The X-files has been closed. Mulder is on routine wire tap surveillance and Scully is teaching at Quantico. There appears to be contact from extra-terrestrials as a message sent on the Voyager spacecraft is returned to a now closed centre in Puerto Rico. They sometimes meet under cover, but don’t even speak in the corridors of the FBI headquarters. We see a flashback to the moment when Mulder’s sister was abducted. Mulder visits Senator Mattheson, who seems to have funded some of the X-Files work. He tells Mulder to go to Puerto Rico to investigate the contact from space. He needs to hurry to get there first. As Mulder disappears from his duties, Scully is questioned about his whereabouts. At the observatory in Puerto Rico, Mulder encounters a scared local man, who may have seen an alien. As a storm picks up, the man runs off only to be found dead by Mulder, apparently scared to death. Meanwhile, Scully has tracked Mulder down and manages to avoid the many agents following her as she flies to Puerto Rico. At the observatory and Mulder experiences something similar to the night his sister was taken. He thinks he sees an alien but wakes up to Scully. Did he really see something or was he delusional? As the military retrieval team arrive, Mulder and Scully escape, taking the recording with them. They manage to get away, but back in Skinner’s office, find the tape has been wiped. CSM threatens Mulder’s career, but Skinner throws him out after finding out her had Mulder’s phone tapped.
This first episode of a new series does not disappoint. We finally get to see the event that shaped Mulder’s obsession and it is good to see a beefed up role for Skinner. There is some indication that he may not be as against the X-Files as he initially seemed. The relationship between Mulder and Scully is played out well, particularly in the early meeting between them. There is a clear increase in budget this series, with a well executed chase scene near the end.
Episode 2 – Host
On a Russian ship, off the coast of New Jersey, a man is pulled into the sewage tank by an unseen creature. Mulder is sent by Skinner to investigate the man’s body when it is found in the sewers and manages to get Scully’s help. Though he initially thinks it is just a routine case, Mulder soon realises that there is more to it, particularly after he is contacted by ‘a friend at the FBI’. Another man is attacked in the sewers and during the autopsy Scully finds a fluke worm. A large, humanoid worm is then caught at a sewage treatment. Mulder presents the case to Skinner who seems happy with the rather unusual conclusions. He implies that he wants the X-files reopened. As the monster is being transferred, it escapes, only for Mulder to find and kill it. Scully’s research shows that it was a mutant parasite, a result of the Chernobyl disaster. At the end we see that there may be another still in the sewers.
Though this plays out as a stand alone episode, there is important plot progression with the introduction of a new inside informant. This introduction adds some interest but it makes me question why they killed off Deepthroat if they are just to replace him with a new but similar character. The scenes in Skinner’s office are particularly good and show how much Duchovny has now got into Mulder’s character. This is a fairly gruesome episode and the monster effects are not very pretty – not for the faint-hearted.
Episode 3 – Blood
People in a Franklin, Pennsyllvania are going on unexplained murder/suicide sprees, despite the small towns peaceful history. It appears that electronic machines are giving people messages to kill. One man, Ed, is getting these messages but seems to be resisting them. The sight of blood appears to be a trigger. Muder discovers the connection is an insecticide that has been sprayed throughout the town. With help from The Lone Gunmen, he finds this chemical enhances paranoia and phobias. They begin to test the town but are too late to stop Ed who climbs up a clock tower at the college and starts shooting. Mulder gets to him before he kills anyone and he is taken away.
This is one of those episodes that starts intriguingly but just isn’t capable of carrying off the high concept. The exaggerated fears is an excellent idea but the electronic interference is rather less well explained. Why are some more prone to being affected than others? Why, as a true paranoid, does Mulder not suffer any affects when he comes into contact with the spray? Scully continues to takes something of a back seat, though she makes important contributions.
Episode 4 – Sleepless
Two men are killed in unexplained circumstances. Though one seems to have died by fire and the other by shooting, according to internal examination, there are no external wounds or damages associated with these modes of death. Mulder connects the two men to sleep studies and a platoon of soldiers during the Vietnam War. Mulder is assisted by a new partner, Agent Alex Krycek, whom he is not too keen on getting help from. With assistance from Mulders new informant, Mr. X, the culprit is tracked down as Augustus Cole, a member of the platoon who were operated on in order to completely eradicate their need for sleep. The plat9oon had gone off the radar and commited numerous atrocities under the influence of extreme insomnia, and Cole is attempting to seek redemption by killing all those involved. He is somehow capable of making people hallucinate so severely that even their bodies feel the hallucination. Mulder and Krycek corner Cole but he forces Kyrcek to shoot him dead. At the end of the episode we see that Krycek is spying on Mulder. There are concerns about Scully and something is agreed to be done about her.
This is a strong episode and the Wes Craven influences are clear, from the dream induced deaths to Tony Todd’s involvement as the insomniac killer. We finally get to meet Mr. X and he appears a lot less warm and friendly than Deepthroat was. Krycek’s introduction at this stage is crucial though his future role through the show is not yet evident. Scully again works in the background as the makers of the show work to explain her absence due to Gillian Anderson’s pregnancy.
Episode 5 – Duane Barry
Mulder is called in to help negotiate with a man who has taken 5 people hostage. The man is Duane Barry, an ex FBI agent who claims to have had multiple encounters with UFOs and aliens. He has escaped from a psychiatric hospital and taken a doctor hostage. Mulder swaps himself with an injured hostage and gains Duane’s trust by discussing details of his sister’s abduction. Meanwhile, Scully has looked into Duane’s background and finds he was shot in the head, causing serious brain damage that makes him a pathological liar. She warns Mulder not to trust or believe him. Mulder tricks Duane into going to the doorway where he is shot by a sniper and injured. He is taken to hospital where they find small metal implants and drill holes in his teeth – just like the stories he told. Scully has one of the pieces of metal and finds a barcode like etching in it. When in a supermarket, she tries scanning the shard of metal only for it to send the electronics wild. Duane wakes up in hospital and sees himself surrounded by alien figures. He flees. Meanwhile, Scully ;eaves Mulder an answering machine message about the barcode. When Scully hears a noise and goes to investigate, she pulls back the blinds to reveal Duane. We hear a window break and Scully scream for Mulder’s help...
With great performances and tense direction this is The X-Files at its best. You can see just how far it has come in quality simply since the first season. The scenes of Duane’s abduction and torture are disturbing and eerily shot and the ending is edge of your seat stuff. This is a hugely important episode in the whole X-Files mythology and is completely absorbing.
Episode 6 – Ascension
As Mulder chases Duane Barry in an attempt to rescue Scully, Krycek tries to stop him. He reaches Scully just too late, as she is taken away – possibly in a helicopter, possibly in a spaceship. Duane Barry dies in custody, probably poisoned by Krycek. Skinner reopens the X-files after discovering Agent Krycek’s betrayals.
Another excellent episode with a great action sequence and a lot of intrigue. We get to see the true nature of Krycek and the series is certainly going to face some changes as Scully becomes absent for a while. It is good to see Skinner become something of a reluctant ally of Mulder at the end.
Episode 7 – 3
A bit of a filler this one. It is something of a break from the intensity of the plot from the last few episodes, but it fails to match up to them in standards of writing and execution. A different, but ultimately unengaging take on the vampire story. It is the first time we actually see Mulder involved with another woman. However, Scully’s absence from this episode means it fails to reach the same quality of character development..
Episode 8 – One Breath
Scully’s body is mysteriously returned to a hospital, but she is in a coma and may never wake up. As her family try to decide whether to switch off her life support, Mulder investigates how she got there. Mulder is led to CSM with help, probably from Skinner but lets him live, presumably to try to get to the truth. Reluctantly, Mr. X tells Mulder that those responsible for Scully’s abduction will break into his apartment to get evidence. He tells Mulder he must kill them. Though his initial intentions are to carry this out, a conversation with Scully’s sister makes him change his mind and go to the hospital to be with Scully. She wakes up the next day.
A fine return to form – and of course a fine return for Scully. Mulder seems to get no closer to the truth but we find out more about those who help him – in a shocking sequence with Mr. X , and those who hinder him – in a cracking showdown with CSM. Skinner’s role is gradually beefed up and he has a couple of excellent scenes – one showing his power struggle with CSM and one genuinely moving scene between him and Mulder. This is also a visually striking episode – with Mulder in a ‘dark’ place as he seeks revenge for Scully’s abduction in stark contrast to scenes set in Scully’s consciousness. We also meet Scully’s sister, Melissa for the first time and see a return for her father.