The look on his face when he quietly and
happily excepts the role of dogsbody in the subway system makes me want to give
him a hug. He is still trying so hard to prove himself to Scully that he would
happily walk into danger for her. He stays down in those tunnels much longer
than I would have under similar circumstances and describes Scully as
He describes being sent down instead of Scully the right call,
despite his companions attempts to turn him against her he remains loyal. He
refuses to leave until they have found the answers and their mystery guest…he
recognises that this is about saving peoples lives at all costs. We’ve already
seen what the Medusa creature can do to a man so the moment Doggett’s face is
lit up with bioluminescence is worth a dramatic cut to an advert break.
Although it cannot be said to be the first of it’s
kind (Doctor Who’s The Web of Fear shows how the BBC concocted a similarly
impressive set with extremely limited resources), the subway set that the
designers built for this episode is impressively huge and detailed. Aside from
the lack of graffiti and litter, I was perfectly convinced that this was filmed
in a genuine subway station and along the claustrophobic and dank tunnels that
connect them. I am so used to seeing Ken Jenkins as the slimy and Hitleresque
Dr Kelso on Scrubs that it took me a few watches of Medusa to adjust to seeing
him in a straight role. It’s a memorable performance but ultimately he is
playing one of those character that is there to throw a spanner in the works
and to complicate the narrative, which he does with great aplomb. You’ve also
got DS9’s Penny Johnson (I say DS9 but she is one of America’s most
recognisable television actresses, that just happens to be the show that I have
seen her in the most besides the first two seasons of 24 and Castle) as part of
the team heading down into the tunnels to investigate the spate of murders. Her
part is as underwritten as Jenkins’ but the thrill is in seeing an actress you
admire in another role in another show that you love. She does everything that
is required of her and more and brightens up an already perky episode. A round
of applause for the transit control centre set as well, another beautifully
designed and constructed piece of work from a set team at the top of their
game. Between them, they have made this action adventure feel like it is taking
place in a real environment underground. The use of POV cameras in the tunnels
was a smart idea because it gives the episodes a dramatic visual aspect during
the tenser moments of the episode. Spotnitz hands out early clues as to the
nature of the threat this week when the ventilation system is mentioned – if
the subway officials knew it was the nature of the organism to react to sweat
then naturally they want their investigative team to perspire as little as
possible. There’s also a close up on a puddle glowing menacing less than ten
minutes into the episode. Having Karras watching over Scully’s shoulder and
reminding her of the deadline before the trains start running again gives the
episode an added layer of tension, this is a race against time to save peoples
lives. The mystery deepens when Doggett comes across a number of bodies wrapped
in plastic sheeting and a diminutive person ducking in and out of the subway
system. It would appear that the officials will go to any lengths to cover up
the deaths and keep the trains running on time and there is a great deal of authenticity
in that. A possible biological weapon that has leaked into the subway system?
That’s a terrifying notion putting thousands of people at risk and making them
all potential carriers to spread to the world upstairs. By the end of the
episode we have been saturated in so much darkness underground that Medusa
turns out to be the ultimate example of an X-File cliché, it is practically
flashlight porn. The Medusa creature itself is entirely plausible but not
exactly riveting answer to what has been happening so you’ll either swing one
way or the other in your reaction depending on what you are after in this show.
A sea creature that is reacting with sweat and killing people, perhaps it is
from the depths of the oceans that have been unexplored which would makes its
previously unrecorded existence a realistic one. The pollution of the subway
network by a an infection of glowing water reminds me nostalgically of the
story The Green Death which sported a similarly luminescent waterfall
of pollution. Except that tale had Giant Maggots too.
I’ve said it before and I’m sure I’ll
say it again but I love stories that are set on, in or around trains. I always
think it is because of the little boy in me that is screaming to come out but
actually over time I have come to understand it is just because I love trains.
So this spooky sequence on board a deserted subway train that heads off into
the distance and something horrific occurs out of sight is right up my street.
The technical achievements are impressive (both the subway set that was purpose
built for Medusa and Mark Snow’s bold and dramatic music) and the mystery is
kept well built with a nasty eaten away far left behind for Doggett to try and
unearth the reason behind. Like the episode at large, there is nothing
especially clever going on here but it is stylish and engaging for that.
Per Manum written by Frank Spotnitz & Chris Carter and
directed by Kim Manners
What’s it about: Scully’s pregnancy is proceeding apace and
Doggett is still in the dark…
Brains’n’Beauty: It is fascinating to watch Duffy tell his
story to both Scully and Doggett because they are both coming at it from such
different angles. Scully has lived through a lot of what he is talking about
(cancer, tests) and would go on to fear what Duffy openly admits (that his baby
was an alien) whereas Doggett wasn’t around for the first seven seasons of the
show and sits there with one eye arched, respectful but not believing a word.
And why would you? Anybody would have the same reaction if they hadn’t
experienced all this science fiction themselves. When Doggett reminds her that
Duffy is reeling off her story, she turns on him in an accusatory fashion as
though he has been prying into her personal affairs. And there was me thinking
that some trust had built between them. These moments of tension between
Anderson and Patrick are so good that I’m quite sad that we are about to reach
a stage where they trust each other implicitly. There was an unseen storyline
during season seven (unseen until now that is…) where Scully discusses her
fears about not being able to give birth and not giving up on the hope that one
day she will have a child. Talk of alien babies, the shock of the disfigured
infants in jars; Scully is starting to panic that something might be wrong with
her own child. It is her damn evasiveness that is keeping a wedge between her
and Doggett and I was screaming for her to tell him the truth about her
pregnancy when she informed him she was taking a leave of absence. It is
getting beyond a joke now.
Closed Mind: Looking like a wounded puppy for possibly
pushing his partner too far, Doggett soon regrets mentioning that he has read
her file and taken on board what has happened to her over the past seven years.
Scully is behaving suspiciously and yet acting accusatory when Doggett starts
asking questions about ultrasounds and her Doctor. If only she would tell him
the truth they could cut through all this mistrust and pretence.
Trust No-1: It almost seems unfair on Doggett that the
writers should bring back Mulder for Per Manum and make him sweeter and more
gentle than he has ever been before. It is enough to make all those people who
have missed him scream to the heavens in thanks and all those who have adjusted
and enjoyed the new dynamic question whether it is an acceptable substitute.
Actually the writers are playing a far more interesting game than that. Per
Manum is probably the only episode in season eight which does promote the
optimistic return of Mulder to the show and his scenes are entirely told in
flashback during season seven. It is a lovely peak at the softness of the
interplay between Mulder and Scully at its height before Mulder is returned to
the show permanently in the present day only to find that it doesn’t have a
place for him anymore. I’m surprised Scully was so understanding about Mulder
keeping the information about her removed and defective ova given that she has
always had ideas of motherhood. Doggett reads a file and she goes nuts, Mulder
explains that he has known all along why she cannot give birth and she barely
reacts. I guess that is the nature of the two relationships.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘My wife gave birth to an alien!’ cries
Duffy like the front cover of The Enquirer. Why is this in this section and not
the one below? Because it is precisely the sort of hullabaloo that John Doggett
fears hearing when he comes into work each morning and gives Scully very little
room to manoeuvre in suggesting there might be some veracity in it.
‘…and go through the donor procedure’ ‘At that part I’m a
pro.’
‘So I’m The X-Files now? Just me?’ says Agent Doggett. I
laughed for about a minute. Also ‘I’m in the dark pretty much most of my time
on the X-Files, Joe’ felt like it was meant solely for me.
‘Never give up on a miracle.’
Ugh: Carter and Spotnitz have caught something genuinely
sinister and unnerving here because there is something pure and natural about
bringing life into the world and so to twist that into something horrific gives
them a simple springboard in which to write a powerful drama. There’s a great
shock ten minutes into this episode where Scully rushes to hide and finds her
way into a storage room which contains grotesque parodies of babies pickled in
jars, hundreds of them. All deformed and misshapen. It’s quite a sick image.
The thought of dissecting any baby to say what makes it tick, even an alien
one, is discomforting and I’m pleased we only get to see it in the reflection
in the surgeons goggles. Both alien births take place with her person viewing
under anaesthetic so it can be a little fuzzy about the details. Perhaps
showing the grisly details would be a step too far for this show…and maybe a
tad too b movie.
The Good: Thanks in no small part to Kim Manners excellent
handling of the transitions so that they are both surprising and perfectly comprehensible,
the hopping back and forth between flashbacks and the present day makes for an
unusual and effective narrative device in Per Manum. Check out the superb
camerawork during the sequence where Doggett meets Scully and Skinner at
roadside diner at night. It glides along the ground and straight through the
window. The sort of direction that is overlooked but stunningly achieved.
Interesting to see Doggett get his own younger, cuter version of Deep Throat
within the government. Knowle Rohrer would go on to appear in a wealth of
episodes in the last season and a half and Adam Baldwin has the conspiratorial
glances down pat. He’s also pretty easy on the eye too. Scully escorting a
pregnant woman to safety is a dry run for what she will be going through in
Existence at the end of the season. It’s such a brilliant dramatic device that
Carter and Spotnitz used it twice, although the second time it is even more
dynamic.
Pre Titles Sequence: One of the most unnerving teasers
because it features a helpless pregnant woman at the mercy of Doctor’s who
clearly have something more to hide than potential malpractice. As soon as her
husband is out of the delivery room they lock the door, drug her to the
eyeballs and drag something decidedly unearthly from her womb. Close on a
bloody and screaming alien child. Freaky as hell.
Moment to Watch Out For: Sometimes this show really manages
to surprise me. When it should be taken seriously it can come across as the
most cringeworthy soap opera, in part due to Carter’s dreadful handling of
personal dialogue. And then there are moments such as the one where Mulder has
to give Scully his answer to her request for him to be a sperm donor which on
paper is doomed to melodramatic failiure. And yet it works. It really,
really
works. Anderson and Duchovny bring down their performances to such a delicate
level, Kim Manners gives them total exposure and the dialogue manages to be
sweet and funny. It’s one of the most touching moments in the shows entire run.
And I would have sworn that this sort of thing would have been hideously
overdone on The X-Files. It’s like I said, they have re-discovered something in
season eight that had been forgotten for at least three years…suddenly the show
is about the people in it again and they are being written for better than
ever. The way this scene blends into another with Scully alone, afraid and
without Mulder to comfort her is profoundly moving. Equally strong is the final
scene between Doggett and Scully where the truth about her baby is blown wide
open. It’s is so gently played by Patrick and Anderson that it gave me
goosebumps. This really has been a relationship to watch.
Fashion Statement: I wondered why Scully’s hair was wilder
and less disciplined this week (it is a look that quite suits her), it is
because her hair is one of the pointers to which section of the story we are
watching, the flashback or the present day.
Result: An excellent character drama which brings all
the elements that have made this year such a joy back into sharp focus after a
spate of standalone episodes. Scully’s fractious relationship with Doggett, her
dexterously handled pregnancy, Mulder’s disappearance that has somehow made him
more interesting than when he was around full time, Skinner’s involvement in
the personal lives of his Agents…Per Manum brings it all into a cohesive whole
for the audience and pushes the story onwards for all of these characters so we
are in the right position for Mulder’s return in the next episode. It’s a joy
to see David Duchovny back in the show but more than that it is a joy to see
him
acting in the role again rather than sleepwalking through the part
like he did for much of the last series. With Robert Patrick taking his place,
suddenly Duchovny has to prove his worth. As lovely as the Mulder/Scully scenes
are my focus was primarily on the Scully/Doggett relationship which continues
to yield rewards as they get closer despite one half of this partnership
keeping secrets to the point of obstinacy. What appears to be a simple story is
revealed to be a lot more complex than it first appeared, the regulars being
set up from their very first appearance to ensure that Scully is delivered into
a hazardous situation for her and her baby. On it’s own terms Per Manum is a
quiet X-Files that isn’t going to blow you away with grand set pieces but if
you are the sort of viewer that enjoys the subtleties of character development
and chance for actors of the calibre of Anderson, Duchovny and Patrick to get
the chance to show off their talents then this might be right up your street. I
honestly never knew that this show could be
this moving:
9/10
This Is Not Happening written by Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz and directed by Kim Manners
What’s it about: The return of Mulder?
Brains’n’Beauty: Scully gets a taste of her own medicine at the beginning of this episode; being called into work and kept in the dark by Doggett until Skinner is available to reveal the possible link between the return of Teresa and Mulder. Isn’t Scully wonderfully grumpy this season? I think she has barely cracked a smile. It’s not something I would recommend in every show (and Anderson has such a lovely smile that it would be nice to see it every now and again) but her character was becoming so fatuous and childish in season seven, almost a parody of who she was in the first three seasons, that it is great to get back to basics and give Anderson some challenging material again. When she confronts Agent Reyes about her involvement in the case I wanted her replacement to tell her to get over herself. Watch Anderson’s restrained anger as Scully questions Absalom, she is a woman right on the edge and any provocation could set her off.
Closed Mind: Doggett and Scully’s approaches still differ and he wont defer to her touchy feely techniques when he feels that pressing the witness will get results. Doggett succinctly tells Scully that if she is going to reject every possibility that he throws her way and go off on a tangent about alien Bounty Hunters then they will have to part company (and Scully, as if knowing that she is passing the torch onto to Reyes in the future, states
‘enjoy your new company’). There was a tiny moment in Invocation where we realised that something tragic has happened in Doggett’s past with regards to his son and the audience is spoon fed a little more information here. Doggett and Reyes were working together during the case when he was missing and he gently asks her to keep his history out of this case and leave the past in the past. This will be mined for real emotional worth in future episodes. It goes to explain why Doggett is so vehemently against believing in the paranormal as an explanation for disappearances. He knows first hand with personal experience that people vanish all the time in the most horrific and violent of ways. If he had turned to such an outrageous way of thinking during his sons disappearance he might never have found the body. Kudos to Carter/Spotnitz for refusing to let this character back down and stay truthful to himself and for giving him a very good and understandable reason for doing so. It might have come in handy to have included this scene much earlier in the season to have prevented him from looking so stubborn but this rewards the patient viewer tenfold.
New Ager: Introducing Monica Reyes, a character that split opinion between those that found her a ray of sunshine and those that found it a struggle to accept that this show isn’t going to be solely about Mulder and Scully anymore. To be fair to her critics the character does come with a few too many quirks in her first appearance (she’s a new ager, she smokes, she’s eccentric in her approach to investigation) and it does feel as if the writers are going out of their way to make her appealing and a bit different. However all this is rendered pretty soluble when you factor in that she is being played by Annabeth Gish, a delightful performer who stresses these qualities but gets to play them down in future episodes. The truth of the matter is that she lights up the screen for me (after half a season of Anderson and Doggett looking dour – as good as that might have been – it is lovely to meet somebody who enjoys smiling and looking on the lighter side of life) and has great chemistry with Robert Patrick (and going forward, Anderson too). I might be the minority (although I don’t think that is the case anymore) but I really enjoyed how the show ploughed on with Doggett and Reyes at the reins. What a breath of fresh air they turned out to be. Reyes is greeted by suspicion by both Scully and Skinner and even Mark Snow punctuates her first appearance with an ominous sting. She goes on what she knows but tries to stay open to extreme possibilities. Reyes doesn’t not believe in aliens, which is going to come in handy when she is assigned to The X-Files. A black sheep in law enforcement with certain spiritual notions, in basic terms she is Mulder albeit with a much stronger connection to the Earth (both spiritually and socially) than he ever had. She looks longingly at a packet of cigarettes and it is only an encounter with an alien spacecraft that prevents her from lighting up (now there’s a sentence I never thought I would write about an X-File episode).
Trust No-1: Whether it was just a dream or a psychic link between Scully and Mulder, the insinuation seems to be that Mulder has been pinned to that chair in the alien spacecraft since the beginning of the season (about three-four months now); tortured, bruised and wan.
Assistant Director: The gorgeous interaction between Scully and Skinner continues, the two of them holding out hope that they are going to find Mulder alive and well but not kidding themselves that things aren’t looking good in that direction.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Did you ever hear of an alien in Nike’s?’
‘What if he’s dead?’
The Good: It is amazing that a show could not only last eight seasons so successfully after the departure of one of it’s two main characters and that it could take in it’s eighth season elements from the pilot episode all those years ago and innovate them to make the show more gripping than ever. The return of Teresa Hosey is portent of doom for Scully who is still hanging out for the return of her partner and lover. Alien abductions aren’t about inflated bellies anymore, since the fallout of the conspiracy arc they have been rough housing their abductees and the Teresa’s messed up body is the result of the sort of torture we saw Mulder undergoing in the first two episodes of the season. A small mention for Judd Tritcher in the very sweet role of Ritchie Szalay, a boy from Oregon who is following the trail of the aliens because his boyfriend was abducted in Requiem. After his godawful, pretentious scenes with the Smoking Man in previous seasons of The X-Files you might have thought that the return of Jeremiah Smith would be a bad thing but Carter and Spotnitz take a look at where the character went wrong before and iron out all his wrinkles in This Is Not Happening. The focus is on his healing powers, rather than his cod-religious portents of the future. I like the fact that Scully believes this is the work of aliens and Doggett and Reyes pump for the more reasonable UFO cult idea and when the dust clears away on the wreckage of this episode it turns out they are
all right.
Pre Titles Sequence: Immediately gripping and then extremely unfortunate for the character, the teaser pretty much sums up the episode at large. Can you imagine having absolute proof of an alien spacecraft visiting the Earth and forgetting to wind up your camera so you lack any visual proof? And stumbling across a battered and bruised abductee with no proof of where she came from is going to take some explaining. Pretty much anything directed by Kim Manners these days is worth watching (since the departure of Rob Bowman he is the in-house director) but his work on season eight is particularly special.
Moment to Watch Out For: The last thing any of us was expecting was for Scully to find Mulder again and to be cradling his corpse when she did so. It’s a shocking conclusion that gave me goosebumps all over and her final scream of anxiety at the loss of the only help for Mulder is a powerful end to the episode.
Orchestra: Snow returns to the Scully’s theme that played such an effective part in Within/Without and Per Manum. It has such a sense of longing and tragedy to it and yet is beautiful in it’s right too and stresses Scully’s pain in a very moving way throughout This Is Not Happening. Taken as a whole this is one of Snow’s most accomplished scores (take a step back and consider the music that he has created for this show and consider the enormity of that statement). The achingly sad music yet optimistic music that accompanies Jeremiah’s healing of Teresa broke my heart whilst the astonishing piece at the climax when Scully finally catches up with Mulder might just be my favourite moment of the series musically. It is precisely the sort of epic, moving and exciting composition that I imagine would have accompanied a real life alien invasion on this show. It is unforgettable and delivers the climax with a real punch of emotion.
Result: Gripping stuff and another mythology episode in season eight that kicks some serious ass, This Is Not Happening serves all of it’s characters extremely well whilst introducing a fresh element into the series and giving one portion of the audience what they have been screaming out for since the beginning of the year. But brilliantly it does none of those things in the way that you might expect. After Per Manum you might expect that Scully and Doggett to be on an even footing now but their antagonism comes to a head in this episode and they almost part company. Monica Reyes is our idiosyncratic new regular but she comes with a handful of neuroses and flaws that make her a little too quirky for her own good, but she mostly salvaged by Annabeth Gish’s sublime performance anyway. And Mulder comes back to Earth with a bang in an episode that is all about building up his return to the show but Carter and Spotnitz save their cruellest trick until last as Scully is finally reunited with her partner only to find that he is dead. What an emotional ride this is and how delicately all the character interactions are handled. The amount of effort that has gone into plotting out the character arcs this seasons and ensuring there is plenty of follow through and rewards to the patient viewer is extraordinary – there really isn’t another season of The X-Files like it in that respect. Nothing is cloudy or indistinct like the mythology of the previous seasons, it is a clearly told story with plenty of emotionally sincere beats. There is almost no need for a plot to This Is Not Happening because the characters and their journeys are creating self-perpetuating storylines and the only standalone elements to this is the sudden diversion to the doomsday cult but the focus soon turns back to Mulder. With the inclusion of Reyes, The X-Files is practically an ensemble show now (Mulder, Scully, Skinner, Doggett, Reyes) and given this is a show that has always found its strength from a core relationship of two it is strange how satisfying the shift to a larger group of characters is. Weirdly enough the only part of this episode that didn’t work for me was the repeated use of the phrase
‘this is not happening’ because it seemed to be shoehorned into a script awkwardly simply to justify the title (three times we hear it in the pre-titles sequence). Apart from that colour me impressed at another arc piece that proves to be a stellar hour of drama in it’s own right. Impressive:
9/10
Deadalive written by Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz and
directed by Tony Wharmby
What’s it about: Mulder’s dead…no wait he’s alive. What’s
going on?
Brains’n’Beauty: Scully tells Doggett that he doesn’t owe
her anything by supporting the X-Files and trying to keep the department open
when she goes on maternity leave but she is clearly still very touched by the
gesture. She tells him to get out while she can or he may never get out at
all…advice she wishes she had been given all those years ago. In a very symbolic
gesture, Doggett stands in her way when she tries to pass him and get to Mulder
and she stresses that she needs to see him in whatever condition. If you fail
to be moved by Scully weeping into Mulder’s chest as he lies in a comatose and
bruised state in a hospital bed then I fear your blood may not be pumping
around your body. We have been here before so many times in seasons 1-7 but
this time it feels different because it is a moment that has been promised for
over half a season and is finely played by Anderson when it comes. No words are
even necessary. Having Scully criticize
Doggett for not believing in the paranormal even when it is staring him right
in the face is gloriously ironic given it took her seven years and an
overwhelming amount of proof to wear down her scientific objections. She
expects him to undergo the same transformation in a few months. It is so
wonderful to see Scully smiling again during the final scene where Mulder wakes
up. I was starting to suspect she had forgotten how.
Closed Mind: ‘Fish while they’re biting, John…’ With
Kersh is smiling at you when you walk in the door, run a mile because something
is clearly very wrong with the world. In this case Doggett is being recommended
for advancement and receiving merits for his part in finding Agent Mulder,
praise and reward that he feels he doesn’t deserve. He clearly doesn’t want to
be manoeuvred into any position, even if that means sticking to the X-Files a
little longer. With no Mulder, the department might be shut down without him.
You would think that with Mulder back the focus would be on him again but the
show seems to be more about Doggett than ever, which is something that pleases
me greatly. The final scene emphasises Doggett as a third wheel in the X-Files
team. Scully clings onto Mulder and weeps and catches Doggett’s eye in the
doorway just as he walks away and leaves them to it. How this is going to play
out is anyone’s guess but it is sure going to be interesting finding out.
Trust No-1: Who would have ever thought that the absence of
a character would have made them far more interesting than they ever were when
they were part of a series?
Assistant Director: Another massive role for Skinner,
another terrific opportunity to see how effortlessly Mitch Pileggi has been
absorbed into the ensemble. I wondered if the whole Krychek/pain device
plotline had vanished into obscurity but it makes an entirely unexpected return
in Deadalive. The veins that bulge out of Skinner’s skin are a great prompt
that rat boy is nearby and waiting to take advantage of events. The difference
between Skinner here and in earlier seasons is that we understand exactly why
he behaves how he does. In previous years when the character being treated as
part ally/part enemy we would never have been privy to the scene between him
and Krychek, we would have only have seen him turning off Mulder’s life support
and get the explanation afterwards. Clearly that was the wrong approach because
knowing what makes him tick, understanding that he is killing Mulder to save
Scully’s baby makes the moment all the more powerful.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Apart from a certain enviable post
mortem tumescence this man is unremarkable…’
‘Agent Doggett, however I felt about you when we first met,
you changed my opinion with the quality of your character and of your work. Now
I thankful to no you and I am thankful of your concern…’ – hurrah!
‘It’s going to be awful crowded down in that X-Files
office…’
Ugh: People should no better than to suggest that corpses
come back to life and start blabbing about how they died because that is just
tempting fate. As a Doctor does here with the pickled and scarred body of Billy
Miles. The make up for Mulder’s ashen, decaying corpse is really very nasty, a
far cry from the handsome man David Duchovny is. If the mythology episodes are
going to continue (this is the third interlinked episode in a row with a fourth
on its way) then Carter & Spotnitz are determined to remind the audience of
what this show is about and include a genuinely grisly sequence when Billy
Miles wakes from his coma, heads to the nearest shower and sheds his crusty,
scarred flesh in as bloody a fashion as possible. It really turned my stomach.
The Good: This episode lives up to it’s title and has great
fun resurrecting apparently dead people from the past. Bully Miles is proving
to be quite the lynchpin of the show in it’s later years, given focus when
Mulder was abducted and when he was returned. His resurrection gives hope that
Mulder might still be alive after his funeral and adds a touch of doubt to his
homecoming – if Billy has returned as a programmed killing machine does that
mean Mulder is too? Was this what the aliens had planned all along? What Mulder
needs is vaccine that stops this process from happening…which is a skilful way
to bring Krychek into the action and his control device over Skinner. The
thought of Mulder, Scully and Doggett all working together on the X-Files makes
my heart sing…imagine the fireworks! Although in realistic terms it does signal
the end of one of the characters because it is not a situation that would work
in the long term. I remember feeling disheartened at the thought that it was
probably Doggett that would go because he is the third wheel, the piece of the
puzzle that doesn’t fit (but a piece in the series that fits beautifully
because of it). How things actually panned out surprised and delighted me.
Pre Titles Sequence: Well that was unexpected. When Mulder
was returned dead at the end of This Is Not Happening I was expecting some
instant miracle to occur in order to bring him back to the land of the living
but instead the writers plunge onwards with the idea that Mulder is no longer
with us. Even going to the lengths of pulling together all the assembled
regulars that are still with us and putting on a beautiful, snow caressed
funeral service for him in a graveyard. Doggett gripping onto Krychek’s face
and hanging on outside of his motor as rat boy ploughs through a host of
stationary cars in the hospital car park is a fantastically exciting set piece.
Moment to Watch Out For: Tying beautifully into the
suggestions that were made in Per Manum, Krychek informs his victim that Scully
cannot be allowed to have her baby and that he must be the one to kill it. Now
we have an absorbing plotline going forwards – is there something amiss with
the baby? What a dreadful dilemma for Skinner to be in, kill Mulder or kill
Scully’s baby…or face the consequences at the end of Krychek’s pain device.
There is so much going on at this point but I had a handle over all of it
because it is tied into the characters and their feelings and explained in a
crystal clear fashion. Why couldn’t the show have always have been as
comprehensible and as interesting as this?
Fashion Statement: Scully’s pregnancy is really showing now
but this takes place three months after This Is Not Happening so that is
understandable. This marks the beginning of the end of her time on The X-Files.
Billy Miles walking around in the buff – don’t mind if I do. When Doggett looks
furiously angry and starts towards Krychek…I just want to bang his brains
out.
Result: Deadalive manages to mix old mythology
(Krychek) and new (Billy Miles) with equal aplomb whilst dealing with the
fallout of Mulder’s death and resurrection and the situation of where Doggett
belongs. It is a remarkably packed episode and it is to the credit of Carter
& Spotnitz that it never feels rushed and unwieldy. I’ve changed my mind
about season eight, it might be my favourite season of The X-Files now because
it is the one where I can see the maximum amount of effort from the creative
team being injected into the show for the utmost rewards. The Scully/Doggett
interaction reaches its zenith in this episode with the two of them managing to
butt heads in some gorgeously scripted exchanges and admit how much they care
for each other as well. It has been a fantastic relationship to chart but this
is the beginning of the end before Mulder and Reyes step in to distract the
pair of them from each other. Mulder’s return isn’t handled at all the way I
thought it would be and is all the better for it, I thought he would be greeted
with fanfare and instead the writers go down the route that he could be a
potential alien assassin. Suspicion and mistrust seems to be the watchwords
surrounding his homecoming. Skinner continues to get a larger slice of the pie
and Mitch Pileggi’s involvement in season eight cannot be faulted, he is
responsible for binding the regulars into an ensemble and the character is such
a reliable, beautifully acted presence. Add to all this some grotesque
sequences that remind that this show can still repulse, fascinating
participation from Kersh and you have a substantial, hugely entertaining
installment of an ever improving year. Season eight shows how good the X-Files
mythology episodes could have been had they been less obscure and tightly
focused on Mulder and Scully. This is how good the show could have been all
along:
9/10
Three Words written by Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz and
directed by Tony Wharmby
What’s it about: Mulder continues to play the bad boy…but he
can’t get away with it anymore.
Brains’n’Beauty: Scully tries to explain how hard it has
been for her coping without him, first at the site of his disappearance, then
having to work with somebody else and then after finding him dead and having to
accept that he will never be a part of her life anymore. No wonder she is more
chilled out in Three Words than we have seen her in a long time. It has been a
real acting challenge for Anderson to convey such a sense of loss over a
prolonged period of time whilst still driving the show and staying firmly in
character but she has risen to the challenge magnificently and given some of
her most striking performances as a result. Scully is very quick to jump to
Doggett’s defence when Mulder starts to criticize and after all the hoops he
jumped through to prove his loyalty to her I am pleased that she took this
stand. We needed to go through the evolution of their relationship to reach
this stage because if Scully wasn’t behind Doggett one hundred percent, despite
Mulder’s insistence that he is a bad guy, then the argument for his continued
work on the X-Files would fall flat.
Closed Mind: ‘The only thing that is impressive about my
work on the X-Files is that I know what’s going on half the time…’ Kersh is
very cleverly using Doggett’s success rate since he has been assigned to the
department as a reason to deny Mulder access to the X-Files again. Apparently
he and Scully have had more arrest on percentage than Mulder and Scully in over
years – ouch. It’s also another method of setting them all at each others
throats which is only to the benefit of the drama of the show. I certainly
wouldn’t want things to return to the lackadaisical mood of season seven now
Mulder is back in residence. Kersh manuveres Doggett into the unenviable
position of telling Mulder that he is no longer assigned to the unit he
created. Double ouch. He’s being manipulated by Kersh and Knowle Rohrer in very
different ways and it is only starting to become clear just how badly his
actions are being pre-meditated and he doesn’t like the position that it puts
him in. Perhaps Mulder is right that Doggett is working against him, but it is
entirely against his will. As soon as he realises this he attempts to rectify
matters but Mulder’s faith in him has been crushed. He confronts Knowle and
informs him he will not be used as his puppet but his informant reveals that
the truth that he is trying to point him towards is all laid out in the X-Files.
It would appear he still has a lot of work to do down in that basement office,
especially now Mulder is no longer welcome in the building.
Trust No-1: The look on Mulder’s face as he remembers the
terrible torture he suffered at the hands of the aliens is that of a man who
has searched the skies for their existence only to get spat in the face for his
efforts. He’s a broken man. Considering he has undergone a miraculous recovery
from death, a feat only otherwise achieved by Jesus, he looks about as thrilled
by the motion as a man who has just been told that he has to pay up all the
rent and bills he has missed since he has been missing. What is unusual is how
Mulder walks through the show that used to be all about him like a ghost, like
a stranger who doesn’t quite belong there anymore because the show has moved on
without him. He doesn’t know where he fits in anymore. Mulder is his own worst
nightmare sometimes (that’s why we love him) and he only feels like getting
back to work when he is told that he isn’t allowed to. He hangs around his
office waiting to meet and wind up Agent Doggett against the advice of Scully
and Skinner. He cannot be said to be undeserved of the punishment he receives
at the end of this episode.
Sinister AD: Fundamentally Kersh is a good man who is only
trying to do the best by the FBI which is why it makes it quite interesting
that Carter & Spotnitz always try and paint as something of a villain, just
as they did with the Smoking Man. Whilst he is often seen to be working against
the X-Files, there are moments when we are privy to him working behind the
scenes to aid them so it appears that much of his bluster and anger is all an
act for someone’s benefit. It doesn’t stop my buttocks clenching every time he
smiles though. He’s so often coming down on Mulder, Scully, Doggett and
Skinner’s ass that it feels as if something is very wrong with the world when
he looks happy.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Problem? You occupy an office that used
to be devoted to finding the truth and now you’re busy burying it’ – oh Mulder
you are so wrong.
‘You know it’s not fair. You’ve been dead for six months and
you still look better than me’ ‘Oh Melvyn, I’d be a whole lot happier to see if
you’d just take your hands off my ass.’
‘Come on guys, I’m on autopilot here…’ is not a line you
should give David Duchovny under any circumstances.
The Good: Judson Scott is a veteran of science fiction
performances but gives one of his best (and certainly most intense) in The
X-Files as the religious prophet Absalom. Whilst he was a side issue in This Is
Not Happening and Deadalive, he comes into his own in Three Words, escaping
from prison, seeking out Doggett and putting him in a situation where his life
is in terrible danger if he doesn’t do everything that Absalom tells him.
Because he talks of alien takeovers and sacred foresight he comes across as the
sort of deathly serious nut job that is capable of anything (
‘You and I are
going to become overnight sensations!’). Another cute appearance by the
Lone Gunmen in season eight with the hug between Frohike and Mulder possibly
the loveliest moment in an episode packed with mistrust. There is a real warmth
to the scenes between the old timers (Mulder, Scully & the Lone Gunmen)
from this show that has been practically absent in the cold (but riveting)
season eight. Like Per Manum, the writers pull off a massive coup by revealing
that this whole plot has been a set up from the start and Doggett has been the
unknowing victim that he delivered Mulder into the hands of his enemies. There
are several excellently paced action sequences in Three Words that Tony Wharmby
handles with great aplomb. Doggett being led like a lamb to slaughter into the
census database and almost being shot in the head for his troubles is one such
example. Mulder making it into the census database intercut with Doggett trying
to make it in to help him and the Gunmen hanging about cutting the security
procedures makes for a glorious ten minute thriller sequence that ends with
them being pursued by an armed security force. Unfortunately it looks like
Doggett has turned up to stop Mulder just as he has happened upon the census
information that could blow this thing wide open – Three Words has been well
structured enough so both men on different sides of the argument can be seen to
be perfectly credible in their opinions.
Pre Titles Sequence: Leaping the fence of the White House
with a disc entitled Fight the Future might be a way of getting the President’s
attention…but probably not the right sort of attention. It’s a gripping
pre-titles sequence all the same for attempting to pull this off on primetime
television. I have to admit I couldn’t tell whether they filmed at the real
White House or not but certainly appeared to be authentic to me. How could you
think this kind of behaviour is anything but a terrorist attack?
Moment to Watch Out For: The long overdue meeting between
Mulder and Doggett goes about as badly as can be imagined with the man who has
been looking for him for over six months smiling and looking to shake his hand
and the man who is angry that he has been superseded shoving him back down into
a chair and accusing him of deliberately having Absalom murdered. If you have
been paying attention to Three Words then Mulder’s accusations are senseless
and it is another point against his characters return and in favour of having
him stripped from The X-Files. I think in this situation his judgement is
severely flawed and he is punished accordingly. What I like is how Mulder is
ultimately proven right about Doggett’s involvement but is so wide of the mark
about him being aware of the fact that his reaction is something of a joke.
Mythology: ‘The invasion has begun…they’re already here.’
Are we kick starting a brand new conspiracy/invasion of the Earth arc in Three
Words? With a man attempting to warn the President and the escape of Absalom
something is bubbling to surface and only Mulder seems to be the only person
who can see it. The information that proves that ‘they’ are already among us is
in the census information and now Doggett is privy to that knowledge. The
information that the hacker was trying to get to the President were the names
of people the Federal government is tracking using the US census who have a
certain genetic profile. Information about people who have been targeted
because of their genetic profile for alien abduction and replacement by
facsimiles – tying this up with the previous two episodes rather neatly.
Result: Probably the most important episode of the last two
and a half seasons, Three Words is the episode that sees Mulder sacked from the
FBI and the beginning of the end of his involvement on the X-Files. If people
thought that his return to the show was going to herald a new era of Mulder and
Scully and paranormal cases…well let’s just say they were always going to be
heartily disappointed. For those of us who thought the show was chugging along
rather well without him and didn’t want a shake up in the status quo (which to
the writers credit is the less likely scenario) were the happy bunnies. Three
Words is the fourth excellent conspiracy episode in a row and each one has
worked so well because despite the gripping running storylines they have been
diverse, individual episodes in their own right. Per Manum was a sensitive
character drama, This Is Not Happening a tragic teaser for Mulder’s return,
Deadalive turned out to be a rather grisly race and against time and they top
of this nourishing tetrology with Three Words, an adrenaline fuelled conspiracy
tale. In tone, pace and content each piece of this mythology anchor in the
middle of season eight has felt unique and riveting in its own right. The
umbrella theme that ties all these episodes together is Mulder and his return
to the show. Whereas the first two thirds have been about the developing
relationship between Scully and Doggett, now the shift moves onto the even more
antagonistic and resentful relationship between Doggett and Mulder (especially
on the latters part) and the sparks that fly are fantastic to watch. Carter and
Spotnitz needed to remove Mulder from The X-Files completely and found a way of
achieving that seems entirely plausible and in character. He basically behaves
like a massive ass (whilst being fundamentally right in his approach), which
was precisely how he has always been portrayed but now we have Doggett to
contrast him against to show how well the office can be run without all the
backchat and breaking of the rules. The ambition of Three Words is to tell the
audience that the show has genuinely moved on, even with Mulder’s return, and
things will never go back to being how they were. It achieves that with some
considerable aplomb. It has been ages since this show was anything other than
excellent, surely it has to drop the ball at some point: 9/10
Empedocles written by Greg Walker and directed by Barry K.
Thomas
What’s it about: A spread of evil from one person to another
a possible link to the death of John Doggett’s son…
Brains’n’Beauty: Gorgeous scenes between Scully and Mulder
who are like to cuddly old spare parts hanging around waiting to be shuffled
off and the new kids brought in full time. Had these moments been phoned in I
might have been a little more critical but they are so warmly played and
scripted and in the wake of so much coldness and gravity in the first part of
the season it comes as a real relief.
Mulder giving Scully an old family keepsake in the form of a cuddly toy
for her baby makes go all wibbly. The scene between Scully and Doggett in the
hospital is vital because it explains in no uncertain terms (a miracle for this
show but something that has been pleasingly ironed out in season eight) why
Scully has allowed herself to explore the possibility of the paranormal. She
was too afraid to believe in things outside of her ordered, calm, rational
world but there came a point where she couldn’t object any more without looking
as though she was perverting the facts to fit her views. Scully likes Reyes
because they are nothing at all alike – I am so pleased that they didn’t go
down the route of these two biting and scratching at each other. Their
interaction in season nine is one of it’s better features. Mulder gave Scully
courage to believe, let’s hope that Reyes and can do the same trick for
Doggett.
Closed Mind: ‘He’s worth the effort, Mulder…’ Only on
this show could you consider dropping the title ‘Agent’ as a term of endearment
as Scully does to Doggett. He’s explosively angry at the thought of Reyes and
(especially) Mulder looking into the case of his sons murder and finds himself
withdrawing to Scully’s bedside for some advice. He has to believe that he did
everything possible to find his son and if there was some paranormal angle that
he was too closed minded to explore then he wouldn’t be able to live with
himself. The writers pretty much acknowledge how Luke’s death is going to be
solved in that scene because there was no way they were ever going to put such
an honourable character through that kind of torture. The truth is Doggett did
see some kind of apparition at the scene of his sons death but it could just
have easily have been his mind playing tricks during a inexplicably stressful
moment. It is easily dismissible.
Trust No-1: Mulder blows hot (his intense feelings for
Scully) and cold (his indifference towards Doggett) but overall Empedocles is
one of the few episodes in season eight where Mulder feels like he is back and
he has a purpose. Mulder can scoff at Reyes and her less than subtle tactics
because he has been there and done that and licked the wounds for his troubles.
There is no man who can empathise more with where she is coming from at the
start of this odyssey of hers.
New Ager: ‘You just keep shooting until you hit
something, don’t you?’ Reyes is trying to be quirky again from the off but
fortunately these forced tics are disposed of very quickly and this is a highly
engaging second visit for the new age investigator before her assignment to the
series full time at the series two part finale. With Mulder stripped of the
X-Files, Scully about to take some personal time to have her baby and Doggett
hardly reaching out for paranormal assignments, the writers needed to find a
new avenues to bring cases to light and Reyes is the perfect outlet. She sniffs
out X-Files where nobody else is looking. Mulder always used to have strong
intuition and beliefs about cases but with Reyes it seems to be something more
personal than that, she has visions and feels an emotional connection to an
investigation which draws her in. It makes a little bit more spooky and fascinating
and it will be interesting to see how the show explores this gift. Working the
case when they found Doggett’s son dead was the hardest she ever had to face
and she cannot imagine what it was like for John. Mulder grins at Reyes when
she tries to manipulate him into helping her, acknowledging that she would say
anything to pique his interest. They are kindred spirits. And that’s why
ultimately a Mulder/Reyes show would never work. It’s fun here to have two
engaging, like minded individuals working an X-Files (it is the opposite of the
first half of the season where you had two sceptics in the office) but long
term this show has a sceptic believer formula that works and helps generate a
great deal of character drama amongst the suspense. That’s why it has to be
about Doggett and Reyes. I like how Reyes for all her understanding of people
and karma and all that shit, she can still mess up terribly when trying to
force people to confront things that they would rather not.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Correct me if I’m wrong but you just
said you were waiting for the pizza man to jump in the shower…’
‘Nice package!’
‘I’m not really a good test for questions like that, I’ll
believe almost anything.’
‘The pisser is you may never know’ – The X-Files at least
acknowledges it’s ambiguous finales these days…but the Doggett storyline is
going be picked up later and given a worthwhile conclusion.
Ugh: Plenty of effort and money went into the sequence where
Jeb rips strips of flesh from his face to reveal the glowing, shifting evil
beneath and I’m pleased because it is one of those iconic X-Files images that
lingers in your mind long after you have finished watching. It also leaves you
asking ‘how they hell did they do that?’
The Good: Potter is clearly an old timer who isn’t down with
the kidz and their styles in music…which is what amusingly leads him to believe
that Jeb is dabbling in the black arts when he is in fact simply a fan of
Marilyn Manson. Boggle at the cinematography
and direction that takes Doggett from the hospital where Scully is resting to
the scene of sons murder in the blink of an eye. Sometimes I need reminding
just how gorgeous this show looks. Director Barry K. Thomas cleverly mirrors
the staging of the discovering of Luke Doggett with the discovering of another
corpse later in the episode, helping to make a visual connection between the
two cases and make the most mundane of scenes (discovering a body is tenapenny
on The X-Files) have a much deeper meaning. Involving children in a murder scene
is always a dangerous business but Thomas handles the drama of Jeb’s murder in
front of his screaming niece with consummate skill. Tasha Yar in The X-Files? I
never saw that coming! To cut from the gooey goodness (in all the best ways) of
Mulder and Scully sharing pizza and gifts to Doggett still darkly haunted by
the ambiguous nature of his sons death sees a show at the height of it’s
powers, switching tone with absolute confidence.
The Bad: The ‘spread of evil’ storyline has great potential
which is squandered in an episode packed with too many goodies. Surely Reyes
would have suffered brain damage from that clout to the head from a fire
extinguisher she receives?
Pre Titles Sequence: I have a vivid recollection of this set
piece wowing me when I first watched the episode. I was grateful after such a
wealth of arc material and character development to get back to something
standalone and it looked as though Greg Walker was determined that it was going
to happen in explosive style. Everything about this pre-title sequence works a
treat, it explains the premise of the episode without having to utter a word,
instead using vivid images to get the ideas across. Jeb is fired from his job
and witnesses a spectacular explosion as two cars collide on the street and a
flaming wraith steps from the carnage, attracted by his anger and consumes him.
The worst work scenario imaginable then occurs with Jeb walking back into the
office that he has been dismissed from and gunning down the man responsible in
front of his heartless secretary (who was sitting in on the interview looking
quite smug). Big, bold and shocking, this is The X-Files at it’s very best. I
would also like to compliment Mark Snow’s score during the teaser (and the
episode) because it really stresses the drama and the excitement of the spread
of pure evil from one individual to another.
Moment to Watch Out For: After showing a remarkable amount
of restraint throughout the first half of season eight where Scully tested his
patience time and again, Doggett finally blows his top at the man he was sent
to find when it appears he is looking into the investigation of his sons
murder. Robert Patrick is extraordinarily frightening and vicious and despite
being a much shorter man looks as though he could kick the shit out of Mulder
if he was riled enough. It is nice to see some of that early edge being
injected back into the character and even when Reyes tries to calm him down his
eyes blaze with an intense anger rarely seen on this show. It’s a great scene and
promise more fireworks in future episodes. Patrick has danger in his eyes
throughout this episode and I like it.
Result: This is such a step up from Surekill earlier in the
season that you have to wonder if Chris Carter didn’t sit Greg Walker down and explain
that he was going to have to up his game a bit. Congratulations, it was a major
success. Doggett has received an awful lot of exposure of late and it is to the
credit of Carter & Spotnitz and the fantastic work of Robert Patrick that
no matter how compelling his character arc is, I always want more. Invocation
and This Is Not Happening suggested a tragedy was waiting to be unearthed in
his past and now is the time for those wounds to be opened with great results.
Barry K. Thomas has been a First Assistant Director on the show since the
middle of season six and helped to give so many episodes since an extra polish
and it breaks my heart to think that this is his only time solely in the
directors chair because the way he executes Empedocles approaches the avant-garde.
My one complaint would be that the a and b and c stories do not blend together
well and whilst there is plenty of stirring material surrounding Scully’s
impending pregnancy, Jeb’s spread of evil and the mystery of Doggett’s dead son
the three storylines never connect in a way that would cohere the whole piece.
Storylines a and c are both given appropriate exposure later which leaves the
Jeb plot lacking the time to be fully realised. However with performances this
strong, more outstanding character development and such riveting execution
there is no way I could reasonably call this episode anything other than a
success, albeit a minor step down from the previous four installments: 8/10
Vienen written by Steven Maeda and directed by Rod Hardy
What’s it about: The black oil is back…
Brains’n’Beauty: Scully is working around the clock to try
and find enough evidence to save Agent Doggett’s life. However her suggestion
that Skinner requests an evacuation of the oil rig with unsubstantiated and
meagre evidence is pushing it a bit.
Closed Mind: Doggett is right to question Mulder’s
criticisms of his character and work ethic because he considers the new
incumbent of the X-Files office a rookie and thinks that anything that doesn’t
fit in his narrow field of vision might as well not exist. He can’t quite bring
himself to defy Mulder despite being pushed to the limit because he knows, deep
down, that if he asks him to quarantine the oil rig then it is for a very good
reason. Amusingly, Doggett smears some oil on his finger and asks Mulder when
it is going to kick in.
Trust No-1: Mulder is playing with fire now he has been
stripped of the X-Files by turning up unannounced and trying to force Agent
Doggett to investigate cases that he feels need his attention. It would only
take a word from Doggett to have him flung from the building and it is only
because he respects Mulder that he doesn’t do so. It’s with some amusement that
he hands Doggett the phone in the X-Files office, maintaining some level of
control. Mulder is willing to take a fall for the X-Files, to be kicked out of
the FBI so that the work continues even if that means with Doggett in charge.
He recognises that Doggett is all the credibility that the X-Files has left and
he has to get out of the way in order to maintain that. It’s a very logical
reason for him to step aside and far less showy and dramatic than I was
imagining should the day ever come. I’m impressed.
Sinister AD: Kersh is starting to have more of a presence as
the season progresses, becoming aware of Skinner’s silence when it comes to the
activities of both Mulder and Scully. Somehow James Pickens, Jnr has a way of
making every line sound like he wants to cave your skull in with a spade whilst
managing to keep his cool. There is something tangibly sinister about this
character and at the same time I can’t help but wonder if he is a friend to the
X-Files office as well. I find him fascinating.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘When he gets old enough tell the kid I
went down swinging.’
‘I’m not sure it’s in all oil’ ‘Well that’s a relief because
only 90% of the planet is dependant on the stuff.’
Ugh: It comes a little late into the episode but the first
instance of the black oil being vomited out of one man onto the face of another
is well worth waiting for. If the idea of this sounds now nasty, the execution
is even worse.
The Good: Being able to shoot in and around a real oil rig
makes all the difference to the aesthetic to this episode and the gorgeous
flyover shots taken by a helicopter are the sort that belong in a big budget
feature film. It is a credit to the set designers on this show that it was
filmed on an oil refinery, an oil platform and on specially created sets and I
couldn’t tell you when the latter are in play. Despite Mulder’s best efforts,
the only reason that Kersh sanctions this investigation is because
bureaucratically his hands are tied and he has to be seen to be protecting
America’s interests when it comes to a rich new oil seam. The shot of the
refinery back lit by a blood red sun is stunning. In order to pass the torch
between Mulder and Doggett they have to be placed in danger in order to work
together. I don’t think there is any way these two would have come to some kind
of mutual consensus otherwise.
The Bad: I know the critics appreciated the return of the
black oil because it was a nostalgic reminder of mythology episodes gone by but
what I think they fail to remember is that it was convoluted plot thread that
was never dealt with in a significantly detailed manner. The black oil was
Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz coming up with a grisly idea and running with
it without adequately explaining what it was all about until the audience was
already lost. The idea of a body jumping viscous fluid is great but when you
start talking about harvested bees to transmit the infection it becomes even
more unnecessarily complicated. However Two Fathers/One Son did a phenomenal
job of explaining all of this away and tying up the mythology in a big bow so
the show could move on. So why are re-visiting it now? Season seven took the
opportunity to kick start a brand new style of mythology episode, one less
reliant on set pieces and machismo and more character based conceptual drama.
It also tied up some long overdue character threads (explaining Samantha’s
disappearance, the Smoking Man’s departure). Season eight has featured the best
batch of mythology episodes the show has ever produced within one season
because it is a self contained story that has been entirely character led and
full of great twists and turns. The individual episodes have been terrific too.
After the incredible run of shows from Per Manum to Three Words it feels a
little underwhelming to take such a massive back step and start harking back to
the black oil again. I’m not sure I buy the idea of being immune to the black
oil because of Indian descent. That smacks of a writer trying to get out of the
pickle that he has put himself in by pulling a scientific explanation out of
his pocket that is based on nothing tangible.
Pre Titles Sequence: I love a good old fashioned base under
siege story (a term I coin a lot for Doctor Who but it originated long before
then) and so the way this sequence plays out with an isolated setting (an oil
rig) with communications cut off in the most dramatic way imaginable pleased me
greatly. All we need is for our heroes to arrive, get trapped and realise that
something has taken over the base personnel and we are in for a great ride…
Moment to Watch Out For: The final ten minutes are very
exciting and build to an unforgettable crescendo when Mulder and Doggett leap
from an exploding oil rig into the sea in slow motion. A lot of money has been
poured into that shot and it really pays off. I remember when I first watched
it and I my overriding thought was that there is no other show on television
that has cornered the market so successfully in impressive visuals.
Result: ‘If I didn’t know any better, I’d say this was a
Mulder stunt…’ A bit of an odd one, this episode. It has all the elements
of a really great X-File but it fails to come together quite as it should. The
second half of the story is excellent, once the atmosphere of being trapped on
the rig at the mercy of the black oil kicks in but it takes an awful long time
to reach that point. Juxtaposing Mulder and Doggett again makes for some fiery
scenes but what really screams from Vienen is that Mulder has had his day and
needs to step aside. We have seen this dance of him flouting orders one too
many times for it to be interesting anymore. I’m pleased that for once his
actions have severe consequences and ones which the writers never go back and
undo in the future. Helping things immeasurably is Rod Hardy’s stunning,
feature film direction and the location work on a real life oil rig. Vienen looks
amazing and once the base under siege drama emerges it is a race against time
to reach the conclusion, which features an unforgettable effects shot. Way
above average but no classic (especially in the wake of so many great episodes),
this feels like a last gasp for both Mulder and the black oil, two elements
that have outstayed their welcome. Whilst I fully expected to feel that way
about the latter, the redundancy of Mulder really surprises (and thrills me).
It means that Doggett can now take centre stage and own the show. It’s a
development that has been plotted in a very sophisticated way and feels like a
natural development for the show: 7/10
Alone written and directed by Frank Spotnitz
What’s it about: Is this the last mutant in the series?
Brains’n’Beauty: The opening scene where Scully tells
Doggett she is taking her maternity leave, smiles at him (a miracle!) and gives
him a gift feels very rewarding because we have gone on a journey and a half
with these characters to reach this point. It is wonderful to see Scully
acknowledging his patience and his loyalty because he has more than earned it.
What’s even better is when she breaks away from her hug you realise that there
never was going to be a sexual connection between these characters (which was
promoted between her and Mulder in the first episode), it is a relationship
built entirely of friendship and respect. Even if the rest of season eight had
been crap (it wasn’t), the Scully/Doggett relationship would have made it worth
watching. She can’t tell him whether she is coming back or not, she just smiles
enigmatically and moves on with her life. Walking away she feels like a
deserter and is worried that she has left Doggett to his fate, that you need
somebody to watch your back when working on the X-Files. She’ll relax when she
hears of Monica Reyes’ posting. Ultimately this is quite an important story for
Scully because she has to come to terms with the fact that she is too invested
in something important to be able to rush to Doggett’s rescue every five
minutes. That wont stop her trying though.
Closed Mind: Doggett manages to hold Harrison’s hand
throughout this case without ever patronizing her nor questioning her
credentials, despite the fact that he knows he has been handed something of a
worthless gun to fire if the shit hits the fan. He even has to remind her to
take the safety of her gun in a tense moment. Blinded and working for two,
Doggett makes it all the way up to the top of a tunnel that leads to the garden
before his hand is trodden on and he falls right back into the pit again. How
much pain can one man suffer in a year? No wonder my sympathies are always with
him. Doggett offering his gift from Mulder and Scully to Harrison is gorgeous
and is this character all over, generous to a fault.
Trust No-1: Mulder is such a naughty bloke that you can’t
help but admire his gall whilst thinking that he is getting himself in more and
more trouble. He just doesn’t know when to quit. Impersonating Kersh is the
last single digit he could shove in the guys face and ensure that he never,
ever works with the FBI again. He loves playing dangerously and gets Doggett to
fire at him whilst the creature is attacking him. If he had been off by a
second he would have a bullet lodged in his cranium. It makes for a tense
conclusion when the camera takes an age to swing around and make sure he is
alright. That’s one way of disposing of the character, I suppose.
Lovely Leyla: What a gorgeous character this is, if entirely
useless for the most part. Leyla Harrison reminds me of Jo Grant from the
Doctor Who universe, a cute as hell, sassy and almost entirely hopeless
character who stumbles into the life of the shows lead when their previous,
fully qualified companion has just left. Harrison gets by on her relentless
enthusiasm and love for the X-Files and she was such a hit with the viewers
that she was asked back in season nine for a return visit, despite the fact
that she was only supposed to be a one off character to fill the gap before
Agent Reyes joined the show full time. Her
‘I’m your new partner!’ even
mirrors Jo’s
‘I’m your new assistant!’ in Terror of the Autons. She is
trying so hard to impress with her knowledge of former X-Files that she comes
across as an avid groupie of the show who is thrilled at the opportunity to
walk on set and take part in an episode at times. It’s really rather endearing
when it could have been irritating as hell, almost entirely down to Jolie
Jenkins’ warm performance. For a placeholder character, Harrison is a very
memorable one. How can you not love this character when she is trying to recall
all manner of X-Files continuity to help with their dire emergency and she
looks at him with those big eyes and asks
‘you think I’m pretty foolish,
don’t you?’
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘This is not a liver eating mutant,
Agent Harrison.’
Ugh: I love how the creatures slithering, shivering sounds
mimics Hannibal Lecteur in one of his most famous scenes.
The Good: The realisation of the X-Files often makes itself
aware for being a cut above the norm in genre television. Direction such as the
rushing POV shots of the creature as it crawls walls and approaches its victims
exemplifies this. This is textbook example of taking a scene that we have seen
ad nauseum on this show (exploring a creepy house for nasties) and realising it
in such a way that it feels fresh and visually interesting. The trapdoor comes
as a completely surprise because I was too busy waiting for the monster to show
up. For an X-Files aficionado like myself there is a wealth of references to
previous episodes in Alone that serve as a reminder of the length and breadth
of this show, how long it was made for and the diversity of adventures within.
Not just direct references such as the coins stuck together or the mention of
Tooms or the movie but more subtle moments such as Mulder spitting out
sunflower seeds for the last time.
The Bad: Mulder
‘wandering away from his tour’ doesn’t
work for me. He needs to be shown the door because the writers are having to
think up ridiculous excuses to keep him involved and get him in and out of the
Bureau. Like Empedocles and Vienen, the central plot of the episode feels
perfunctory compared to everything else that is going on and the explanation of
how the monster of the week came to be could almost be excised for all of its
importance. There was a time when this sort of thing would bother me greatly
but The X-Files has done something extraordinary in it’s eighth season, it has
introduced an ensemble to the show that has mean that even during the episodes
with lesser plots there are still a wealth of goodies to be unearthed,
character wise. If only Carter had realised this years ago we could have been
spared an awful lot of dreary standalones. How on Earth does Leyla know that
the Stites is the creature? Womens intuition? There is no way she could have
figured that out with the evidence given but Frank Spotnitz needs the plot
wrapped up (there is only four minutes to go) and so a leap was required.
Pre Titles Sequence: Not bad when it comes to atmosphere and
appetite whetting because it is clearly a return of a monster of the week
(which we haven’t seen for ages) but there is nothing especially memorable to
make this teaser stand out from the pack. Except the microwavable peas and
carrots, they are just grim. The creature sliding into view is subtle enough
that you might miss it but prepare to leap away from the screen as it pounces
right out at you.
Moment to Watch Out For: The final scene really sweetens the
overall experience of watching this episode (I might have given it a 7
otherwise). Imagine coming face to face with your heroes? That’s what it is
like for Leyla as she gets to pal up to Mulder and Scully and ask them all
manner of questions about continuity errors in their adventures together, just
as any good fan girl would do. That Mulder/Scully chemistry is back as they
argue over what exactly occurred at the end of Fight the Future and Doggett
walks away from all three of them, his work done and off to greet the future
and a certain Monica Reyes.
Result: Whilst they are all good in their own right,
the episodes that sit between Three Words and Essence can’t help but feel a
little bit like the after party from the main event. The mythology episodes in
season eight are so strong that it leaves the standalones feeling somewhat
insignificant and that is a massive reversal from the norm. Since there isn’t a
terrific amount of substance to the monster of the week plot beyond ‘Doggett
and Harrison discover a monster and are captured by it’ in the script written
by Frank Spotnitz, he decides to direct the hell out of it to make the
experience worthwhile. There are some very impressive shots in Alone and
coupled with Mark Snow’s most playful score of the season it feels an awful lot
like the lighter, more easily accessible episodes of old. That’s almost
mandatory since this is the last standalone adventure to feature Mulder. Alone
isn’t a fantastic X-File in it’s own right, it is the peripheral elements that
make it so damned entertaining. Jolie Jenkins makes an instant impression as
the ditzy but eager Leyla Harrison and forms a great rapport with Robert
Patrick, Scully is given an enjoyable subplot where she has to come to terms
with the fact that she isn’t working on the X-Files anymore, Mulder gets to
save the day one last time and the creature itself is a pretty nasty piece of
design work. It’s a perky piece, enlivened by it’s ensemble cast and confident
direction and it concludes with a gorgeous scene that acknowledges the past
whilst looking to the future:
8/10
Essence written by Chris Carter and directed by Kim Manners
What’s it about: Scully is close to term and everybody wants
a cut of the event…
Brains’n’Beauty: Some lovely domestic scenes between Scully and
her mother reminds us that these are normal people with normal lives. Dana wont
tell her mom what the baby’s sex is so they are having a mixed gender themed
baby shower. You can always count on your mother interfering when there is a
baby on the way and Margaret wants Scully to take it easy and let a baby nurse
help carry the load…a decision that she may learn to regret. Sheila Larkin is
one of the unsung heroes of The X-Files and has been appearing in the show
since the first season, a naturalistic, committed performer whose character has
offered Scully a little stability in her life. Can you imagine the horror of
discovering that the baby nanny that you have inviting into your home might
very well be poisoning you? She is trying to have a baby and she cannot live
her life as the subject of some unending X-Files. Scully thought this was
something that wouldn’t be touched by her work but it would seem that her
miracle conception has some very sinister undertones.
Closed Mind: I rather like the notion of Doggett spending
his weekend cleaning his gun and watching racing, you know chilling out like a
real man. After the tension that has run its course between them, Mulder and
Doggett make for an engaging team and it is disappointing that we should be
denied any further interaction on the account that Duchovny is about to make
his exit. However in order for the show to survive (even for another season
only), only one of them can front it and at this stage of the game the only
plausible choice is the man who still has much more to give.
Trust No-1: Always use the contacts that you have, and
Mulder knows that because of his ties to the X-Files and Scully that Doggett
will pretty much do whatever he asks of him (with some perfunctory objections).
Scully pushes Mulder away when he starts questioning the work of her Doctor and
a potential threat to her baby but he insists it is only because he cares about
her and her child so much. They need to make sure that everything goes as
smoothly as possible, that there are no nasty surprises.
Assistant Director: I love the almost parental concern that
Skinner has for Scully and the awkward ‘who’s the father?’ scene he shares with
Mulder.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘The child she is carrying is very
special.’
‘This isn’t about the X-Files, Scully, it is only about
you.’
Ugh: Like Per Manum we are dealing with babies with birth
defects pickled in jars. That’s revolting by any standards but especially
undignifying for the dead infants. At first I thought Doggett looked suitably
appalled because he was coming face to face with these horrors until the camera
cut away to a decapitated head in a jar. Lovely. The beheadings are very nicely
done (can you describe decapitation as nice?), especially the impressive
handling of one murder that sees the prop head fall to the floor in the same
shot as the slicing. It’s seamlessly, shockingly handled. You should never say
lines like ‘you have to keep a cool head’, you’re just asking for
trouble.
The Good: Despite Per Manum and the danger that Scully
walked into, the suggestion that Scully’s baby is a sought after commodity only
really comes into play here and the first indication is Lizzy Gill tampering
with Scully’s medication. In fact I have been pleasantly surprised with how the
pregnancy plot has been quietly played until now and handled in a very clever,
characterful way. The opening two parter used the pregnancy as a way of driving
home how lonely Scully is without Mulder and how desperate she was to find him,
Roadrunners was all the more tense and exciting because of her condition and
the secret about the baby was used as a constant wedge between Scully and
Doggett with her only coming to accept him fully once she has (inadvertently)
revealed that she is going to be having a baby. She had to trust him first.
Since Mulder’s return it has been used a symbol of their union and the source
of great jokes and a reason to remove Scully from the action and to give Mulder
something to do since he was torn from his office for good. And now it is the
lynchpin of the finale, the event that the season has been building to and one
where all the characters that season eight has built into an impressive
ensemble can come together to ensure goes without a hitch. It has been a very
fruitful plot device but also responsible for some fascinating character work
too. All this without highlighting it too much and making the show too
domestic. It was a very profitable exercise. Who would have thought that Billy
Miles would make such an effective villain? A cute, slight young man who under
any other circumstances would look utterly inoffensive but thrown into the
right narrative light takes on a whole new level of menace. It’s the Terminator
nature of this character that is so thrilling and terrifying, how nothing will
stop him from reaching his objective of securing Scully and her baby no matter
what her friends throw at him. You can pump bullets into this guy, run him down
with a car and shove him in a dump truck and he’ll be back. A killer who walks
very calmly after his victim is much more frightening than one who is in a
dreadful hurry. Billy Miles knows he will catch up with her eventually. Mulder,
Scully and Doggett all hanging out in Scully’s kitchen and discussing the
danger to her baby – this is an attractive line up of regulars that I could
have seen running further. The twist that Lizzy has been trying improve
Scully’s health and the health of her baby rather than kill it comes as an even
greater shock and opens a whole new can of worms. Why precisely would these
people want to help the birth of her baby along? Is there something special
about it? The news is Scully is giving birth to a perfect human child but with
no human frailties, the holy grail of biological science. We don’t know if this
will be substantiated at this point but it sure gives Carter a further thread
to pick up on next season…should the baby be born.
The Bad: It seems a little churlish to criticize the
unexplained plot elements of a two part storyline and so I will wait until the
conclusion to see how they are dealt with. Needless to say we still don’t know
why the experiments were run to create the human babies out of alien DNA, why
Lizzy was trying to promote the birth of Scully’s child or why it seems so
important to so many.
Pre Titles Sequence: How could David Duchovny vanish from
the series without one last voiceover? I rather like the description of birth
as ‘essence turned into existence.’ What Carter is talking about here is
something that is hotly debated – the miracle of life or a biological
phenomenon? Throwing the light on Scully’s pregnancy so boldly is pretty much a
necessity at this stage.
Moment to Watch Out For: After thirty minutes worth of
suggestions that something might be wrong with Scully’s baby and that she might
be in danger the lights snap out in her apartment and it is a race against time
to get her to safety. The following sequence is one of the tensest and most
exciting action sequences in The X-Files because there is so much at stake. The
last person you would ever suspect of running down Billy Miles and protecting
Scully is Krychek, which makes the moment such a great surprise. Mulder,
Skinner and Doggett have to be desperate to leave Scully in his hands whilst
they head off to tackle Billy Miles. The music is superb during this sequence,
especially during Skinner’s rooftop stand off.
Fashion Statement: It’s not until you see him in civvies
that you realise just how well built John Doggett is. Those suits really do
iron out any muscle.
Mythology: ‘We were surprisingly successful with a clone
from a human egg and alien DNA. DNA that the government had since 1947. Alien
babies, birthed by human mothers desperate to conceive.’
Foreboding: The big event is yet to come…
Result: What I really like about Essence is how it starts of
like your usual overly complicated and grisly mythology episode (albeit a good
one) and soon becomes something much more powerful (and simple) as the plot
coheres on one character – Scully and her baby. The second half of Essence is
where all the gold lies as the ensemble that has been brought together so
successfully for season eight all comes together (including Kychek and Reyes)
to ensure that Scully and her baby are kept safe. It also promotes what I have
been banging on about ever since Per Manum and that is season eights exquisite
handling of it’s characters and the various arcs that have woven through the
episodes. I have seen some deft handling of Mulder and Scully before but their
characterisation has often been inconsistent in the hands of so many different
writers over the years (and the overall effect of the pair has depended
entirely on whether Duchovny and Anderson are engaged with a particular episode
or not). With Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz entirely committed to proving
that The X-Files deserved an eight year, it feels as though they have very
cleverly plotted out the season in advance so that each character goes on a
very satisfying journey. Introducing terrific new characters (Doggett and
Reyes), highlighting old favourites (Skinner, Kersh, Margaret Scully and the
Gunmen) and giving Scully in particular some of her finest and most challenging
material to date, season eight has been all about the impressive cast of
characters that this show has to offer. Of all of them Robert Patrick’s Doggett
deserves the most credit and I have been riveted by his journey from suspected
enemy to ultimate ally. Essence contains all the mangled plotting that polluted
many a mythology episode in the past but it is rooted in character and that
makes all the difference. It really makes me angry when people dismiss the last
two seasons of The X-Files, suggesting that show is running out of steam just
because Mulder is out of action for the most part. Season eight in particular
is phenomenal, it might just be the strongest overall collection of episodes
since the series began. Check out the last ten minutes of Essence and tell me
again that the show didn’t deserve to keep going. Compelling stuff:
9/10
Existence written by Chris Carter and directed by Kim
Manners
What’s it about: Scully is about to pop and everybody wants
a piece of the baby…
Brains’n’Beauty: There’s a lovely chemistry between Scully and Reyes which bodes well for season
nine. One thing The X-Files has always shied away from in the past is
introducing any kind of female character that can come close to dominating
Scully so there has never really been the chance to pair Gillian Anderson up
with any female actress. It looks like they have been missing a trick because
they work so well together, with none of the rivalry you might expect. The
moment where Scully tells Reyes that she reminds her of her sister tells you
everything that you need to know with regards to what Carter was aiming for
with their relationship. They have thought this through well because under any
other circumstances Scully and Reyes might have been rivals but they both have
a male partner in waiting and instead of expending their energy fighting for
attention of Mulder/Doggett (like Scully and Fowley) they can enjoy each
other’s company and do some excellent work together. Please don’t think I am
saying that when you put two women together the only way you can get them to
interact is to have them fight over a man, but that does seem to be an
unlikable convention of television that crops up repeatedly, and on this show
too. I have to give Gillian Anderson her dues, she has the weight of thousands
of televised pregnancy scenes against her to try and do something different and
she succeeds through the intensity of her performance. Scully is determined to
fight to give birth and to protect her baby, surrounded by what she thinks is
hostile forces that have come to take him from her.
Closed Mind: Doesn’t it just feel so right that Doggett was
born in such an unworldly location? Where life is tough and you have to be a
real grafter to get by.
Trust No-1: Doggett asks Mulder where his quest for the
truth stops, a what point does he walk away from all this danger and just live
his life. It is a question that he cannot satisfactorily answer.
Rat Boy: By all accounts, Nick Lea was a bit fed up with
playing a character as obscure and who turned up as sporadically as Krychek.
Who can blame him? He has hardly been a consistent character or one who has
enjoyed natural development. He’s basically wheeled out whenever some mythology
backstory needs to be explained or when Carter feels like the fans need a fan
boy thrill. I think he was pretty patient to take the character to this point.
I maintain that his first episode is definitely his best, one where the
potential of the character (a blue eyed boy in the Smoking Man’s pocket) was
really exploited and everything in between has been either too violent, too
agenda driven (his homo-erotic advances Mulder) or too convoluted. His surprise
appearance in the previous episode was probably the best shock to involve the
character since the end of Sleepless and to give Carter his credit he gets a
terrific final scene in Existence, one that I have never forgotten since I
first watched it. But first one last confrontation between Krychek and Mulder,
a relationship that was borne out of duplicity and has been maintained due to
their mutual hatred and love of giving each other a battering. All the usual
tropes are there – Krychek calls him ‘brother’ and is waving a gun in his face,
Mulder accuses him of being a coward and a liar but the difference this time is
that this really is the end. That manages to salvage a great deal. And when the
moment comes it isn’t Mulder who gets the chance to pull the trigger and put
both Krychek and Lea out of their misery, it is Skinner. The man who this rat
of a traitor has been torturing, mentally and physically for the past couple of
years. It feels very satisfying to see him finally being put down like a dog
and final effects shot of the bullet coming at the audience in slow motion
captures the moment memorably. Probably the most punch the air way Krychek
could have been written out. And I especially like the way Mulder watches
Skinner commit murder but doesn’t revel in the moment but instead looks quite
shocked that the long held rivalry between him and Krychek is finally over.
Bravo.
New Ager: Reyes is terrified to deliver Scully’s baby and
has to suck down on a fag or two to pluck up the courage to get started.
Perhaps Carter felt that Reyes was coming across as a little too spaced out but
the ‘I feel energies’ angle was dropped when she became a regular. A shame,
because I rather like the idea of somebody a little kooky working in the
X-Files office. I don’t really buy the criticism that Reyes is a forced
eccentric, a character constructed out of idiosyncratic ticks and quirks…at
least until she started to imitate whale song. At that point I thought she
might have gone insane. Annabeth Gish’s warm and witty performance still shines
through, smoothing over any deficiencies in the writing.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘I’ve never delivered a baby’ ‘Well I’ve
never had one. That makes us both beginners.’
‘You investigate what I tell you…’ ‘And you put me on the
X-Files. That’s what I’m investigating.’
‘That doesn’t make him any less of a miracle.’
Ugh: Watch out for the spectacularly nasty moment where
Agent Reyes tosses a bucket of scalding water at Rebecca and leaves her face
burnt and blistered. Don’t get between this woman and the baby she is trying to
deliver.
The Good: Whoever thought the idea of the young and sweet
Billy Miles turning out to be the most advanced and unstoppable super soldier
deserves a clap on the back because this potentially ropey idea translates
extremely well on screen. Whether it is Zachary Ansley’s performance, the pacy
and dark direction or simply because Miles is such an inoffensive looking
character I couldn’t tell you (a combination of all three is the answer) but he
really does come across as a genuine threat, whether he is tossing Agent Reyes
about like a rag doll or he is bursting through a lift door and knocking
Skinner unconscious. Shelley Mack gives a convincing turn as the officer that
turns up at the abandoned town to aid with the protection of Scully’s baby.
Rebecca is hard edged, practical and full of surprises. Candlelit, rustic and
intimate, the late night scenes between Scully and Reyes in the spruced up
shack in Doggett’s home town are rather beautiful. It’s a lovely rural
location, contrasting against the usual office sets and underground car parks.
How brilliant to have scenes from Terminator playing out but this time with
Robert Patrick as the good guy. Agent Crane goes flying over the bonnet as
Doggett tries to take him out and seconds later he is clinging onto he side of
the vehicle and smashing the window in with his fist. These super soldiers know
nothing about loyalty, as soon as it appears that Agent Crane is of no further
use, Knowle Rohrer mows him down and then ploughs his car into a wall.
Spectacularly violent, these are phenomenal action sequences of the kind only
The X-Files can muster. Whilst I do think the religious metaphors are pushed
too far on this show at times, the Lone Gunmen showing up as the Three Wise Men
is too cute for words.
Pre Titles Sequence: Billy Miles turns up in a morgue as
hamburger after falling into a garbage crusher at the end of the last episode
and starts to regenerate thanks to the power of his metallic vertebrate. I know,
it sounds nuts but it is a an unshowy and quite way to begin what is a very
packed and mental episode.
Moment to Watch Out For: No more ridiculous excuses, Mulder
and Scully finally share a long, intimate kiss and show the audience what they
really think of each other. Warmly played by Duchovny and Anderson, this is the
apotheosis of their relationship. Everything feels like it is coming up
smelling of roses.
Mythology: ‘There was
a rumoured plan out of the Cold War, planned to create a super soldier. What
you’re chasing is a prototype and he’s after your partner Scully. You may not
be aware that she was part of a programme herself. Six years ago Agent Scully
was taken in a military operation staged as an abduction. They put a chip in
the back of her neck to monitor her. It was also used to make her pregnant with
the first organic version of that super soldier.’ So Scully is giving birth
to the perfect human being, one with no human frailties and who will grow up to
be the ultimate killing machine. Nothing in her life is ever simple, is it?
Actually I’m being a little unfair. This is The X-Files, not Melrose Place and
had the pregnancy passed by without any kind of paranormal angle it would have
felt very mundane, another soap opera element for its own sake. The idea that
Scully has something to fear about the birth of her impending child is rather
neat and I pretty much love how they handle the super baby next season (except
for the religion angle but we’ll get to that next year). For now let’s bask in
the idea that the baby that Scully has been pining for since season four might
turn out to be something very dangerous indeed. Very dangerous and much sought
after, and that gives the this last episode something worth fighting for.
Foreboding: Sinister happenings in the FBI building at the
dead of night involving Kersh. Doggett deservedly breaks the news to is
superior that his office is under investigation. What a satisfying moment, I
can’t wait to see how it is resolved.
Result: Packed with so many riches I am quite exhilarated
after watching it, Existence caps off a riveting eighth season of The X-Files
in great style. The first half of the episode sets things beautifully with
questions of infidelity at the FBI and Scully an Reyes setting up home out in
the sticks before the pace quickens exponentially in the second half and I was
left clinging for dear life as I was thrown from one incredible set piece to
another. At the heart of all of this is the coming together of the incredible
season eight ensemble to ensure that Scully’s baby is born safely, such a
lovely, simple idea and yet it is given a forbidding touch with the subtle
suggestions that the baby might not be quite as innocent as it appear. In the
shows eighth year the creators have managed to successfully reinvent the brand
just when it felt as though it had gone to the dogs, to introduce several new
central characters, to kick start a new mythology angle and to pull together
all the characters into an engaging ensemble. The Scully’s pregnancy/Mulder’s
abduction and fall from grace storylines that have played out this year have
provided a solid backbone to the season (something that season seven sorely
lacked) and the return of focus to the characters and their lives has proven
vital to its success. Robert Patrick’s Doggett is the standout star and he gets
to triumphantly walk away from season eight unencumbered by Mulder, with a
spanking new partner by his side and the satisfaction of having found his place
in the show. The future of the X-Files looks bright, at least for the time
being. Not forgetting Mulder and Scully as well, this incredible pair of
characters that have seen us through the first seven years of the show. Their
relationship is seen out in style two, with the pair of them acknowledging
their feelings and sharing a kiss whist holding their baby between them. It’s a
shame that Mulder would return at all because this would have made the perfect
final scene. A phenomenal end to the shows finest year: 10/10