CARTER, Chris (Creator); “The X-Files – The Event Series”, 2016,
Twentieth Century Fox
Well,
they’re back.
(Wait.
I guess I probably should have said “They’re ba-A-ack!” because like some kind
of noisy, undead horror they just will not stay down...)
There’s
been a lot of talk about getting the band back together as far as this vehicle
is concerned and I’m guessing they reached a tipping-point between not doing it
and doing it and the ayes took the day. To my mind the original series simply
petered out in such a godawful fashion that I would have preferred them to just
let it be and to not get back into the ring for one more try. As Yoda said, “do
or do not: there is no try” so I guess the ‘let’s do it!’ thinking came out on
top.
This
“Event Series” was played on free-to-air TV here and I caught the first episode
with a sense of trepidation. It’s not that I wasn’t a fan of the show – I own
the whole thing on DVD so that should give you an indication - it’s just that,
for me, it all broke down into two sections: episodes that were creepy,
thought-provoking and very cool (a la “Night
Stalker”), and the Mythology episodes (so-called). Watching Scully and
Mulder go mano-a-mano with the
“there’s a conspiracy!/there is no conspiracy!” two-step was like watching
paint dry. Every time they got close to the wizard behind the curtain, the bad
guys (the next lot of bad guys) came
in and moved the goal posts. By Season Nine, credibility was stretched so thin
that there was nothing left to do but just pull the plug and call it a day.
Of
course it didn’t help that the two stars were carping on about being typecast
and wanting a larger share of the profits, opportunities for movies, bigger
trailers, blah, blah, blah. Obviously, any job can get dull after awhile. So
Duchovny went off to make a movie about chasing aliens and Anderson spent time
with her family before moving into theatre and on to some fantastic BBC dramas.
I don’t blame them; and I don’t blame them for wanting to take the old vehicle
for another spin around the block.
So
I watched the first episode and guess what? It was a by-the-numbers Mythology
episode and my eyes started to glaze over. The first episode is a busy
talk-fest, with Duchovny rattling through all the old conspiracy stand-bys,
disposing of things that don’t work anymore (post 9/11) and ramping-up or
adding things that could be hammered into a workable X-Files backstory leading
into 2020. All new characters, or any action, introduced in this instalment was
secondary to Mulder’s manifesto and I had – as they say – a very bad feeling
about all this.
In
fact, so put off was I by all this that I chose to ignore the rest of the
series. It wasn’t until the other day when I saw the show available on DVD in
my local supermarket that I thought I’d give it another try. This time I
ignored episode one and jumped straight to episode two. Having chatted up a
storm in the previous ep., here Scully and Mulder put theory into practise and
go after the new bad guys. They find a covert medical establishment filled with
horribly-deformed kids who have been experimented upon using alien DNA. Most of
the children are just horribly mutated, but some have super-powers, including a
boy who can stimulate auditory nerves using infra-sound and who rescues his
telepathic sister from the centre. The evil founder of the institute is killed
– getting his just deserts – and the kids escape to start a new life elsewhere.
Scully and Mulder go back to the newly-reopened X-Files office to write up
their bemusement.
On
the whole this was a pretty – meh - episode. It felt like it was just there to
carry some stuff over from the pilot and to give the show a reason to re-open
the X-Files bureau (also to drag out gallons of latex to make some truly
disgusting deformity make-ups). If this show can be considered a body of work,
then this is the connective tissue.
Episode
three. I had a coffee and sat down squarely before the TV, killed all
distractions and got ready to grit my teeth. To my great surprise, this turned
out be a pure Monster-Of-The-Week episode and, even better, one written by
Darin Morgan! Shades of Jose Chung, this was what the doctor ordered! Right
from the start I was captivated – Scully and Mulder track down a were-creature
that’s been killing hikers in nearby forests. Fortunately for their
investigation, witnesses have provided a sketch of the were-creature;
unfortunately, the witnesses are the two stoners who provided equally dubious
evidence during the “War of the
Coprophages” and at Heuvelman's Lake where poor Queequeg got taken by the
Lake Monster.
In
this romp, full of Morgan’s trademark unreliable narrations and bait-and-switch
finger-pointing, the were-creature is a Tuatara-like lizard-man, played
eloquently-enough by Kiwi, Rhys Darby, dressed as Karl Kolchak – when he is
dressed – and flattening his vowels like there’s no tomorrow. This was pure
magic: Duchovny and Anderson obviously enjoy these stories as their hilarity
clearly gets full rein. For once, Anderson doesn’t have to get all teary-eyed
about her missing son William while Duchovny tries desperately to keep up with
her.
After
this, we have a story about a bunch of gentrification do-gooders trying to
re-develop a part of Philadelphia by bulldozing and power-hosing all the
homeless people out of one district and into another, where they’re equally
unwanted. Rocketing to their defense, is the “Nose Band-Aid Trash Man”, a
superhumanly strong terrifying figure that shows up in a garbage truck, tears
heads and limbs off those who would gain from the homeless tribe’s woes, and
then packs himself back into the trash truck while it self-propels into the
night. And yes, he has a band-aid on his nose.
Scully
gets side-lined by her mother’s death by heart-attack while Mulder takes the
running. He tracks down a street artist with the tag “Trash Man” and discovers
that this guy believes the monster is a “tulpa”,
or thought form, from Buddhist doctrine, raising havoc in the street peoples’
defense. Interestingly, Mulder debunks this straight away, despite it being the
rationale for several of his own earlier cases. Either way, the street artist
it seems is the one who dreamed up the creature and our dynamic duo eventually
convince him to put paid to it. Or does he? This is one of those eerie X-Files
episodes that has a very scary core and which only, very shakily, gets
resolved...
Next
we tackle suicide bombers and, after witnessing a mindless attack of this sort
upon a Texan art gallery, we learn one of the bombers – what’s left of him
anyway – is still “alive” in a nearby hospital. In Washington, Scully and
Mulder are visited by two young FBI agents – Miller and Einstein – keen to know
if they have any freaky insights into communicating with the mostly dead. Well,
Miller is keen to know, anyway.
Co-ordinating
their attack, Scully ensnares Miller while Mulder sidelines Einstein, each with
their own takes on somehow finding a means of communicating with the dying
bomber. Scully jury-rigs some normal scientific procedures and makes an ECG
Monitor do the job of an MRI scanner, and determines that, despite appearances,
the bomber is hearing things and responding to them on some level. Mulder
convinces Einstein to give him an extract of psilocybin mushrooms to augment
his consciousness so as to be able to penetrate the veils between life and
quasi-death. The mushroom trip is very amusing, showcasing Duchovny’s
boot-scootin’ skills and offering the Lone Gunmen a photo opportunity.
Of
course, the “mushroom extract” is a placebo (niacin) and the day is won by all
four members of the team pooling their information – however bizarrely obtained
– and saving the day. The episode ends with some heavy preaching by Mulder and
Scully concerning radicalism and love versus hate, some of which is very
prettily written but most of which sounds like axes grinding.
The
last episode resolves most of the issues from episode one and is also entitled
“My Struggle”. One of the (other) things that bugged me about the original
series, was the producers’ fondness for all things Nazi. Any excuse to get the
cast into jack-boots and they took it. Shows with creepy German titles,
hark-backs to Nazi mysticism – there was always just a tad too much relish
being thrown at these features for my liking. The title to these two episodes
is a case in point: “My Struggle” in German is “Mein Kampf”. How about that?
Got to hand it to Chris ‘Captain Obvious’ Carter, he knows how to wield a blunt
instrument.
So, feeling all covered with neo-Nazi ick once more, I
clenched my teeth for another Mythology quagmire, and I wasn’t disappointed. In
this instalment Cancer Man cries ‘havoc!’ and unleashes the dogs of calculated
global decimation, causing outbreaks of anthrax to begin de-populating the Earth.
Barely in time, Scully and Einstein work out that alien DNA, added to some
people’s smallpox inoculations, will save a minority of humans, so they culture
up the DNA that Scully identified in her own genome in episode one and create a
vaccine. Just like that. Meanwhile, Agent Miller drives to Cancer Man’s abode
and saves Mulder’s butt. Just as they arrive back in Washington and the
vaccine, an alien craft appears overhead and ...the credits roll.
I
assume that means “X-Files: Season 10”
is on its way (although IMDb is already calling this Season 10…).
Is
this a good thing? I’m not sure. This little run down memory lane has
underscored all the things I both liked and hated about the show. If a new
season does eventuate, does this mean that I’m going to be enjoying two out of
every six episodes, for a – roughly – 30% approval rate? The inclusion of
Miller and Einstein in the last two eps didn’t convince me that they’d make
good replacements for Duchovny and Anderson if those two decided to fade into
the background once more. Miller is a walking haircut with no personality and
Einstein is a badly-named caricature of Scully without the acting chops to
really pull it off. As a foursome they did okay; but Miller and Einstein ain’t
Scully and Mulder.
I
think this “event” has done little more than urge me to re-visit “The Night Stalker” and watch “Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose” once
more. Apart from that – meh.
Three
tentacled horrors.
No comments:
Post a Comment