Episode Reviews
(by original air date)
Season Two
Little
Green Men: The X-Files are shut down, and Mulder and
Scully have been split per the conspirators' design - he on a staggeringly boring
surveillance detail and she as a forensics instructor at the academy. We finally get a
brief look at one of Mulder's connections in Congress, who sends him off to Puerto Rico
because big things are in the making down there. Once again Mulder takes off for parts
unknown, and once again it's up to Scully to show up and save his ass. We already knew
they'd find a way to work together, but the real thing here (other than the possibility
that Mulder actually did see a real alien at the doorway of that
listening station) is the understood frustration of those unknown conspirators as they
watch events transpire.
The
Host: Although this is a generally well-regarded episode,
I've always thought there wasn't much to it. A radioactive mutant shows up in the New
Jersey sewers, kills a couple of people, and gets cut in half, but as it turns out is
still out there somewhere. And? Is that all there is? Sure, we get a hint at a new
informant when Mulder gets a phone call in the middle of the investigation warning him
that success in his present case is of utmost importance, but other than that and a couple
of gross-out scenes, there's really not much here.
Blood:
This is another dud that could have been much more with just a little work. Combine the
chemical spraying and the electronic manipulation, and you've got something big going on,
and yet the cause is hardly addressed - the episode is really only interested in the
effects (almost as if it's an excuse to throw in the White Bronco chase footage). The
effects, by the way, basically consist of using the subjects' worst fear to incite them to
do things they wouldn't ordinarily do via some kind of subliminal electronic suggestion
(although is it really "subliminal" when the person can actually read the
message?).
Sleepless:
The entrance of Alex Krycek here, particularly the revelation of who
really pays his salary, opens doors to myriad other possibilities, many of which are taken
advantage of during subsequent episodes. One of the few remaining subjects of a
Vietnam-era military experiment to create a soldier who doesn't require sleep is cleaning
house, killing other test subjects and the doctors in charge and justifying it by seeing
himself as some kind of avenging angel. One question, though - did Krycek really see a gun
in Preacher's hand? I'm sure part of his assignment was to finish cleaning up the mess
(i.e. - kill the remaining test subjects if they weren't already dead), so why is the
effort made to make us believe that Krycek thought Preacher was holding a gun? As an
(allegedly) intelligent operative, wouldn't he have realized that Mulder getting killed
during such a relatively mundane assignment (and it would have been abundantly obvious
that "this crazy guy" had killed Mulder) might have gotten rid of the
Syndicate's worst pest, and as such would Krycek have backed off, letting Preacher shoot
Mulder first? I wonder this because he's not told until later how much they believe Mulder
should be kept around, and the aftermath of Krycek's hesitation. It's just a thought.
Duane
Barry: Thus begins a story arc that could have been
disatrous for the series but instead is still its greatest triumph. It's already the stuff
of legend - how Gillian Anderson became pregnant and had to be written out of the show for
several episodes, and so Scully is abducted by an escaped mental patient who believes
himself to have often gotten unwelcome extraterrestrial probings in the past, doing this
in the hopes that she'll be taken this time instead of him. Ah, but I'm getting ahead of
myself. Duane Barry instigates a hostage situation, and Mulder gets thrown into it, using
it to gain information about the possibilities of what might have happened to his sister.
The situation is resolved, but Duane gets away and abducts Scully. End of part one.
Ascension:
Part two begins with Scully in the trunk of Duane's car. Mulder and
Krycek follow him to Skyland Mountain, and while Mulder hangs onto a swinging cable car,
Krycek finally starts to earn his money by attempting to sabotage Mulder's rescue attempt.
By the time Mulder reaches Duane, a bright light has briefly appeared and Duane is
energetically celebrating the fact that "they" won't take him anymore (and,
honestly, isn't he doing a disturbing amount of jumping around for a guy with a recent
gunshot wound to the chest?). Krycek briefly visits Duane, and a couple of minutes later
the latter chokes to death (so we know who killed him... or do we?). By the time Mulder
gets called on the carpet by Skinner, Krycek is nowhere to be found. End of part two.
3:
Suddenly, we have a brief intermission from the riveting Duane Barry
story arc, allowing Mulder to investigate a case on his own. A group of people think
they're vampires, although it takes Mulder just a little longer than usual to believe
them. In the process, he becomes emotionally involved with a girl who's trying to outrun
them. In short, he gets some, although that point is still hotly debated on occasion.
Mediocere at best.
One
Breath: The conclusion of the Duane Barry arc finds
Scully in that region somewhere between life and death, sitting in a rowboat as some kind
of existential metaphor. Her comatose body is found in a hospital bed, delivered by
persons unknown, and Mulder finds a newfound conviction that leads him through events
including witnessing the impromptu execution of an enemy operative by his new informant,
meeting Scully's sister and hearing a childhood story by her mother which leads to a
greater understanding of the adult she's grown into, listening to a story by Skinner which
partly explains why Mulder is becoming more often supported by his superior, and
confronting the Cigarette-Smoking Man at gunpoint. This last event is one of the series'
defining moments. Needless to say, Scully recovers after Mulder reveals that he's really
an ol' softie after all.
Firewalker:
Essentially, here we have a remake of Ice
without the original's paranoia, style, or character insight. Okay, so Mulder's concerned
about Scully going out into the field so soon after her recovery, but beyond that, what do
we have? A new form of life that lives as a parasite in a remote location, and if it's not
stopped there, it might never be stopped. Change the worms to silicon-based spores, change
the setting from an arctic outpost to a geological research station in the immediate
vicinity of a volcano, and take away the uncertainty of who's infected (it's not long
before we get the idea that everybody's infected, although who knows why it takes
our agents so long to figure it out), and there you have it.
Red
Museum: Here we have a vastly underrated episode -
one that comes out of nowhere and makes the viewer wonder after thinking about it. The
kids are getting mean in a small Wisconsin town, which also contains a disturbing
cult-like vegetarian group which gets the blame when kids disappear and later turn up with
writing on their backs. As it turns out, a cattle growth hormone is to blame for the
increasing aggressiveness of the kids, and the Church of the Red Museum is the control
group, so they're actually the "normal" ones (physically speaking, anyway).
Remember when we had the inter-network crossover between Ally McBeal
and The Practice? By all accounts, it was a success, and yet
three years earlier the same stunt was attempted that would have had this episode
concluded in the episode of Picket Fences that immediately
followed (it turned out to be the one with the cows being used as experimental prenatal
incubators for human fetuses). Of course it could have worked, but CBS, with absolutely no
forethought, decisively stopped any ideas of a crossover. It was this same type of narrow
thinking that sent Picket Fences straight to hell within the
next year, but enough about that. Anyway, we get another appearance by Deep Throat's
murderer, who's killed before he can be caught, once again preventing our agents from
finding the right answers.
Excelsius
Dei: A plain old dud. Experimental drugs allow
nursing home residents to astrally project themselves and do cool stuff. Did I say
"experimental drugs"? They were actually some kind of mushrooms - an
"ancient Chinese secret" - used by an orderly. For some reason the ghosts of
deceased residents show up in the hallway around Scully on occasion, although I still
don't know what they were doing there.
Aubrey:
Mostly a dud but still has its moments. A woman in a relationship
finds herself pregnant by her superior at work (they're both cops), and before she knows
it she's blacking out and digging up undiscovered bodies from crimes 50 years ago. The
person who committed the crimes is still around, living actually nearby, and as it turns
out the pregnant woman is the daughter of the product of one of the criminal's rapes years
ago. Genetic memory? I dunno, although we're also left with the possibly disturbing
questions concerning the unborn male child and what lies ahead for it.
Irresistible:
An overrated episode which is still at least partially redeemed by a
very creepy Donnie Pfaster. He's an "escalating death fetishist" with his own
personal dream job as an assistant in a funeral home. He goes too far with one of the
clients, gets fired, and does exactly as Mulder predicts: he begins killing so as to gain
the corpses he feels he needs. He starts to get a thing for Scully, and she finds herself
as possibly his next victim. At one point, he begins to morph into men of different races,
and there's a demon-like being mixed in there somewhere. Was this from Scully's subjective
point of view, hammering home the point that Pfaster could be any anonymous-looking
person, raising the question of whether we really know anybody else, or was it how Pfaster
sees himself, searching for his own identity? By that point, I didn't care, as I was
instead waiting for the obligatory scene of Mulder coming to the rescue.
Die
Hand Die Verletzt: A great example of how an episode
might have a ludicrous premise (a witchcraft-practicing school board, although as a
teacher now I'm starting to wonder just how ludicrous it really is) and ridiculous scenes
(frogs falling from the sky, a guy swallowed by a snake which instantly leaves behind a
skeleton as waste products), and can still be done well and be fun to watch. A substitute
biology teacher (Mrs. Paddock) turns up at the school, although she's really an
"emissary" from the devil, a kind of satanic enforcer sent to remind the school
board in no uncertain terms that they've forgotten how to show the proper respect. Despite
its dark subject matter, this one is still a lot of fun.
Fresh
Bones: Taking its plot from headlines concerning
American soldiers in Haiti killing themselves, this episode offers a possible explanation
- voodoo. The commander of an internment camp for Haitian refugees tries to get voodoo
secrets from a shaman who's one of the prisoners and/or to seek personal vengeance for his
men who died in Haiti, using decidedly unfriendly tactics (including beatings and murder)
to do so. The shaman retaliates by using his own knowledge to cause soldiers at the camp
to kill themselves and otherwise create mayhem. A mediocre episode with a mostly
unnecessary subplot in which a boy acts as a guide for our agents, and it turns out that
this particular boy has been dead for weeks.
Colony:
Here is the beginning of an excellent two-parter that provides more
defining moments for the series. The Alien Bounty Hunter makes his first appearance,
seeking out and killing abortion doctors who are really clones using properties of fetal
tissue to further their own plans for colonization. In an associated plot thread, Mulder
finally meets his sister Samantha, who explains that the doctors are her adoptive parents
and spins tales of how she was a repeat alien abductee. One defining moment: Mulder shows
up at Scully's apartment, and while he's there Mulder calls her on the phone (insert
dramatic music here), and this is where part one ends.
End
Game: The Alien Bounty Hunter takes Scully prisoner,
demanding that she be exchanged for Samantha. A sniper is put into position to kill the
ABH in the only way known - by piercing the base of the neck - and as a result both he and
Samantha tumble from the bridge (the site of the exchange) into the water. He isn't
recovered, but Samantha's body is, although after Mulder runs off to wallow in his guilt
privately it's revealed that the being posing as Samantha wasn't human at all. As it turns
out, these colonists knew Mulder's story and used it in trying to get help from him in
escaping the ABH. Unfortunately, he accomplishes his mission and gets away. One defining
moment: a brutal confrontation between Skinner and X in an elevator as the former goes
through "unofficial channels" to discover the whereabouts of Mulder (who's by
then in the Arctic). Another defining moment: Mulder finds the submarine in the Arctic
that was commandeered by the ABH, and is willing to die to learn what really happened to
his sister. The ABH seems to know ("She's alive"), but we don't get any other
information. Why doesn't he kill Mulder then? Apparently he already understands how
important Mulder is to whatever this project is.
Fearful
Symmetry: Not a bad attempt to find another angle
for the alien-related storyline. Animals at a zoo are escaping and going on rampages while
invisible (I think). What's making them crazy? There's a distraction involving animal
rights activists who believe it's the conditions at the zoo that are doing it, but it
turns out that these particular animals have had offspring delivered and taken away from
them. By whom? By what? Unless I misunderstood, the offspring have been taken by some
alien intelligence to produce some kind of extraterrestrial Noah's Ark. This aspect as
well as a gorilla's cryptic signing of the phrase "Man save man" answers no
questions while raising several more.
Dod
Kalm: Beyond the gimmick of having a couple of
pretty young people aging rapidly, there's not much here. Our agents travel to Norway to
check out the phenomenon of a group of young Navy sailors who abandoned their ship and
suddenly appear to be of an extremely old age. There's some talk of wormholes and the
Philadelphia Experiment to explain the temporal anomolies, but in essense it's all an
excuse to put us on a decrepit-looking ship in the ocean and give us some make-up effects.
Humbug:
An exhibition of freaks, weirdos, and Darin Morgan's brilliant debut
as a writer for the series. The actual story concerns unexplained murders occurring in a
community composed primarily of circus performers and freaks, with the culprit eventually
revealed to be an only partially formed Siamese twin who is looking for another brother,
but the main targets found in Morgan's writing include a consistent off-center atmosphere
and attitude as well as the sly jabs at Mulder's dry personality and dour appearance
(which will become a Morgan trademark). This was the first episode to be played mostly for
laughs (albeit darkly), and it set a welcome precedent for the occasional departure from
the usual mythology and monster episodes.
The
Calusari: Speaking of dark, here's an episode whose
tone is set in an opening sequence in which a child is run over by a train. It has
something to do with the child's older brother being possessed by his twin who was
stillborn. There's something about an ancient Romanian curse and the kid's grandmother who
is trying to protect him from it, although she gets - if I understand this correctly -
pecked to death by roosters. We get an exorcism scene that is overtly reminiscent of Linda
Blair in The Exorcist, but it still works.
F.
Emasculata: "Emasculata"? I dunno... that
in itself is a pretty scary name as far as I'm concerned. As far as biological crises
crossed with prison dramas go, it's still pretty good. A prison is used, as are many of
its unwitting inmates, for research involving a parasitic organism. Since the situation
can be passed off as a shipping mistake if anything were to happen (which it does, of
course), a pharmaceutical company is the one doing the research at the prison with the
tacit cooperation of the government. CSM puts in an appearance and weighs in on the
situation, so involvement in this research is apparently yet another aspect of the
Syndicate's operations.
Soft
Light: Research into "dark matter" leads
to Dr. Chester Banton's accidental development of a fatal shadow. We get a little insight
into Scully's recent history after learning that one of her former students at the Academy
is now a detective in charge of the case as well as an amusing false lead early on when an
accidental victim happens to be an executive with Morley Tobacco (CSM's favored brand).
Also, X turns up to collect Banton, meaning that once again the Syndicate is somehow
involved, although as time progresses they'll be less interested in such varied projects
and more involved with bees, smallpox, and black oil. However, this episode primarily
belongs to Tony Shauloub as Banton, who flawlessly creates a tragic character who has the
unenviable ability to disintegrate others by only putting his shadow in their direction,
and as a result literally watches every step. The sympathy for him is compounded by the
final scenes, in which, having become an "unperson", he's getting the
"brain suck" he so much feared..
Our
Town: Cannibalism as a means of longevity? Whatever
works, I suppose. It's off to Arkansas, to the Chaco Chicken processing plant. The area
has a strange record of missing persons, and the latest was a food inspector who was going
to recommend shutting down the Chaco plant due to health code violations. It's revealed
that occasionally people have been eaten during local ceremonies that Mr. Chaco brought
back with him from the South Pacific during World War II. The people who are sacrificed
during these rituals are usually beheaded, and it looks like Scully is going to be the
next victim when Mulder shows up and saves the day. Finally, it appears that Chaco Chicken
will soon be history as dozens of people contract a fatal disease carried by the food
inspector, having picked it up from presumably eating him.
Anasazi:
The beginning of another classic story arc - one that will have dire
consequences for just about everyone concerned, including the Mulder and Scully families.
An earthquake in New Mexico unearths a boxcar filled with non-human corpses, and the
Syndicate finds itself in a serious crisis because of this as well as because a hacker
known to the Lone Gunmen as "The Thinker" has hacked his way into more of those
secret government files. Unfortunately, the files are in the written language of the
Navajo, making them useless for all practical purposes. This seriously pisses Mulder off,
but he's been very touchy lately, and Scully discovers why when she finds that the water
in Mulder's apartment has been contaminated with something that's been causing Mulder's
erratic behavior. Mulder's father is about to confess some of his past sins when he's
killed by Krycek. Later, Mulder almost kills Krycek, but Scully shoots him in the shoulder
before he can, realizing that Mulder would subsequently be framed for his father's murder.
They fly off to New Mexico to find out what's been discovered there, but CSM is hot on
their heels. Mulder is believed to be trapped in the buried boxcar when CSM orders it
blown up, and that's the end of part one.
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