Mythology of The X-Files

The mythology of The X-Files, sometimes referred to as its "mytharc" by the show's staff and fans, follows the quest of FBI Special Agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny), a believer in supernatural phenomena, and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), his skeptical partner. Their boss, FBI Assistant Director Walter Skinner, was also often involved. Beginning with season 8, another skeptic named John Doggett, and Monica Reyes, a believer like Mulder, were also introduced. The overarching story, which spans events as early as the 1940s, is built around a government conspiracy to hide the truth about alien existence and their doomsday plan. Not all episodes advanced the mythology plot, but the ones that did were often set up by Mulder or Scully via an opening monologue.

Most mythological elements in The X-Files relate to extraterrestrial beings, referred to by the writers as "Colonists", whose primary goal is to colonize Earth. Late in the series, this was revealed to have been planned for the year 2012.

Episodes

This list of mythology episodes is taken from official sources, The X-Files Mythology range of DVDs and the book The Complete X-Files: Behind the Series, the Myths and the Movies. Differences between the DVDs and the book are shown, where appropriate.

Chronology

Season 1

FBI Special Agent Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) has made a name for himself, "Spooky Mulder," working on X-Files—unexplained cases which may be paranormal in origin. He is appointed a partner in these investigations—Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson)—with his superiors hoping that she will be able to debunk and discredit his work. Their first case together is the investigation of possible abductions in Oregon, which falters when their evidence is destroyed in a fire.[1][2] A later case, involving the disappearance of a United States Air Force test pilot, sees the introduction of secretive informant Deep Throat (Jerry Hardin), who continues to provide the agents sensitive information.[3][4] This help is supplemented by conspiracy theorist group The Lone Gunmen, who are contacted for help in a further abduction case.[5][6] Deep Throat is killed, however, when he helps the agents uncover details of a government human cloning program, and the X-Files unit is closed shortly thereafter.[7][8]

Season 2

Unable to continue his work with Scully, Mulder obtains information about possible extraterrestrial contact in Puerto Rico, finding that the SETI program at the Arecibo Observatory is being forcibly closed.[9][10] Although the pair are allowed to resume their work, Scully is later kidnapped by an unhinged multiple alien abductee, Duane Barry. Barry takes Scully to a hilltop where she is then abducted, presumably by aliens.[11][12][13] She is found comatose at a later date, having mysteriously arrived at a hospital, and recovers several days later.[14][15] Mulder receives a call from his father, who informs him that his sister Samantha (Megan Leitch), who had been abducted as a child, has returned. Samantha is being pursued by a shapeshifting bounty hunter, who is assassinating human clones. Samantha is killed, although it is revealed that she was simply one of a number of clones, produced using alien tissue to create an alien-human hybrid.[16][17][18]

The Lone Gunmen contact Mulder and Scully about a successful attempt by a friend of theirs to hack the United States Department of Defense computer system. The hacker, Kenneth Soona (Bernie Coulson), is able to give Mulder the downloaded information on a digital cassette. Soona is subsequently assassinated, and the downloaded files are found to be written in Navajo. Contacting Albert Hosteen (Floyd Red Crow Westerman)—a Navajo man capable of translating the files—Mulder is shown a box-car full of what appear to be alien corpses. He is trapped in the box-car by the series' antagonist, The Smoking Man (William B. Davis), and left for dead after it is destroyed.[19]

Season 3

Mulder is later found and nursed back to health by Hosteen. Meanwhile, Scully investigates the possible involvement of the smallpox eradication program in human genetic experimentation, discovering that a Nazi scientist who defected during Operation Paperclip has been conducting human experimentation to create alien-human hybrids. Dana's sister Melissa (Melinda McGraw) is shot by assassins who mistake her for Dana, and dies in the hospital.[20][21][22] Investigating evidence of an alien autopsy, Mulder infiltrates a secretive government train carriage carrying an alien-human hybrid being experimented on by Japanese scientists. Mulder is almost killed by a Syndicate operative guarding the hybrid, but is saved by his informant X (Steven Williams). X had been tipped off about Mulder's activities by Scully. Scully, meanwhile, meets a group of women with abduction experiences similar to her own, and meets another member of the Syndicate known as the First Elder (Don S. Williams), who claims during her abduction she was placed on a similar train car and experimented upon by the Japanese scientists.[23][24][25]

Crew members of a French salvage ship trying to raise a World War II-era submarine from the sea floor are stricken with massive radiation burns—except for one, who has been infected with a parasitic black oil discovered on the submarine. The black oil, controlling the crewman's body, passes into the crewman's wife and uses her to travel to Hong Kong in pursuit of a middleman selling government secrets, who Mulder has also been pursuing. After Mulder catches Alex Krycek (Nicholas Lea) in Hong Kong, the black oil passes itself to Krycek.[26] Scully determines that the submarine had been involved in discovering the black oil on the sea floor during World War II, under the guise of finding a sunken fighter plane. The infected Krycek makes his way to a missile silo used to hide a UFO, and the black oil escapes his body to board the craft. Meanwhile, Scully has tracked down Luis Cardinal, the man responsible for killing her sister.[27][28][29]

Season 4

When the Syndicate suspect that one of their members is passing information to Mulder and Scully, they organise a canary trap to find the leak, using information about the safety of Mulder's mother as bait. X's role as an informant is discovered and he is shot dead, although he is able to pass along the name of another informant who can be of use to Mulder—Marita Covarrubias (Laurie Holden), the Special Representative to the Secretary-General of the United Nations.[30][31] Covarrubias' aid is sought when Mulder attempts to reach the site of the Tunguska event, in Russia, to investigate the source of a further black oil contamination. Whilst there, Mulder is held in a gulag and used as a successful test subject for a black oil vaccine. He escapes and is able to return to America, having found out that Krycek is working with the Russians.[32][33][34] Having been diagnosed with cancer, Scully is unsure of her future with the FBI. Mulder is convinced that her condition is a result of her earlier abduction, and is prepared to make a deal with the Syndicate to find a cure. He is dissuaded by Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi), who secretly makes such a deal instead.[35][36]

Season 5

While being pursued by an assassin responsible for a hoax alien corpse discovered on a mountaintop, Mulder fakes his own suicide, mutilating the assassin's face to provide a decoy body. He uses the distraction this offers to infiltrate The Pentagon to find a cure for Scully's cancer, while Scully is able to uncover and reveal a Syndicate connection within the FBI.[37][38][39][40]

As a rebel alien race secretly attacks several groups of former alien abductees, the agents meet Cassandra Spender (Veronica Cartwright), a woman who claims to be a multiple abductee and wants to deliver a positive message about aliens.[41][42] Eventually, Mulder has Scully put under hypnosis to learn the truth about her abduction after Cassandra goes missing and her son, Jeffrey Spender (Chris Owens), angrily attempts to push his way up in the FBI. The Syndicate, meanwhile, quicken their tests for the black oil vaccine, sacrificing their own to do so.[43][44] Later, the assassination of a chess grandmaster leads Mulder and Scully into an investigation that they soon discover strikes at the heart of the X-Files; they learn that the real target was a telepathic boy named Gibson Praise (Jeff Gulka).[45][46]

The X-Files: Fight the Future (feature film)

After the X-Files have been shut down again, Mulder and Scully are sent on a mission to deal with a terrorist bomb threat. However, when a government building is destroyed, Mulder is approached by a mysterious doctor, Alvin Kurtzweil (Martin Landau), who reveals that a new strain of the black oil has been discovered in North Texas that causes an extraterrestrial to gestate inside the host within 96 hours. He argues that the bomb was deliberately placed by the conspiracy within the government to hide the evidence. After Scully is stung by a black oil-infected bee and abducted, Mulder is given her location and a weak vaccine developed by the Syndicate by the Well-Manicured Man, who is assassinated by a car bomb. This leads Mulder to Antarctica, where he discovers a massive, buried alien spaceship. Inside, he finds Scully and administers the vaccine, which is successful in curing her.[47]

Season 6

In Washington, D.C., Mulder appears before an FBI panel regarding his experiences in Antarctica, but is later denied reassignment to the X-Files division: Mulder and Scully have been replaced by Spender and Diana Fowley (Mimi Rogers). After a scientist working for the Syndicate accidentally comes into contact with the black oil and gestates an alien, Mulder and Scully attempt to track the creature down in Phoenix, Arizona before the Syndicate can capture it.[48][49] Skinner is mysteriously poisoned by a nanorobot infection. The culprit is revealed to be Krycek, who continues to control the potentially debilitating nanotechnology in Skinner's system in order to achieve his goals.[50][51]

Mulder and Scully learn of reports of rebel aliens burning doctors who were working on Cassandra. After they locate her, she informs them that the aliens are here to destroy all life on Earth and that she is a successful alien-human hybrid. The Smoking Man reveals everything to Diana Fowley, who agrees to help him and betray Mulder.[52][53] Fowley forcibly takes Mulder, Cassandra, and Scully to a CDC facility at Fort Marlene. Meanwhile, the Syndicate meets up at a check point, ready to be taken away by the Colonists, who are preparing for invasion. They are met, however, by the alien rebels, who incinerate them all, including Cassandra, while the Smoking Man and Fowley manage to escape. Jeffrey Spender is then purportedly killed by The Smoking Man.[54][55] Several months later, a metallic artifact with inscriptions is discovered on the beach of Côte d'Ivoire in Africa. After Mulder examines rubbings of the object, he falls into a dangerous coma. Hoping to find a cure for her partner, Scully rushes to Africa and discovers a massive wreck of a large spacecraft partially buried in the ocean.[56][57]

Season 7

Skinner and Michael Kritschgau (John Finn) desperately attempt to find the truth behind the alien object.[58][59] Unsuccessful, Scully returns from Africa to see Mulder, but instead she finds out that he has disappeared. She contacts Kritschgau and Skinner to find her partner. The Smoking Man has taken Mulder away to transplant the telepathic part of Mulder's brain into his own cranium, but the surgery is a failure.[60][61] After the unsuccessful surgery, Mulder develops an inoperable terminal brain tumor, news of which he keeps from Scully.[62][63]

While investigating the bizarre disappearance of a young girl from her home, Mulder soon discovers the truth about his sister's abduction.[64][65] It is revealed that his sister was taken by a "walk-in", benevolent spirits who save the souls of children doomed to die in suffering. Together, Mulder and Scully locate evidence proving that Samantha was abducted by The Smoking Man, forced to live in a now-abandoned US Army base, and experimented upon. Mulder is eventually reunited with the spirit of his sister, allowing him to finally let her go.[66][67] Mulder and Scully investigate a case of alien abduction which leads them back to Oregon, the site of their first case together. While investigating, Mulder is taken by a UFO.[68][69]

Season 8

Scully soon meets Special Agent John Doggett (Robert Patrick), the leader of an FBI taskforce organized to conduct a search for Mulder.[62] Although the search ultimately proves unsuccessful, Doggett is assigned to the X-Files and works with Scully to search for explanations for several X-Files cases.[70] When Scully learns that several women have reportedly been abducted and impregnated with alien babies, she begins to question her own pregnancy.[71][72]

Doggett introduces Scully to Monica Reyes (Annabeth Gish), an FBI specialist in ritualistic crime, shortly before Mulder's deceased body suddenly appears in a forest at night.[73][74] Following Mulder's funeral, Assistant Director Skinner is threatened by Krycek, who tells him that Skinner must kill Scully's baby before it is born. Billy Miles, a multiple abductee who disappeared on the same night as Mulder, is returned deceased but his dead body is resurrected and restored to full health.[75][76] Mulder also returns from death, with Scully supervising his recovery. Fully rejuvenated, and healed of his earlier brain tumor, Mulder investigates several X-Files, against orders to do so, but soon gets fired, leaving Doggett in charge of the cases. Mulder continues to provide input in an unofficial capacity.[77][78]

Reluctantly accepting Krycek's assistance, Mulder, Doggett and Skinner learn that an alien virus recently created in secret by members of the United States government has replaced several humans, including Billy Miles and several high-ranking FBI personnel, with so-called alien "Super Soldiers". Krycek claims that the soldiers are virtually unstoppable aliens who want to make sure that humans will not survive the colonization of Earth. They have learned that Scully's baby is a miraculously special child and are afraid that it may be more powerful than them.[79][80] When Miles arrives at the FBI Headquarters, Mulder, Doggett, Skinner and Krycek help Scully to escape along with Reyes who drives her to a remote farm. Shortly after, Skinner kills Krycek, and Scully delivers an apparently normal baby while the alien "Super Soldiers" surround her. Without explanation, the aliens leave the area as Mulder arrives. While Doggett and Reyes report to the FBI Headquarters, Mulder takes Scully and their newborn son, William, back to her apartment.[81][82]

Season 9

Mulder goes into hiding, Scully is again reassigned to the FBI Academy, and Reyes becomes Doggett's new partner at the X-Files. Doggett, Scully, and Reyes discover a conspiracy to place Chloramine in the nation's water, causing mutations and creating "Super Soldiers". This leads them to a clandestine laboratory where a secret experiment is taking place, with connections to Scully's child, William. The X-Files office's investigation is hampered by Deputy Director Alvin Kersh (James Pickens, Jr.) and Assistant Director Brad Follmer (Cary Elwes).[83][84][85] Scully is hopeful about reuniting with Mulder after a complete stranger, "Shadow Man" (Terry O'Quinn), offers his service to drive Mulder out of hiding. She takes the offer, but Mulder and Scully are nearly killed when it is revealed the man is a Super Soldier.[86][87] Later on, Scully, Doggett and Reyes find evidence of a dangerous UFO cult which has found a spacecraft similar to one Scully studied in Africa two years ago. The cult kidnaps William,[88][89] but is destroyed when the baby's crying activates the ship and kills everyone while leaving William unharmed.[90][91]

Doggett finds a strange disfigured man in the X-Files office. Initially, Doggett believes the man is Mulder, but he is revealed to Jeffrey Spender, Mulder's half-brother. Spender sticks a needle into William, which the other agents believe to be a virus of some kind, but is later revealed to be a cure for William's powers.[92][93] Mulder comes out of hiding to look for classified information at an army base and, after allegedly killing an apparently indestructible "Super Soldier" Knowle Rohrer (Adam Baldwin), he is placed on trial to defend the X-Files and himself. With the help of Kersh, Scully, Reyes, Doggett, Spender, and Gibson Praise (Jeff Gulka), Mulder escapes. Mulder and Scully then travel to New Mexico to find an old "wise man", later revealed to be The Smoking Man, who tells them that the aliens will arrive in 2012. Doggett and Reyes are confronted by Knowle Rohrer, who is killed by magnetite (the only known vulnerability of the "Super Soldiers"). The four agents then escape a pair of black helicopters, which kill The Smoking Man with missile fire. Scully and Mulder are last seen together in a motel room facing an uncertain future.[94][95][96]

The X-Files Season 10 (comic book series)

In this comic book series which is "Executive Produced" by Chris Carter, Fox Mulder and Dana Scully are visited by Deputy Director Walter Skinner who informs them that someone hacked into the FBI's files and discovered information regarding the X-Files. Scully has later gone missing and Mulder tracks down the Lone Gunmen — revealed to have faked their deaths several years earlier — to help him find Scully.

FBI Agent John Doggett investigates a pipeline that mysteriously explodes, which is later revealed possessing magnetite. FBI Agent Monica Reyes finds out that William's adoptive parents are dead. Mulder is also visited by the believed-to-be dead Cigarette Smoking Man.

Scully, after many encounters with mysterious aliens, reports to an FBI review board that people with connections to the X-Files division are systematically being targeted. As a result, Mulder and Scully are reinstated as federal agents as a counter measure.

Production

Conception and early work

Spotnitz and Carter, the main writers for the show's mythology episodes.

At the beginning, Chris Carter did not think of creating a "mythology" for the episodes focusing on extraterrestrial life, because "they were just stories we wanted to tell," which involved Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) on his personal quest joined by his partner, Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson). Eventually, the writers saw that the most "personal" episodes were the ones centering on the government conspiracy. Another reason for the development of the mythology, was that the producers were afraid of not creating a thread between the episodes centering on the conspiracy, being that they felt it would be pretentious if they did not do it.[97]

According to Carter, the mythology "sprung from" the pilot episode and its follow up, "Deep Throat", which set up the idea that aliens had been around for many years. Carter sees the final scene of "Deep Throat" as the "launching moment for the entire mythology". The main theme for the show starts with these episodes, being Mulder's quest to find "the truth" about his sister, Samantha Mulder. Mulder's quest for the truth helped build the mythology, since his investigation took him into cases about the paranormal.[97]

After a series of stand-alone episodes featuring UFOs and extraterrestrials early in the first season, the show's mythology developed largely based on the pregnancy of actress Gillian Anderson, who became pregnant midway through the first season. Executive producer Frank Spotnitz described it as "the best thing that ever happened to the series.", also saying "This mythology really ended up running through the life of the series, all because Gillian Anderson became pregnant".[98] Although there were initially second thoughts about Scully (Anderson) giving birth to an alien baby, ultimately the writers decided to work around Anderson's pregnancy. The writers decided on closing the X-Files at the end of the season to separate Mulder and Scully from one another, and have Scully abducted, who would later reappear in a coma.[99] In addition to the creation of the storyline concerning Scully's abduction, Anderson's reduced role in the first half of the second season permitted the writers to develop some of the other characters in the show including Assistant Director Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi), The Smoking Man (William B. Davis) and X (Steven Williams), and resulted in the introduction of the character Alex Krycek (Nicholas Lea).[100] Krycek, who was initially created by writer Howard Gordon to temporarily replace Scully as Mulder's partner for three episodes eventually grew into a character that lasted seven seasons on the show.[98]

Creation of mythology and early seasons

Spotnitz at the April 2008 New York Comic Con

Prior to the season two episode, "One Breath" the "Cigarette Smoking Man" mostly "lurked around in the shadows" and smoked cigarettes. The Smoking Man uttered only four audible words in the entire first season of the show, all of them being in "Tooms". R.W. Goodwin did not trust William B. Davis to take on the part as arch-nemesis to Fox Mulder. It was later revealed to the producers that Davis was running an acting school, and teaching such actors as Lucy Lawless, who would make an appearance in the ninth season.[97]

In the two-part episodes "Colony" and "End Game", Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz along with some help from David Duchovny created what would become a recurring character named the Alien Bounty Hunter. According to Carter, Duchovny came to him and said "Wouldn't it be great if we had like an alien bounty hunter?" Carter was positive towards the idea.[97] The actor, Brian Thompson, auditioned for the role in a casting session, where he was competing with another actor. Spotnitz and Carter did not have much time to cast this character, but they knew this casting would be important since he was going to be a recurring character. Thompson was chosen according to Spotnitz because he had a very "distinctive look" about him, most notably his face and mouth. After casting him, they told Thompson's agent that he needed a hair cut, because he was originally envisioned as a US Air Force pilot who had been shot down. When Thompson came to Vancouver, Canada there had been some "misunderstanding" between them, and he had not been told of the hair cut. So the hairstyle seen in this and every episode since was a "compromise between Thompson and the producers.[101]

Mythology development in seasons 3–5

"What's great about that idea is that it touches on something that everybody's done, everybody's been forced to do since we were children, get inoculated for something or other, for smallpox in this case, and to turn that into something scary is brilliant, I think, because that really means you can't trust anyone."

— John Shiban talking about the new storyline introduced with "Paper Clip".[97]

Chris Carter admits that David Duchovny was very involved in shaping the show's mythology. His first notable efforts were "End Game" and "Anasazi". After writing the episode, Carter met up with a man who watched over the show by the Fox Network. He wanted the show to explain the paranormal phenomena in each episode. Carter responded with: "the interesting part about this for me was going to be telling stories where you left people wondering at the end, with the possibility that it could be real, but never ever stating that this is in fact the truth." "Anasazi" was the first episode of a three-parter where the writers introduced the government conspiracy arc following the Syndicate. "Paper Clip" introduced the idea of genetic material that was taken through inoculations.[97]

In season three the black oil was introduced, which was an alien creature which invaded bodies and made them into living hosts. The Black oil was able to enter through a victim's mouth, eyes or nose; it would leave a victim's body to get back to its original form or get a new host. Later on in the show's mythology, it is discovered that the Black oil is the Colonists' lifeform; the oil was brought to Earth by meteorites to create hosts of the human population living there. The season four two-parters "Tunguska" and "Terma" hit the writers when they were trying to conceive a big and fun canvas to tell stories. So they decided to create a story which had connections to the Russian gulags, which led to a "natural" idea that the Russians were experimenting separately from the Syndicate to create a vaccine for the Black oil. Shiban felt it was natural creating an arms race-like story between the United States and Russia, being that the Cold War had ended a few years earlier.[97]

With the season five episodes "Patient X" and "The Red and the Black", the mythology became too hard for some viewers to follow. These two episodes marked the introduction of the Alien rebels who were fighting against the Colonists for their plan to colonize the known universe. These Alien rebels were of the same race as the Alien Bounty Hunters. Cassandra (Veronica Cartwright) and Jeffrey Spender (Chris Owens) would make their first appearances in these two episodes. Two other characters, Diana Fowley (Mimi Rogers) and Gibson Praise (Jeff Gulka) were introduced to the series mythology in the season five finale, "The End".

The X-Files feature film and seasons 6–7

From the third season to the sixth season, the mysterious Syndicate was explored in detail. In the two part episode "Two Fathers"/"One Son", the Syndicate was destroyed. The plan to eliminate the Syndicate and relaunch the series' mythology in a new direction was originally conceived in September 1998.[102] Director Kim Manners stated "I've said for years that the show really resolved itself, if you will, by accident. The whole story line of the Syndicate and the bees and the aliens and the chips in the neck, they all seemed to just accidentally fall into place and create an intriguing, mysterious storyline that eventually got so mysterious and so intriguing that Chris had to blow it up, because he couldn't deal with it anymore."[103]

The "Biogenesis"/"The Sixth Extinction"/"Amor Fati" trio of episodes started a new mythology for the series, questioning the origin of human life. Series creator Chris Carter claimed to be interested in the subject for a while, citing the possibility of extraterrestrial involvement in great extinctions that had happened millions of years ago.[104] Carter claimed that early in the show he had met with a man who was one of the people responsible for leading the project of mapping the human genome and that he was interested enough in the subject to tie it into the show's alien mythology.[105] The scientific basis for extraterrestrials pursued the writers to help Mulder and Scully's beliefs come together, which was furthered in the later seasons of the show.[104] Frank Spotnitz claimed that the ideas used in this episode had been discussed between him and Carter for a few years, and had become easier to bring up after clearing away elements of the conspiracy in the episodes "Two Fathers" and "One Son".[104]

"Closure" was written to create an end to Mulder's quest for his sister, Samantha, who had been abducted when he was a child. The idea to close the story arc received mixed reactions from various production and crew members. However, many of the show's producers realized that the time had come to answer one of the show's biggest questions. Spotnitz explained that, "I think [series star, David Duchovny] grew tired of playing the man who is missing his sister. [...] I told him, 'This is going to be the last time you're going to have to play [that part].'"[106] Paul Rabwin noted that, "It's been seven years. I don't think any of us are going to miss Samantha Mulder. That device and motivation were very strong in the early years of the show. But as the years have gone by, the speculation kind of melted away."[106]

"Requiem" was written as a way to potentially end the series. While filming was underway for the seventh season, many members of the crew felt that the show had entered into its final season. Executive producer Frank Spotnitz later explained, "There was a pretty strong sentiment inside and outside the show that it was time to call it a day."[107] Eventually, it was decided that Mulder would be abducted at the end of the seventh season, leaving things open for the actor's return in 11 episodes the following year.[108] They eventually replaced Duchovny's Mulder with Robert Patrick's John Doggett.[109]

Season eight and "The New X-Files"

"I figured that the best way to introduce the character was exactly the way they did it, in a mythology episode. And I think it was important for Chris and Frank and my director, Kim Manners, to really establish who this guy was, John Doggett, and what he was supposed to be doing."

Robert Patrick talking about his introduction.[97]

The season eight premiere, "Within", started the storyline following the Super Soldiers and the search for Mulder.[97] As Carter always believed the only way to get the audience to keep watching the show was to give them answers. So when they cast Robert Patrick as John Doggett a new lead character, since Duchovny had sued the Fox Network and Carter for more money, while wanting to leave, the court said he must appear in 12 episodes in the eighth season and then leave.[110][111][112] When introducing Doggett into the series, they wanted to give him an enemy, this eventually led to the Super Soldiers, who rose up in "Within" to take on the role as the new government conspirators. The reason for creating a new enemy was to make sure not to just create a "new Mulder". The original idea for the Super Soldiers was that the United States Defense Department was developing genetically modified human beings, this was the non-alien explanation, while these characters eventually became the new aliens. Dana Scully took Mulder's role as a "believer" and handed her previous role as a "skeptic" to Doggett.[97]

"In the course of a 24 episode season, you'd have 6 or 7 or 8 episodes that really told the story that promised more and more, that answered itself as it went along but then asked even more questions, and that kind of twisted back on itself. I mean, sometimes perhaps one time too many, but it turned out to be a story that captured a lot of people's imagination and that sustained for a remarkably long time."

Howard Gordon talking about the mythology episodes.[97]

Carter himself has admitted that the mythology became "complex" and a bit "too difficult to" follow, and even more difficult for the writers to "add more layers on to it". While saying it got "more interesting" in some ways but at the same time less interesting in some other ways, he said he understood why long-time fans of the show were discontent at seeing a "Mulderless" season, but at the same time said the new characters introduced new fans to the show who reacted positively to the changes.[97]

Annabeth Gish's character Monica Reyes, who would become a main character in season nine, made her first appearance in "This Is Not Happening". When creating the character for the episode, they wanted to give the character a personality who had much in common with both Mulder and Scully. Her first shot was four in the morning and her first scene in the episode was to run down a hill to discover a former abductee.[113] Reyes, along with Skinner, were elevated to main character status in the ninth season.[114]

The original plan for season nine was to exit both Mulder, Scully and baby William out of the storyline in the following season. A proposed Season 10 would follow a storyline where the aliens were not the central focus of the mythology, since many of the writers, most notably Frank Spotnitz, felt that the alien-conspiracy storyline had gone on long enough "and played itself out." The story arc would instead focus on what happened to Doggett's son, Luke, and the character of Reyes.[97]

Reception

Jay Anderson, writing for What Culture, described the mythology entries as "some of the best of the series, featuring many superb acting performances, well-crafted scripts, and nail-biting endings". Anderson added that the mythology "really held the show together".[115] Andrew Payne of Starpulse named the "original" mytharc of seasons 1-6 a "37-way-tie" for the fifth best episode of the series, explaining that it "was the thing that made The X-Files the best show on television during its first six seasons". However, he commented that it "went awry during the inscrutable sixth season finale".[116] IGN's Dan Iverson wrote, "I loved the X-Files from the moment I started watching it, due in no small part to the mythology that Chris Carter created. Even though we all loved the 'monster of the week' episodes, these less ostentatious gems kept us interested in what could come in the long run. The overall story arc may have eventually fizzled out, but the questioning, open-ended nature of the stories nevertheless kept us at the edge of our seats."[117]

For the first five seasons, critics praised the development in the mythology episodes. The first season episode "Deep Throat" was cited as beginning to "set the stage for the central conflicts" of the series.[118] IGN's Dan Iverson felt that the episode served to "open the door to the possibilities of this series";[119] while Tor.com's Meghan Deans noted that "although the pilot introduced the idea of government conspiracy, it's 'Deep Throat' that kicks out the edges of the canvas".[120] Nina Sordi of Den of Geek noted that the plotline in the second season finale "Anasazi" laid "the groundwork for the mythology arc for the rest of the series", adding that it "brought much more significance to what is to come".[121] Todd VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club called the third season The X-Files' "best season and maybe one of the greatest TV seasons of all time", noting it was consistent and "[swung] from strength to strength" between mythology and stand-alone episodes.[122] Michael Sauter of Entertainment Weekly praised the new additions to the series' mythology during the series' fifth year.[123] As the show increased in popularity, the mythology episodes even started causing media speculation. For instance, the fourth season episode "Gethsemane" caused newspapers to run articles on whether or not Mulder had actually died. An article in the Wall Street Journal discussed fan theories behind Mulder's madness while a cartoon ran in The New Yorker a few weeks later surrounding Mulder's "death".[124]

After the 1998 film, the show's mythology began to receive increasingly critical reviews. Some fans felt there was no coherent plan to the main storyline and that Carter was "making it all up as he goes along."[125] The sixth season entries "Two Fathers" and "One Son"—which are considered to be the end to the Syndicate arc—were well-received for delivering answers and closure. Earl Cressey from DVD Talk named both episodes as "highlights of season six."[126] Joyce Millman from Salon magazine said the episodes were some "of the most coherent, [...] almost unbearably tense, hours in the series' run".[127] Likewise, "Closure", which concluded the Samantha story-arc, was met with mixed to positive reviews; although many felt that the episode hit the right emotional notes, some felt it did not conclude the way it should have.[128][129]

Many critics considered that the introduction of John Doggett and the search for Mulder in season eight helped to revitalize the series.[130] However, once the series entered into its ninth season, most critics panned the mythology. The A.V. Club called the episodes "clumsy", noting that they were "new serialized storylines about so-called 'super soldiers'".[130] The series finale, title "The Truth", received mixed reviews from critics. The main reason for criticism was that, instead of creating a conclusion, the episode created new questions for the audience. Robert Shearman and Lars Pearson, in their book Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen, gave the episode a scathing review and awarded it one star out of five.[131] The two, despite calling the opening "promising", derided the episode's ending—especially the revelation of alien colonization of December 22, 2012—writing, "is this really what the series was about?"[131] Furthermore, Shearman and Pearson concluded that the problem with the episode was that the show decided "to define itself in the summing up" with the episode, which did not answer very many questions.[131] Tom Kessenich, in his book Examinations noted that the episode, "told us nothing of significance" regarding the, "big picture" mythology story arc.[132]

See also

References

Notes

  1. Robert Mandel (director); Chris Carter (writer) (September 10, 1993). "Pilot". The X-Files. Season 1. Episode 1. Fox.
  2. Lowry, pp.99–101
  3. Daniel Sackheim (director); Chris Carter (writer) (September 17, 1993). "Deep Throat". The X-Files. Season 1. Episode 2. Fox.
  4. Lowry, pp.102–103
  5. William Graham (director); Glen Morgan & James Wong (writers) (February 18, 1994). "E.B.E.". The X-Files. Season 1. Episode 17. Fox.
  6. Lowry, pp.138–139
  7. R.W. Goodwin (director); Chris Carter (writer) (May 13, 1994). "The Erlenmeyer Flask". The X-Files. Season 1. Episode 24. Fox.
  8. Lowry, pp. 155–156
  9. David Nutter (director); Glen Morgan & James Wong (writers) (September 16, 1994). "Little Green Men". The X-Files. Season 2. Episode 1. Fox.
  10. Lowry, pp.161–162
  11. Chris Carter (writer and director) (October 14, 1994). "Duane Barry". The X-Files. Season 2. Episode 5. Fox.
  12. Michael Lange (director); Paul Brown (writer) (October 21, 1994). "Ascension". The X-Files. Season 2. Episode 6. Fox.
  13. Lowry, pp.171–174
  14. R.W. Goodwin (director): Glen Morgan & James Wong (director) (November 11, 1994). "One Breath". The X-Files. Season 2. Episode 8. Fox.
  15. Lowry, pp.179–180
  16. Nick Marck (director); Chris Carter & David Duchovny (writers) (February 10, 1995). "Colony". The X-Files. Season 2. Episode 16. Fox.
  17. Rob Bowman (director); Frank Spotnitz (writer) (February 17, 1995). "End Game". The X-Files. Season 2. Episode 17. Fox.
  18. Lowry, pp.199–204
  19. R.W. Goodwin (director); Chris Carter (writer) (May 19, 1995). "Anasazi". The X-Files. Season 2. Episode 25. Fox.
  20. R.W. Goodwin (director); Chris Carter (writer) (September 22, 1995). "The Blessing Way". The X-Files. Season 3. Episode 1. Fox.
  21. Rob Bowman (director); Chris Carter (writer) (September 29, 1995). "Paper Clip". The X-Files. Season 3. Episode 2. Fox.
  22. Lowry, pp.225–237
  23. Rob Bowman (director); Frank Spotnitz (writer) (November 24, 1995). "Nisei". The X-Files. Season 3. Episode 9. Fox.
  24. David Nutter (director); Chris Carter, Howard Gordon Frank Spotnitz (writers) (December 1, 1995). "731". The X-Files. Season 3. Episode 10. Fox.
  25. Lovece, pp.204–208
  26. Rob Bowman; Chris Carter, Frank Spotnitz (writers) (February 9, 1996). "Piper Maru". The X-Files. Season 3. Episode 3. Fox.
  27. Rob Bowman (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers) (February 9, 1996). "Piper Maru". The X-Files. Season 3. Episode 15. Fox.
  28. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writer) (February 16, 1996). "Apocrypha". The X-Files. Season 3. Episode 16. Fox.
  29. Lovece, pp.211–212
  30. R. W. Goodwin (director); Chris Carter (writer) (October 4, 1996). "Herrenvolk". The X-Files. Season 4. Episode 1. Fox.
  31. Meisler (1998), pp.19–25.
  32. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers) (November 24, 1996). "Tunguska". The X-Files. Season 4. Episode 8. Fox.
  33. Rob Bowman (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writer) (December 1, 1996). "Terma". The X-Files. Season 4. Episode 9. Fox.
  34. Meisler (1998), pp.95–110
  35. Kim Manners (director); Howard Gordon & Frank Spotnitz (writers) (April 27, 1997). "Zero Sum". The X-Files. Season 4. Episode 21. Fox.
  36. Meisler (1998), pp. 221–230
  37. R.W. Goodwin (director); Chris Carter (writer) (May 18, 1997). "Gethsemane". The X-Files. Season 4. Episode 24. Fox.
  38. R.W. Goodwin & Kim Manners (directors); Chris Carter (writer) (November 2–9, 1997). "Redux". The X-Files. Season 5. Episode 1 & 2. Fox.
  39. Meisler (1998), pp.259–270
  40. Meisler (1999), pp.27–46
  41. Kim Manners (Director); Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz (Writers). "Patient X". The X-Files. Season 5. Episode 13. Fox.
  42. Meisler, pp 173–184
  43. Chris Carter (Director); Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz (Writers). "The Red and the Black". The X-Files. Season 5. Episode 14. Fox.
  44. Meisler, pp. 187–196
  45. R. W. Goodwin (Director); Chris Carter (Writer). "The End". The X-Files. Season 5. Episode 20. Fox.
  46. Meisler, pp. 269–280
  47. Chris Carter (1998). The X-Files: Fight the Future (DVD). Fox Broadcasting Company.
  48. Kim Manners (Director); Chris Carter (Writer). "The Beginning". The X-Files. Season 6. Episode 1. Fox.
  49. Meisler, pp. 11–18
  50. Daniel Sackheim (Director); John Shiban (Writer). "S.R. 819". The X-Files. Season 6. Episode 9. Fox.
  51. Meisler, pp. 120–132
  52. Kim Manners (Director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (Writers). "Two Fathers". The X-Files. Season 6. Episode 11. Fox.
  53. Meisler, pp. 135–144
  54. Rob Bowman (Director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (Writers). "One Son". The X-Files. Season 6. Episode 12. Fox.
  55. Meisler, pp. 147–156
  56. Rob Bowman (Director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (Writers). "Biogenesis". The X-Files. Season 6. Episode 22. Fox.
  57. Meisler, pp. 279–290
  58. Kim Manners (Director); Chris Carter (Writer). "The Sixth Extinction". The X-Files. Season 7. Episode 1. Fox.
  59. Shapiro, pp. 7–16
  60. Michael Watkins (Director); Chris Carter and David Duchovny (Writers). "The Sixth Extinction II: Amor Fati". The X-Files. Season 7. Episode 2. Fox.
  61. Shapiro, pp. 19–28
  62. 1 2 Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter (writer). "Within". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 1. Fox.
  63. Kim Manners (director); Frank Spotnitz (writer). "The Gift". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 11. Fox.
  64. Michael W. Watkins (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers). "Zein und Zeit". The X-Files. Season 7. Episode 10. FOX.
  65. Shapiro, pp. 119–128
  66. Kim Manners (Director); Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz (Writers). "Closure". The X-Files. Season 7. Episode 11. Fox.
  67. Shapiro, pp. 130–139
  68. Kim Manners (Director); Chris Carter (Writer). "Requiem". The X-Files. Season 7. Episode 22. Fox.
  69. Shapiro, pp. 266–277
  70. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter (writer). "Without". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 2. Fox.
  71. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter (writer). "Per Manum". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 13. Fox.
  72. "Per Manum". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 22 March 2012.
  73. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers). "This Is Not Happening". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 14. Fox.
  74. "This Is Not Happening". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  75. Tony Wharmby (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers). "Deadalive". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 15. Fox.
  76. "Deadalive". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  77. Rod Hardy (director); Steven Maeda (writer). "Vienen". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 17. Fox.
  78. "Vienen". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
  79. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter (writer). "Essence". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 20. Fox.
  80. "Essence". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 8 March 2012.
  81. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter (writer). "Existence". The X-Files. Season 8. Episode 21. Fox.
  82. "Existence". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved October 1, 2009.
  83. Kim Manners & Tony Wharmby (directors); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers). "Nothing Important Happened Today". The X-Files. Season 9. Episode 19 & 20. Fox.
  84. "Nothing Important Happened Today I". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  85. "Nothing Important Happened Today II". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  86. Tony Wharmby (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers). "Trust No 1". The X-Files. Season 9. Episode 6. Fox.
  87. "Trust No 1". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
  88. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers). "Provenance". The X-Files. Season 9. Episode 9. Fox.
  89. "Provenance". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
  90. Chris Carter (director); Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz (writers). "Providence". The X-Files. Season 9. Episode 10. Fox.
  91. "Providence". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
  92. David Duchovny (director); Chris Carter, Frank Spotnitz & Duchovny (writers). "William". The X-Files. Season 9. Episode 16. Fox.
  93. "William". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved 16 July 2012.
  94. Kim Manners (director); Chris Carter (writer). "The Truth". The X-Files. Season 9. Episode 19 & 20. Fox.
  95. "The Truth". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  96. "The Truth, Part Two". BBC Cult. BBC. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  97. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Spotnitz, Frank, Carter, Chris, Shiban, John , Manners, Kim and Gordon, Howard among others (2004). Threads of Mythology (DVD). 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment.
  98. 1 2 Hurwitz and Knowles, p. 44
  99. Lowry,Brian (1995). The Truth is Out There: The Official Guide to the X-Files. Harper Prism. p. 24.
  100. Edwards, Ted (1996). X-Files Confidential. Little, Brown and Company. p. 89.
  101. Spotnitz, Frank (2005). Audio Commentary for "End Game" (DVD). FOX.
  102. Meisler, pp. 156–157
  103. Hurwitz and Knowles, p. 159
  104. 1 2 3 Meisler, pp. 290–291
  105. Hurwitz and Knowles, p. 169
  106. 1 2 Shapiro, p. 139
  107. Hurwitz and Knowles, p. 180
  108. Elber, Lynn (18 May 2000). "Fox Mulder 'Ready to Get Back to Work'". SPACE.com. Archived from the original on December 10, 2004. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  109. Fleming, Michael (20 July 2000). "Patrick marks 'X-Files' spot". Variety. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  110. Germain, David (April 28, 2000). "Scully, Mulder go Hollywood in Duchovny's X-Files tale". The Associated Press. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  111. "Duchovny quits X-Files". BBC News. May 18, 2001. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  112. Spencer, Russ (April 28, 2000). "A close encounter with Chris Carter". Salon. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  113. Carter, Chris, Patrick, Robert, Spotnitz, Frank and Gish, Annabeth (2002). The Truth Behind Season 8 (DVD). FOX.
  114. Spotnitz, Frank, Gilligan, Vince, Shiban, John, Carter, Chris, Elwes, Cary, Patrick, Robert, Manners, Kim, MacLaren, Michelle, Kaplan, Corey, Beck, Mat, Rabwin, Paul, Mungle, Matthew, Amann, David, Montesanto-Medcalf, Cheri, Wash, John, Roe, Bill and Reynolds, Burt (2002). The Truth Behind Season 9 (DVD). FOX.
  115. Anderson, Jay (January 20, 2015). "The X-Files: 15 Best Mythology Episodes". What Culture. Archived from the original on January 22, 2015.
  116. Payne, Andrew (July 25, 2008). "'X-Files' 10 Best Episodes". Starpulse. Retrieved February 1, 2012.
  117. Iverson, Dan (August 5, 2005). "X-Files Mythology, Vol. 1 - Abduction". IGN. Retrieved February 5, 2012.
  118. Bush (2008), p. 41
  119. Iverson, Dan (August 5, 2005). "X-Files Mythology, Vol. 1 – Abduction – DVD Review at IGN". IGN. News Corporation. Retrieved May 1, 2011.
  120. Deans, Meghan (October 27, 2011). "Reopening The X-Files: 'Deep Throat'". Tor.com. Tor Books. Retrieved June 24, 2012.
  121. Sordi, Nina (September 22, 2009). "Top 10 X-Files episodes". Den of Geek. Retrieved January 12, 2012.
  122. VanDerWerff, Todd (July 4, 2010). "The Blessing Way/Paper Clip/DPO". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved March 31, 2012.
  123. Sauter, Michael (May 14, 2002). "The X-Files: The Complete Fifth Season". Entertainment Weekly. Time Inc. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
  124. Meisler, p. 271
  125. Parks, Jo-Ann (January 2000). "What's Ailing The X-Files". Space.com. TechMediaNetwork. Archived from the original on September 1, 2005. Retrieved July 27, 2009.
  126. Cressey, Earl (5 November 2002). "X-Files: Season Six". DVD Talk. Internet Brands. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  127. Millman, Joyce (8 March 1999). "The Xerox Files". Salon. Salon Media Group. Archived from the original on 25 July 2008. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  128. Handlen, Zack (January 12, 2013). "'Closure'/'X-Cops' | The X-Files/Millennium | TV Club". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved January 13, 2013.
  129. Rosell, Rich (July 27, 2003). "The X-Files: The Complete Seventh Season". DigitallyObsessed. Retrieved January 14, 2012.
  130. 1 2 Adams, Sam; et al. (May 7, 2012). "One Bad Apple... We Can Live With That: 31 Rotten Parts of Otherwise Fantastic Wholes". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved May 19, 2012.
  131. 1 2 3 Shearman and Pearson (2009), pp. 278–280
  132. Kessenich (2002), pp. 195–200

Bibliography

External links

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