Founder's Mutation

"Founder's Mutation"
The X-Files episode
Episode no. Season 10
Episode 2
Directed by James Wong
Written by James Wong
Production code 1AYW05
Original air date January 25, 2016
Running time 44 minutes
Guest actors

"Founder's Mutation" is the second episode of the tenth season of The X-Files. It was written and directed by James Wong, and aired on January 25, 2016 on the Fox network. Guest stars include Doug Savant, Rebecca Wisocky, Omari Newton, Aaron Douglas, Vik Sahay, Ryan Robbins, Christine Willes, and Kacey Rohl.

Plot

At the headquarters of Nugenics Technology, researcher Dr. Sanjay arrives to work in a troubled state, hearing a mysterious high-pitched noise in his head. At a staff meeting, the noise becomes so overwhelming that he flees and locks himself inside a server room, where he begins frantically deleting data. Desperate to stop the noise, he shoves a letter opener through his eardrum and into his brain, killing himself. Before doing so, he writes something on the palm of his left hand.

With the X-Files now re-opened by the FBI, agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully are dispatched to investigate the incident. Receiving little cooperation from Nugenics in the investigation, Mulder steals Sanjay's mobile phone and contacts the last person he called. At a Washington bar, Mulder meets a man named Gupta, who is soon revealed to be Sanjay's secret lover. Gupta tells Mulder that Sanjay had been distant and expressed concern that his "kids" were dying. Meanwhile, Scully performs an autopsy on Sanjay and discovers the words "founder's mutation" written on Sanjay's left palm, a reference to Nugenics' reclusive owner Dr. Augustus Goldman, an individual known to employees as "The Founder". Upon searching Sanjay's apartment in Dupont Circle, the agents discover several photographs of horribly disfigured children. Police arrive, and Mulder suddenly becomes overwhelmed by a high pitched noise which only he can hear, mirroring the incident that ultimately lead to Sanjay's suicide. The sound somehow conveys the message "find her" to Mulder.

Upon presenting their findings to FBI Assistant Director Walter Skinner, Mulder and Scully are told that the case is closed in order to placate the Department of Defense, which has ties to Goldman and Nugenics. Privately, however, Skinner reveals that the agents are to continue. Observing footage of birds which flocked near the Nugenics building at the time of Sanjay's death, Mulder theorizes that the noise is a frequency normally unheard by humans. Citing Nugenics' reluctance to assist in the investigation, the agents visit the hospital where Scully works in order to get in touch with Goldman, who happens to be one of the hospital's biggest financial donors. While there, they are approached by a young woman named Agnes, who expresses a desire to leave and claims her unborn child is abnormal. Outside, Mulder and Scully discuss the possibility that Goldman is experimenting on pregnant women for "the project". They also reminisce about their son William, who remains in hiding. Later, Scully has a fantasy about living with William, shown as a teenager going to school, having an accident and breaking his arm, and having alien, lizard like black eyes.

Mulder and Scully receive approval from Goldman for a meeting. Goldman purports to conduct research on children suffering from debilitating genetic conditions. During a tour of his facility, they witness a confrontation in which one of Goldman's patients causes objects to move on their own. Soon afterward, they learn that Agnes has been struck and killed by a car, with her fetus mysteriously missing. The agents next question Goldman's wife Jackie, who has been confined to an insane asylum and claims her husband is keeping her there against her will. She recalls an incident in which her young daughter fell into a swimming pool and was thought to have drowned after spending ten minutes submerged. Jumping into the water, Jackie is shocked to find her daughter instead breathing normally underwater. Realizing that Goldman experimented on her while pregnant, Jackie fled but wrecked her car. Under attack by the noise – her unborn child's attempt to communicate with her telepathically – Jackie cut her uterus open with a kitchen knife; the baby escaped and was presumed dead.

Utilizing security footage, Mulder and Scully discover that a janitor working one floor directly beneath Sanjay at Nugenics reacted strangely at the precise moment of Sanjay's suicide. The agents drive to the remote home of the janitor, Kyle Gilligan, and are confronted by his adoptive mother. Mulder is once again incapacitated by the high pitched noise which only he can hear. Noticing a nearby flock of birds, Scully quickly locates Kyle, forces him to stop, and takes him in to custody. Kyle reveals that he killed Sanjay unintentionally and demands to meet his sister, who is one of Goldman's test subjects. Kyle is taken to Goldman's lab, where he is presented with a girl who Goldman claims to be his sister. However, Kyle quickly realizes that the girl is a decoy and not his actual sister, and he runs down the corridor where he encounters the irate patient from earlier – his real sister, Molly. After speaking to each other telepathically, the siblings use their telepathic abilities to repel the agents. Utilizing the same high pitched sound that had earlier killed Sanjay and incapacitated Mulder, they kill Goldman and flee the Nugenics building.

Production

"Founder's Mutation" was written and directed by James Wong, making it his first directorial contribution to The X-Files since 1996's "Musings of a Cigarette Smoking Man", as well as his first writing credit since 1997's "Never Again", both of which aired as part of the show's fourth season.[1][2][3] "Founder's Mutation" was the fifth of the season's episodes to have been written and filmed, and it was originally going to be the fifth episode to air.[1][4] However, it was later chosen to air the day after "My Struggle".[4] The episode guest stars Doug Savant, Rebecca Wisocky, Omari Newton, Aaron Douglas, Vik Sahay, Ryan Robbins, Christine Willes, and Kacey Rohl.[5] Willes previously played a different character, Agent Karen Kosseff, in seasons two and four.[6]

Reception

Ratings

"Founder's Mutation" debuted on January 25, 2016, and was watched by 9.67 million viewers. It scored a 3.2 Nielsen rating in the 18- to 49-year-old demographic (Nielsen ratings are audience measurement systems that determine the audience size and composition of television programming in the United States), which means that the episode was seen by 3.2 percent of all individuals aged 18- to 49-years old who were watching television at the time of the episode's airing.[7] Although the episode marked a decrease in ratings from the previous episode, it was noted that the viewership remained "startlingly large".[8] This episode was also the highest-rated broadcast program of the night.[7]

Reviews

Alex McCown of The A.V. Club reviewed the first three episodes of the revival and awarded them collectively a "B+". Although he largely derided the season's opening episode, "My Struggle", he argued that the season "immediately course corrects" with Wong’s "Founder’s Mutation"; he called the "smart" and "unsettling" episode "a solid return to form".[9] He felt that the episode's dialogue allowed the audience to remember "what we like about these characters, and why they work so well together".[9] Darren Franich of Entertainment Weekly awarded the episode a "B", arguing that "Founder's Mutation" is "fun for fans of the show" and "an improvement over the premiere".[10] Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com wrote that "Founder's Mutation" "perfectly blends show mythology (including Mulder and Scully’s kid) with a modern plot".[11] Kaly Soto of The New York Times gave the episode a favorable review, noting that it gave her "faith in this new iteration" and praising Anderson's performance in particular: "Gillian Anderson does a flawless job of imbuing Scully with a sense of grief over William, her voice brittle and her expressions slow and weary".[12] Matthew Chernov of Variety wrote that unlike the first episode, the chemistry between Mulder and Scully "seems much closer to the playful banter we're used to from the good old days" and that the script "allows Gillian Anderson to do some of the best work in the series so far".[13]

References

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 X-Files News [XFilesNews] (August 3, 2015). "Episode No. 5 of #XFilesRevival is going to be written and directed by #JamesWong @thexfiles #thexfiles" (Tweet). Retrieved August 4, 2015.
  2. Meisler 1998, pp. 75–82.
  3. Hurwitz and Knowles 2008, p. 105.
  4. 1 2 Quijada, Avi (January 6, 2016). "TXF Season 10: "Founder's Mutation" will air on 01/25". XFiles.news. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  5. "(XF-1005) 'Founder's Mutation'". The Futon Critic. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  6. Roots, Kimberly (January 26, 2016). "The X-Files Revival Easter Eggs". TVLine. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  7. 1 2 Porter, Rick (January 26, 2016). "Monday Final Ratings: 'Scorpion' and 'Superstore' Adjust Up". TV by the Numbers. Tribune Digital Ventures. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  8. Hibberd, James (January 26, 2016). "X-Files ratings remain huge for second episode". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  9. 1 2 McCown, Alex (January 18, 2016). "Meet the New X-Files, Same as the Old X-Files". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
  10. Franich, Darren (January 19, 2016). "The X-Files EW Review: Never Better, Never Worse". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  11. Tallerico, Brian (January 2, 2016). "Return of The X-Files Stumbles But Quickly Recovers". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  12. Soto, Kaly (January 25, 2016). "'The X-Files' Season 10, Episode 2: That's More Like It". The New York Times. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  13. Chernov, Matthew (January 25, 2016). "'The X-Files' Recap: Mulder and Scully Get Back to Their Roots in Episode 2". Variety. Retrieved January 30, 2016.

Bibliography

External links

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