way of introducing him to the fold is excellently
handled. Frederic Lane also gives a exceptional performance, effortlessly
agreeable and with a real feeling of warmth developing between Dales and Exley
as the episode continues. How Duchovny frames his passage through time by
mirroring events from the past and the present gives the audience an engaging
visual hook when crossing from one to the other. How lovely it is to see Brian
Thompson given the chance to act rather than stand in the background and loom
menacingly. For fans of the series, Duchovny films his first scene obscurely so
we’re not even aware that it is the Bounty Hunter until the scene is almost
over. Exley deliberately plays badly so that he doesn’t get noticed by the
scouts, not because he is a black man who doesn’t want to face the ignominy of
playing in the white league but because he is an alien that doesn’t want to go
home. As soon as they move on, disgusted at his poor performance, he hits a ball
so powerfully that the score board is destroyed. Great stuff. In the middle of
this generally serious (if sentimental) piece there is a glorious moment of
comedy where Dales spies Exley in his natural form and screams like a big girl,
fainting like a Jessie over and over again. That is probably the best ever make
up for one of the Grey aliens that the show ever attempted as well, weirdly
convincing in baseball gear. Imagine a race of beings that don’t laugh, or
experience the pleasure of things. What an awful existence that would be.
Wonderfully, when things start to get a little too cloying, Exley starts taking
the piss out of the usual platitudes that dramas like this promote. There is
something so sweet though about one last game of baseball, a game that has
given you such joy and allowed you to experience the best of humanity, before
going home. Like the last supper but with mittens.
Pre Titles Sequence: A playful first scene which crests an
ominous looking hill with a star speckled sky over the rise promising
supernatural wonders…only to settle on a night time baseball game. Whether it
is the chemistry between the actors, Snow’s cuddlesome score or simply the
intimate way that Duchovny films it, this opening is imbued with the kind of
warmth that many shows couldn’t even aspire to, let alone accomplish. The
appearance of the Klu Klux Klan to spoil a perfectly innocent game between
black and white breaks your heart.
Everything about this off shoot of racist reactionaries turns my blood
cold, especially how they don’t even have the courage to show their faces and
reveal their identities. Hiding behind a ghost mask and carrying a gun seems
like such a chicken shit way of going about things. To have the white
characters throwing baseballs in their faces to protect their black friends
might be my favourite moment of the year.
Moment to Watch Out For: The final ten minutes of The
Unnatural sees the episode really come into its own with regards to providing
an emotional experience. Exley talking so proudly about hitting a home run,
holding back the tears, to a member of his own race that cannot understand why
he has risked everything for such a childish pursuit…I had to hold my breath to
hold back the tears. It is so understated, it is beautifully handled. The
simple but extremely effective conceit of Exley having human blood rather than
alien poison might not make sense logically, but emotionally it is bang on the
nail. The crane shot that pulls down on the younger Dales as he cradles Exley
in his dying moments and fades to another on the older Dales remembering the
event and weeping was when I finally stopped resisting and went and grabbed
some tissues. Very little television affects me like this, but when it does and
the floodgates open I’m practically inconsolable. It’s only the fact that this
has such a degree of tenderness to it that makes all the difference.
Fashion Statement: Who cares about the colour of his skin,
Jesse L. Martin is a fine looking young man and plays his role of Josh Exley
with such charm that I was bewitched by him throughout. The version of Come
and Go With Me To That Land that the baseball players hum and then sing on
the coach is possibly my favourite piece of music to compliment an episode of a
TV series. Ever since I first saw this episode I was beguiled and can be heard
humming and singing it all the time. It’s just beautiful.
Orchestra: Whimsical, sinister, jocular…it is another
phenomenal Mark Snow score in season six. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it
again, when Snow is given material that excites him he goes all out to provide
a memorable musical experience and given his propensity for excellent
soundtracks in season six he must have been geared up by the quality of the
episodes throughout the entire year. The subtle, ominous piano theme that plays
over the more shattering moments in The Unnatural remains one of my favourite
pieces of Snow’s work.
Three of a Kind written by Vince Gilligan & John Shiban
and directed by Bryan Spicer
What’s it about: Byers is still looking for Suzanne Modeski…
Trust No-One: In a brilliantly funny stab at Duchovny’s
occasionally robotic delivery, Scully receives a phone call from her partner
that is mocked up by the Gunmen and spliced together from various speeches and
she cannot tell that it isn’t him talking to her directly. Hehehe.
Brains’n’Beauty: ‘I just can’t decide who lights my
fire…’ Rather than simply asking her outright, the Three Stooges concoct an
elaborate ruse to entice Scully to Vegas to help them out. She clearly still
has issues with them, despite turning to them for help whenever she needs it.
If you thought that Scully had been cut loose already this season then you
haven’t seen anything yet. Anderson gets to go wildly over the top as the
tanked up Scully who has lost all control of her faculties. You might think the
show has lost the plot completely and that this is a far cry from the studious
and sensible character from the first two season but fear not, Scully is about
to have a personality overhaul in the eighth season when she loses her partner.
Normality will resume. When we get back to our usual boring Scully she suddenly
seems even more boring in retrospect of her giggly behaviour.
The Three Stooges: Byers is often given the lead role
amongst the Lone Gunmen and that initially surprised me because I found Bruce
Harwood the most stiff of the three actors when they were first introduced.
However, thanks to season five’s Unusual Suspects his character was given a
massive boost and it was clear how he could be utilised as the emotional focal
point for this core group of characters. He’s the one that most aspires to be
normal as the pre-titles sequence reveals and he has fallen head over heels in
love with Suzanne Modeski and it would have been a blast if he could have
settled down with her before the series bowed out (instead Byers was another
casualty in the dramatic culling at the tail end of season nine). The boys should perhaps stick to techie
business because espionage clearly isn’t their game, being caught out as
intruders through the most obvious of means.
Timmy serves the Gunmen rather well because he is so
irritating (I would say he is up there with genital lice) that he makes Langly
almost likable in comparison. I have often had an issue with this character
because of the stubborn way he has been written and Dean Haglund’s prickly
performance but it seems as though the writers are making a concerted effort to
soften him up here. Contrasted with Timmy, he’s a pretty nice guy. I especially
liked the moment when he nauseatingly watches Scully perform an autopsy, unable
to look away and yet clearly not having the stomach to endure it.
Frohike is just adorable, isn’t he? I want him in every
episode. The way he chivalrously tries to protect Scully after she has been
drugged is so sweet.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Scully what killed him?’ ‘In my medical
opinion…BEEEEEEEEP SPLAT!’
The Good: I’m sure a show that commands the kind of
resources that The X-Files does could have mocked up Vegas to a reasonable
standard but this is one city in the world that requires actual location
filming to capture the scope and the madness of it all. You’ll find luxurious
pans across expensive looking lobbies, casinos and hotels and some electrifying
imagery filled with lights, tourists and stunning buildings. It is practically
style pornography of the most explicit kind and serves the episode well. Jimmy
the Geek might be the most annoying character to grace a television series and
a thorn in the Gunmen’s side…but he is a rather fun character to have crop up
every now and again. It gives TLG a little core group of characters and
continuity all of their own and the fact that that wont be the case anymore
gives this adventure one of its most effective moments. The Suzanne Modeski
plot gives them a running thread too that makes this less of an exercise in
stalling (which it clearly is) and more of a developing storyline. How weird is
the shot through the bottom of an ice bucket as Byers plunges his head into it?
It is typical of Spicer’s imaginative handling of Three of a Kind. It is always
a delight to see John Billingsley turn up in shows other than Enterprise
(although he was by some margin the best contributor to that arm of the Star
Trek universe) and his appearance as the geek turncoat that hampers the
Gunmen’s plans is a delight. I never suspected for a moment. He even gets to
abuse Scully horribly, which turns her into a gigglesome drunken wreck. An
abject lesson in how to fake an assassination and how to shoot a fake
assassination so the audience is in on the joke but it is convincing enough so
that the attendees of the convention believe it is real. When the camera pulls
away from Byers and reveals his two cohorts and the Vegas setting you have the
money shot for the title sequence of a Lone Gunmen spin off show, right there.
Pre Titles Sequence: Wow, that house is beautiful. Talk
about living the American dream. The camera follows Byers all the way through
this stunningly picturesque property out into the garden where he embraces the
woman of his dreams. As an example of the kind of stylish direction that this
show delivers, you’ll find no finer example in a brief two minute vignette.
Moment to Watch Out For: That awkward moment when Byers
finally reunited with Modeski and it goes about as badly as it could. He’s not
exactly the most charismatic of men anyway so when he declares ‘I’m here to
save you!’ it sounds unconvincing coming from his lips. Plus she has a hot
man waiting for her in a towelling robe. She couldn’t less interested in our
favourite little geek if she tried.
Result: ‘Why would the government want to turn Scully
into a bimbo?’ Not to disrespect the work of the three actors who play The
Lone Gunmen but this is clearly a stopgap episode to hold back the end of the
season. Saying that, it is a hugely entertaining stopgap episode that flaunts
the glitz and glamour of Vegas at the audience and allows the show to let it’s
hair down (once again in the loosest season of this show) and indulge in some
purely pleasurable entertainment. It would appear that every time the
production team need to give Duchovny or Anderson some time off they call in
The Lone Gunmen (last time it was because both actors were filming the movie,
this time it is Duchovny’s writing/directing stint in the previous episode) but
that is no bad thing since they have been disappointingly absent of late. You
can understand why the producers of this show thought a Lone Gunmen spin off
was a good idea; they are fun characters and their adventures illicit nothing
but affection. Based on the frothy fun that Three of a Kind provides, I reckon
the series was green lit with this as its pitch. There is the barest hint of
sentiment to be found but ultimately this is all about getting your geek on and
having an adventure in the gambling capital of the world. Hell, it’s worth
watching Three of a Kind just to see Gillian Anderson’s gloriously wild and
drunk Scully. As flawless as their work is, it is nice to see a director other
than Kim Manners and Rob Bowman take the helm for a change and Bryan Spicer is
completely in tune with the peppy tone this episode is trying attain. None of
this is essential but it’s fairly addictive fluff and a colossal step up from
any of the filler episodes from last season. And the Morris Fletcher cameo is a
peach (especially the way Scully, who rejected his advances in Dreamland,
seductively takes a cigarette in her mouth!): 8/10
Field Trip written by John Shiban & Vince Gilligan and
directed by Kim Manners
What’s it about: Mulder has evidence that alien life exists,
and then dies. Or is it all an illusion?
Trust No-One: ‘In six years how often have I been wrong?’
Wow, we haven’t enjoyed an establishing scene with Mulder and Scully at a
projector for…I couldn’t tell you. A long time. That’s how much season
six has thrown caution to the wind and tried something new each week. They have
been getting on so well of late I had forgotten how these sorts of scenes
usually play out. Mulder trying explain to Scully why he wants to investigate
an obscure mystery and Scully shitting all over it with her logic and rational
explanations (‘Sounds like crap when you say it’). The exposition scene
in Field Trip plays out exactly what was being parodied in Gilligan’s Bad Blood
but with the parody-o-meter turned right down to a more reasonable level. They
have reached the stage now where this dance has become routine and they feel
comfortable enough to ask each other some pretty personal questions. So Scully
asks Mulder why he always has to go for the fantastical explanation when there
are perfectly sensible ones to be going along with…and Mulder’s excellent
counter question is to ask Scully in all the time they have worked together how
often he has been wrong (or more succinctly if you read between the lines he is
asking how often she has been right). Ouch. He believes that he has earned the
benefit of the doubt and it is hard to disagree with that assessment. Possibly
the most romantic moment for Mulder and Scully to date comes when they are
covered in mud and close to death and they reach out to hold each others hands.
Brains’n’Beauty: What a moment when Scully realises that she
has spent the last six years fighting against the possibility of alien life for
nothing. Anderson sells it exquisitely and it genuinely feels as though
we are going to head in a new direction with the character, one where she is
more open to extreme possibilities. But this is all inside Mulder’s head. In
Scully’s delusion, Mulder has been killed and she has to deal with the
ramifications of going on with her life without him. The twisted nature of this
episode leaves Scully questioning her role in The X-Files, whether she has
actually done any good at all or if she has simply been dogging Mulder’s
footsteps and hampering his success rate. I wouldn’t agree with any of that but
I might suggest that she does give him the benefit of the doubt more in the
future, she very rarely turns out to be right when she plucks her
hyper-rational theories out of thin air. The only episode where Scully gets to
figure what is going on inside a shared delusion whilst being eaten by a
homicidal fungus. That has to be worth an hour of anybody’s time.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘I abducted him’ – best line since ‘That
cow had my name on it!’
‘It’s a rare day when the two of you sign off on the same
report’ – we should have known it wasn’t real! Mulder and Scully agreeing on
the outcome of an investigation?
‘I’m not exactly clear on how we escaped?’ – Mulder takes on
the role of a reviewer, finding fault with how the episode has concluded.
Ugh: There is plenty to squirm about in Field Trip and it
mostly concerns nasty yellow pus-like goo. Imagine jumping in the shower and
finding the thick putrescence sliming down the cubicle. Or having a vision of
yourself being consumed by the stuff, screaming as it fills your throat and
nostrils. Watching the divinely beautiful Gillian Anderson turn into sickly
yellow goo is enough to turn anyone’s stomach. I love the idea of an insidious
fungus that throws out spores to overwhelm animal life and then slowly but sneakily
drags them beneath the ground and eats them alive. As Scully mentions there is
real carnivorous plant life out there and some areas of the world are home to
the largest organism on record which just happens to be huge areas of fungus. And we know the effects of a certain variety
of mushroom when consumed. The basics behind this man eating mushroom are
terrifyingly plausible. The sick realisation of Mulder and Scully that they are
being digested and fed hallucinations to keep them complacent is utterly
chilling.
The Good: Isn’t it lovely to have a show where everything
isn’t spelt out for you but subtle clues are scattered about so when the
answers come you aren’t left feeling cheated? Mulder rolling up in his car is
greeted by a subtle gale of mushroom spores, something that is barely
noticeable because it seems so mundane but that is absolutely vital in terms of
the plot. Kim Manners could make anything look moody at this stage of the game
and when he is given something as atmospheric as dark, subterranean caves to
shoot he is in his element. He lets the light ripple off the actors and
suggests that there is something menacing that is about to turn up at any
minute. The first fifteen minutes of Field Trip play out like a bog standard
X-File and there is sudden shift after Mulder and Scully have been plagued by
the spores (although we don’t know this for ages) where their lives take a
detour into madness. It is because Shiban and Gilligan play their hand so
gently, not throwing them off the deep end and changing their lives
immeasurably but slowly revealing things that will change the nature of their
work forever. I was completely fooled when I first watched it, convinced that
they were going to be able to go public with their alien captor. The cut from a
probing by an alien ship to Scully shining her torch down a hole is expertly
handled, for a second I genuinely thought that was what Mulder and Wallace were
experiencing. Manners segues beautifully between scenes, the light filling the
cave and then tearing through the number on Mulder’s door to suggest a change
of location. Suddenly the episode is fronting a shared delusion between Mulder
and Scully, conversing with a pair of victims that the latter had ID’d earlier
that day. The writers cleverly take the idea of changing the lives of these
characters to a point and then has Mulder question the details of what has been
playing out, even when this is precisely what the audience has wanted for so
many years. Suddenly there is real doubt of the whole situation, suddenly we
can trust nothing. Brilliantly, in Scully’s hallucination the coroner starts
talking in exactly the same medical gobbledegook as Scully was at the beginning
of the episode, the fungus trying to placate her into believing that she was right
and give Mulder’s death a rational explanation she can buy into. The wake
scenes have an unreal air about them and not only because these moments of deep
sentiment often do but because both Scully and the audience are now onto the
fact that things have gone too far and nothing is quite adding up. We walk with
Scully around the sorrowful mourners looking for clues to try and figure this
thing out. Anderson gets brilliantly hysterical when surrounded by robotic
versions of herself (spewing out the same nonsense about ‘ritualistic
sacrifice’) in the guise of her friends. Mulder always did have a terrible
sense of timing but turning up at his own wake is a new record. It is always
the case with these dream within dream episodes that whatever shows is trying to
pull it off always adds a last minute twist where everything appears to be
normal but turns out to be one last delusion. Field Trip gets away with it
because it leaves it to the very last minute – Mulder and Scully tearing free
of the ground is almost at the 40 minute mark which is about standard for most
X-File episodes. And their cheek at shoving in one last surprise means we get
the glorious moment where Mulder shoots Skinner and the yellow goo vomits from
his wounds. Great stuff. Poor Duchovny and Anderson having to tear themselves
out of that mud, though.
The Bad: Jim Beaver of Supernatural fame (and if you
want to see him play a really nasty role check out his unforgettable turn as
Hannah McKay’s father in a one-episode stint in Dexter) is far too good
an actor to be wasted in a bit part as a coroner. However, it is indicative of
the sort of quality of casting this show commands now when the minor characters
can be handed out to such strong performers.
Pre Titles Sequence: I love how this gives you enough
information about what is going for you to be able to figure it out if you are
clever enough but doesn’t actually show the act of the fungus consuming them.
There’s a shot of Angela beneath the ground that suggests all is not as it
seems and then Manners expertly marries up two shots, one of the couple
cuddling in bed and another of them as desiccated husks above ground (spat out
by the fungus now it has had the best of them) in the same position. It’s
intriguing in its ambiguity but by the end of the episode it all makes perfect
sense.
Moment to Watch Out For: It was hard to choose just one
moment in an episode where all bets are off but for me it was the astonishing
sequence where Mulder reveals that he has definitive proof that aliens exist and
shows her a grey that is being kept in his flat. Gillian Anderson’s reaction,
Scully’s life has literally been turned upside down by this revelation, took my
breath away.
Fashion Statement: David Denman, cutest guy of the season,
dies within the first five minutes. Fortunately this is one of those dream with
dream episodes and he’s back before you know it. Check him out in the cave
scenes, he’s a dead ringer for Ben Browder.
Orchestra: Another stonkingly good score from Mark Snow,
matching the quality of soundtracks such as Triangle, Monday and The Unnatural.
He really was on fire this year, wasn’t he? What a shame that they didn’t bring
out soundtracks of his music on a yearly basis because this season would have
been a superior release. He even manages to make the most perfunctory of scenes
(like Mulder chasing Wallace down the rabbit hole) come alive in unexpected
ways. He’s a composer that is always thinking about the scenes he is trying to
add a layer of depth too (at least he does when he is energised by a script) –
check out the whistling, harmonious version of the X-Files theme tune that he
utilises during the scene where Mulder states that the aliens communicate
telepathically. It is like we are tuning in to their melodic way of
corresponding.
Result: ‘Mulder, this is not reality…’ Stunning, this
is another highly original, surprising, emotional and thoroughly enjoyable
season six episode. Another classic. I want to say a little something
about John Shiban who I have been complimentary in the past about but always
with a caveat. His initial batch of episodes were the uncelebrated Teso Dos
Bichos and El Mundo Gira which under normal terms would be enough evidence to
strike somebody from the writers pool for good. However he followed that with a
number of co-writing credits on some very good pieces – Leonard Betts, Momento
Mori, A Christmas Carol, Travelers, Dreamland, Monday and Three of a Kind. It
is clear that Shiban is a far superior writer when he is conspiring with
somebody else, guiding his skill and helping to turn a good piece of writing
into a great one. Field Trip is his fourth collaboration with Vince Gilligan in
season six and it is their finest work to date, a stunning piece of Russian
Doll storytelling which has been written with care and brought to life with
precision by stalwart director Kim Manners. So many genre shows use the
opportunity in these dreams within dreams episode to have their regular do
crazy shit and to make it glaringly obvious that what is playing isn’t real because
it is so far from the show we know and recognise. That isn’t The X-Files’ style
at all, always keeping one foot in reality and in doing so it creates a
convincing enough delusion to trick the viewer into thinking that perhaps, for
one, nothing will ever be the same again. It’s not just the clever twists and
turns that make Field Trip such a delight; it is also the emotional wringer
that it puts Mulder and Scully through, especially the latter and it encourages
Gillian Anderson’s most impressive performance of the season. Even the nature
of the threat is unusual and original. It is an episode that keeps giving right
up until the final frame and another example that six years on The X-Files is
producing some of its finest ever work: 10/10
Biogenesis written by Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz and
directed by Rob Bowman
What’s it about: With Mulder driven to madness by his new
quest, Scully has to investigate a claim that she doesn’t even believe in…
Trust No-One: Mulder is going nuts, again? Didn’t anybody
check his water supply because this has an awfully familiar ring (hoho) to it.
Mulder is starting to be able to hear peoples thoughts…is this the first
example of an FBI Agent becoming a Tomorrow Person? Wouldn’t it have been fun
to have run with this extra perception of Mulder’s for his last full season of
the show? Or is that a little too outrageous for The X-Files?
Brains’n’Beauty: Because Mulder is having a funny moment we
don’t quite get to hear all of what her argument was but one thing is for sure,
Scully doesn’t understand his endless pursuit for the truth any more. Has she
forgotten about his sister? Scully thinks that he has won because he was part
of the plot that helped to bring down the Syndicate but he has never, not for
one moment forgotten what his core mission brief is (neither has Carter, thank
goodness, and he will wrap that up for good next year before Duchovny parts for
pastures new). Scully looks a little awkward when Sandos is described as being
a pseudo scientist, a man who writes scientific papers about extraordinary
events. I think she’s worries that that is how she will be remembered. I don’t
think she would ever be beyond embarrassment, though. Scully’s scepticism is
put to good use in this episode because she is so staunchly against what Mulder
is suggesting (that aliens had a hand in the development of humanity) so that
when even she is offered enough proof I
was completely on side because of it. It’s well argued and well proven. She’s more
than a bit put out when Diana Fowley answers the phone and Mulder informs her
that he is in bed.
Sinister AD: It feels like ages since Skinner was placed
under Krychek’s influence (in reality only half a season ago) and it is nice to
finally see the writers deliver on that promise. It proves that Mulder’s sense
were right and they were being spied upon.
Ugh: The last thing you want to discover in a bin is a
disembodied head smeared with blood as Mulder and Scully do here.
The Good: Considering they had 45 minutes a day to shoot the
beach scenes due to inclement weather, the location work on Biogenesis is
extraordinarily good. Stone tablets unearthed in unusual places that hold
secrets that will change the nature of humanity for good – you can almost sense
Dan Brown scribbling down notes in the background. It feels in the first ten
minutes that you are watching a pilot for new series that explores the origins
of humanity and doesn’t feature Mulder and Scully. Whilst I don’t think Michael
Chinyamurindi has the charisma to spearhead a television show, it is quite
intriguing for an episode to kick off in such an unusual fashion. A man who has
spent a career exposing science and religious fraud he should team up with Scully and they could become evangelist
hoax assassins (she does declare Barnes’ work as ‘quite scholarly,
actually.’). If a rock from Mars
can be found in the Antarctic because it was from outer space, then why can’t a
Navaho carving be delivered to Africa by the same means. Oh wait…that means a
tablet that reveals the secrets of humanity has journeyed from another world
and that opens up the sort of can of worms that Carter revels in. Interesting
that The X-Files, a show that has great fun playing about with myths and
legends, chooses to make the passages of the bible a genuinely sacred text.
Extracts from Genesis are carved on the artefact and that has travelled through
space to reach us. Who does that make God?
Albert Hosteen, the dullest recurring character in a television show, is
finally laid to rest. Hallelujah. In an episode that has been this gradual and
able, it feels fitting that the cliffhanger should avoid being a moment of
peril but instead a moment of stunning reflection as Scully discovers a
spacecraft beneath the ocean and (once again) the show feels like it is about
to turn a corner. Who is willing to bet that the bloody thing will whisked away
from beneath her feet before she can have it analysed? Regardless of how this
is concluded, the image of Scully spying the alien craft beneath the water as
the ocean washes in is a memorable way to close the season (Snow’s score is
very good here too).
The Bad: Who couldn’t have figured that as soon as Mulder
needed to be as quiet as a mouse that his new sense would give him a trumpet
blast in the ear? The sequence where thoughts assault him from every angle
feels like direct steal from the Buffy episode, Earshot. Fowley is a bit
of a one note character at this stage, turning up whenever the shows needs to
drive a wedge between Mulder and Scully or to add an element of suspicion to
events. Who the hell is this woman…and more to the point will we ever find out?
With the perpetual dance of distrust with Skinner as well (would he really
blurt out a plot point that he couldn’t possibly know anything about like
that?) the dynamics in these mythology episodes are starting to feel a little
stale. Hurry along, Doggett! Gillian Anderson sounds uncomfortable reading out
the Carter/Spotnitz purple prose (listen to how she repeats ‘matter and gas’).
‘Can he re-ignite the spark even as it grows cold and weak?’ Any actress
would have trouble with lines like that.
Pre Titles Sequence: A beautifully packaged montage of clips
that show the depth and range of the journey of mankind from a single celled
organism to a fully advanced species. The trouble is it comes with a
Carter/Spotnitz penned voiceover, which threatens to overwhelm the viewer and
turn a simple but awe inspiring piece of visual narration into something overly
poetic. Carter and Spotnitz aren’t poets, they are dynamic television
writers. Try watching this with the sound down and let the assault of beautiful
images wash over you, it is much more effective that way. And had that been the
case it would have shown the same kind of faith in the audience to figure what
is being charted as the production team did in Field Trip. Even the Movie gets
a look in.
Moment to Watch Out For: Mulder’s mad ravings in a padded
cell take his insanity further than they ever dared in Anasazi. Duchovny is
weirdly compelling hollering at nothing and you have to ask yourself how the
character can ever be brought back to normality after so dramatically plunging
over the edge like this.
Orchestra: Was Snow busy this week? Why the blatant thievery
from the Movie’s soundtrack (which actually wasn’t one of his finest anyway)?
Result: The big question was after the brilliant arc wrap up
in Two Fathers/One Son (or some might say cutting the head of the snake and
letting it die before it bloats out of all proportions) the big question
was…where do we go from here with the mythology episodes? What could be bigger
than an international government conspiracy working with aliens? A mass
extinction, apparently. The X-Files finds religion and mysticism and slips them
into it’s new myth arc and for the time being it does offer an extra layer of
interest and depth to the show. To be unearthing secrets that have laid dormant
since the beginning of time is actually rather exciting, and to have that story
told in such an uncomplicated and fluid way all to the writers credit. Clearly
they learnt something from the previous, bloated arc. The secrets of the origin
of human life are up for grabs. Whilst the backbone of the story is an
intriguing one, what Biogenesis lacks is a solid emotional core so we can feel
something about the revelations that are on the horizon. It has clinical nature
at times, like we are watching a documentary about these events rather than a
drama and because of this studious nature it might have worked better as a mid
season episode – television convention demands that both opening and closing
episodes are a little more energetic than this. Sedate and thoughtful, it poses
some great questions and even suggests some life changing answers. I am
certainly fascinated to see how the show will wrap up a story with this much
potential. Biogenesis isn’t the best X-File finale (that would be in two
seasons time) but it is entire leagues away from its worst (that is still
season three’s unfortunate conclusion) and whilst it is a shame that the shows
most impressive year to date couldn’t have ended in a blockbusting fashion, at
least it opted for an interesting one instead. Flawed, but offers promise for
the future: 7/10
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