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X-FILES
Oct 26, 2015 14:56:36 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Oct 26, 2015 14:56:36 GMT -6
www.ew.com/article/2015/10/24/x-files-ew-fest-writers-7-things-we-learned?hootPostID=1fdd116a2bd14ab480740175569ec3ebThe X-Files at EW Fest: 7 things we learnedby Kelly Connolly / www.ew.com/author/kelly-connollyPosted October 24 2015 The X-FilesX-Files fans got a glimpse inside the writers’ room on Saturday at EW Fest — not that the groundbreaking sci-fi series ever had a writers’ room in a traditional sense. As executive producer/ writer Glen Morgan, who is returning for the show’s new season in January, recalled, the writers rarely broke stories in a group, working instead out of boxy offices or each other’s backyards. But out of the series’ regular group of writers came a number of TV’s biggest influencers, including Vince Gilligan (Breaking Bad) and Frank Spotnitz (Man in the High Castle). Series creator Chris Carter joined Glen Morgan and fellow writer/ producer Darin Morgan onstage, in a panel moderated by EW’s own Jeff Jensen, to look back on the experience of writing The X-Files and tease what fans can expect from the series’ return. Here’s what we learned: 1. Carter denies rumors that Mulder and Scully have married.When asked about recent comments made by series star David Duchovny (Fox Mulder) alluding to his character’s marriage to partner Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), Carter replied that he was “really surprised” by Duchovny’s answers. “They were together but never married, so that was news to me,” Carter said. “You saw them in the second movie — they were obviously together and under one roof. I am here to announce that is not the case coming back.” 2. Mulder and Scully’s partnership will be reignited — even if it’s only for work.“They’re not together. And…” Carter trailed off when asked about the state of Mulder and Scully’s relationship as it stands now. “We’re dealing with two people who had a romantic relationship,” he said. “They’re no longer together for reasons that we come to understand over the course of the pilot — it’s mentioned — and we see the reigniting of some old passions that each of them have. And they find a reason to come back together, not romantically, but for other reasons.” Monsters might be involved. 3. Early notes from Fox asked Carter to ramp up the sexual tension.On the subject of Mulder and Scully’s relationship, Carter said that he initially felt making the two characters a couple would be “the wrong direction for the show” — but the network felt differently. He recalled executives calling during the filming of the pilot to say that there was “not enough sexual tension.” While the showrunner stands by not making The X-Files a “racy hot super romance,” he also admits that by the time of the franchise’s second movie (2008’s The X-Files: I Want to Believe), “it was time that they did get together.” Carter praised the way Mulder and Scully’s relationship evolved over the course of the series, especially their “clever” first kiss (which Mulder shared with an alternate-universe, 1939 version of Scully in season 6’s “Triangle”). 4. Carter calls Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny’s chemistry a “miracle.”Anderson was 24 when she was cast as Scully, but even then, Carter remembers, “she had that seriousness, like a gravity.” He called casting her a “stroke of luck,” adding that Anderson “had really good ideas for the character. As much as we create that character, Gillian is as responsible for Scully and making her that icon as any of the writers.” Carter also said that he sees The X-Files as Scully’s show: “If it weren’t for Scully’s science, the show would be much less interesting than it would be if it was just a show about the paranormal.” 5. The show never had a series bible.The team behind the show veered away from a set of definitive guidelines for writers — aside from one. “Early on, we said, ‘If Scully ever sees an alien or they kiss, the show’s over,’” Glen recalled, to plenty of audience laughter. “That’s how much we know.” Carter said that they preferred “finding what the show did best” organically to laying down a writers’ bible, which he called “self-limiting.” Darin Morgan remembered season 1’s “Beyond the Sea” as one of the first times the writers broke the rules, positioning Scully as the believer and Mulder as the skeptic after the death of her father. Darin, who was not yet a writer on the series but was watching for brother Glen, called that episode the first to show the series’ full potential. 6. The writers pulled ideas from everywhere.Glen Morgan recalled that the series’ first monster-of-the-week episode, season 1’s “Squeeze,” originated from a comment frequent writing partner Wong (who is also returning for the new season) made late one night in their office: “What if a guy came through that vent right now?” The series’ most disturbing hour, season 4’s “Home,” was inspired in part by an anecdote in Charlie Chaplin’s autobiography, along with Morgan and Wong’s thoughts on “coming home” after time away from the show. (When asked if his upcoming episode “Home Again” is a sequel to that classic, Glen explained that it is not — he “was just kind of being a punk” with the name.) Darin Morgan’s season 3 episode “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space” was guided by an actor who came in to audition for one of Darin’s earlier episodes and just happened to remind him a lot of Truman Capote. From there, Darin said, he got the idea to write an episode about “Truman Capote, [but] instead of doing ‘In Cold Blood,’ he’s writing about alien abduction.” Director Rob Bowman considered changing an aspect of that episode, but Carter remembered counseling him against it: “Sometimes you just have to bow to genius.” 7. The X-Files never left its writers.Glen Morgan said that he still walks down the street and thinks of things that would make good episodes of The X-Files. “Something about that show is a place that, for me, I like to explore. And I love writing for Gillian and David.” Darin Morgan echoed the sentiment, explaining that already he had story in mind that involved a monster, but was really about humanity. “This is the only place that you can tell that story.” www.ew.com/article/2015/10/24/x-files-ew-fest-writers-7-things-we-learned?hootPostID=1fdd116a2bd14ab480740175569ec3eb
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X-FILES
Nov 20, 2015 23:49:46 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Nov 20, 2015 23:49:46 GMT -6
www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/tv/6748987/X-Files-is-back-but-it-will-be-very-different.html X Files is finally back ... but fans will be spooked by new changes to showEXCLUSIVE: Gillian Anderson reveals massive spoiler ahead of new seriesEXCLUSIVE by JEN PHARO, TV Features Editor 11-18-15 THE X-FILES heroine Gillian Anderson has revealed a massive spoiler ahead of its return to TV – there will be no aliens. The six-episode tenth series is due to be shown from January after fans called for a revival of the 1990s sci-fi smash hit. But Gillian, who plays FBI agent Dana Scully alongside David Duchovny’s agent Fox Mulder, has revealed that while the new series will be scary, unlike every previous series it will feature no extraterrestrials. She said: “Will there be aliens in it? No, no aliens this year, sorry. It will be scary. I hope it will be good. “There’ll be some laughs and I think overall, even though I haven’t seen any of it, I’m most pleased with the fact it feels like what we used to deliver. No spooks ... aliens are out in new series “And that’s kind of what the audience and the fans seem to want. “I think we have accomplished that. So hopefully it will be successful.” All the previous series focused on whether there was an alien conspiracy — and Mulder was even abducted. The last series in 2002 revolved around alien “super soldiers” which appeared human and infiltrated the US government. The X-Files is one of the most successful global hits of all time and ran for nine years from 1993 to 2002. The saga spawned the catchphrase “The truth is out there” and two films, The X-Files: Fight The Future in 1998 and 2008’s The X-Files: I Want To Believe. www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/tv/6748987/X-Files-is-back-but-it-will-be-very-different.html
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X-FILES
Dec 29, 2015 17:21:49 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Dec 29, 2015 17:21:49 GMT -6
www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/the-x-files-behind-the-scenes-footage_5682f9e2e4b0b958f65aac0e
New Behind-The-Scenes 'X-Files' Footage Is All About NostalgiaThe series returns for six episodes in January 2016. 12/29/2015 Carly Ledbetter / Entertainment Writer, The Huffington Post / www.huffingtonpost.com/carly-ledbetter/ After 13 long years, Mulder and Scully are officially back. The two FBI special agents, played by David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson, return to television this January for a six-episode "X-Files" event airing on Fox. Ahead of the heavily anticipated premiere, "The X-Files" team released a behind-the-scenes video of the reboot. Called "The X-Files Re-Opened," the 21-minute video features commentary from Duchovny, Anderson and creator Chris Carter. The vid also reveals that the new series will talk about Mulder and Scully's son, William, and possibly about the time he was conceived. Be sure to tune into Fox on Jan. 24 and 25 for the reboot's two-night premiere, starting at 10 p.m. ET. MORE VIDEO: www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/the-x-files-behind-the-scenes-footage_5682f9e2e4b0b958f65aac0e
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X-FILES
Jan 13, 2016 14:22:18 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Jan 13, 2016 14:22:18 GMT -6
www.outerplaces.com/science/item/10874-the-science-of-the-x-files-can-extraterrestrial-life-survive-a-trip-to-earth-on-a-meteorite The Science of The X-Files: Can Extraterrestrial Life Survive a Trip to Earth on a Meteorite?by Janey Tracey Monday, 11 January 2016 It's January, X-Files fans, which means we have less than a month to wait before our favorite alien conspiracy show returns for a six-episode miniseries. The pilot (which we saw at NYCC), airs on January 24th, but until then, we're going to give you daily articles about the fascinating science behind the X-Files, courtesy of science advisor Anne Simon and her book "The Real Science Behind the X-Files: Microbes, Meteorites, and Mutants." In the X-Files episode "Tunguska," Mulder and Scully discover a meteorite has unleashed the alien Black Oil virus on the populace. In the first season episode, "Ice," a Thing-esque alien life form is found preserved in a frozen tundra but was originally delivered to Earth on-you guessed it- a meteorite. But could alien life ever actually reach Earth this way? "In 'Tunguska' and the earlier episode 'Ice,' meteors are the delivery systems for alien hitchhikers that are able to invade a human host. This brings up several interesting questions," Simon writes. "What are the chances that an alien microbe could survive a trip through space on a vehicle that lacks such basic amenities as an atmosphere, temperature control, sunscreen, refreshments, and brakes?"While at first blush, bacteria surviving in space may seem like a "fantasy worthy of Mulder's imagination," scientists have been theorizing that alien bacteria hitches rides on meteorites for years. In fact, many astrobiologists believe that life may have been "seeded" on Earth through unintended contamination from meteorites, comets, and asteroids, a theory known as panspermia. Extremely hardy microscopic life forms such as extremophles can survive all sorts of environments, including the anoxic, dessicated Moon and radioactive waste, so it's theoretically possible that these bacteria could survive the grueling trip to Earth. "Believers in panspermia are not just science fiction junkies. Francis Crick (Nobel laureate and co-discoverer of the structure of DNA) supports the theory of panspermia as does noted English astronomer Sir Fred Hoyle. Even Dana Scully, in "Biogenesis," the last episode of the sixth season, concedes that panspermia is a plausible hypothesis."Although panspermia is, of course, just a theory, evidence has been mounting since The X-Files went off the air in 2002. Most recently, scientists from the Central European Institute of Technology proved that this phenomenon is physically possible, and a further study from the Harvard Center of Astrophysics claims that panspermia would follow a distinctive pattern that we may able to detect (or not detect) in the not-so-distant future: CONTINUE READING: www.outerplaces.com/science/item/10874-the-science-of-the-x-files-can-extraterrestrial-life-survive-a-trip-to-earth-on-a-meteorite
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X-FILES
Jan 15, 2016 16:39:39 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Jan 15, 2016 16:39:39 GMT -6
THE X-FILES | TCA: THE X-FILES
Published on Jan 15, 2016
The X-Files have been reopened and Scully and Mulder are back on the case. THE X-FILES returns JAN 24 for a 6-episode event.
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X-FILES
Jan 22, 2016 13:41:00 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Jan 22, 2016 13:41:00 GMT -6
www.geekwire.com/2016/return-of-the-x-files-brings-real-life-ufo-sleuths-back-out-of-the-shadows/ The return of ‘The X-Files’ brings real-life UFO sleuths out of the shadowsby Alan Boyle / www.geekwire.com/author/alanboyle/ January 22, 2016 Alien visitation is a big topic for “The X-Files.” (Credit: Fox) UFOs are back in style, thanks in part to the return of “The X-Files” to television this weekend, almost 14 years after the last episode had its original airing. And while Mulder and Scully are delving into new anomalies in prime time, the folks who deal with UFO reports in real life are gearing up for renewed attention as well. “X-Files, Y-Files, No-Files, I get calls from people who say they have evidence of alien visitation,” said Seth Shostak, senior astronomer at the SETI Institute. “Either they’ve seen something, they’ve photographed something or they’re in touch with something.” The calls generally come in at a regular rate, but Shostak does recall that there was a noticeable uptick while the original “X-Files” show was on TV. Don Lincoln, a physicist at Fermilab who’s the author of “Alien Universe,” notes that attitudes toward UFOs tend to reflect depictions in popular culture, ranging from flying saucers and little green men to mysterious “Men in Black” and alien conspiracies. The original “X-Files” told tales of gray extraterrestrials and government coverups, and he’s curious to see whether the new series will follow the same path. “It could well be that what the new X-Files will ultimately accomplish is to introduce a new generation to the mysteries of Area 51 and the unsettling idea of the Men in Black,” Lincoln wrote in an email. “I have said enough. They’re watching…” One expert who won’t be watching is Peter Davenport, who’s the director of the National UFO Reporting Center, or NUFORC. He doesn’t even own a television. “I try to avoid addressing works of fiction, because I am a scientist,” he told GeekWire from his home base in Harrington, Wash. “I collect data that is appropriate and accurate. … I find [fictional UFO tales] to be unsatisfying, seeing that I deal with the real thing, all day, every day.” Since he took over NUFORC in 1994, Davenport has compiled more than 100,000 reports of UFO sightings. Some of the records are stored in a decommissioned missile silo that he bought years ago. Almost all of them are available online. (The exceptions tend to be obvious hoaxes or pranks.) “From my vantage point, after 22 years of doing this work, it appears to me that this planet has been visited routinely by these objects that we call UFOs,” Davenport said. “This is very good evidence that we are being visited, apparently by creatures from other parts of our galaxy. We are just beginning to awaken to phenomena beyond what our five senses seem to tell us is the case.” MORE VIDEO & CONTINUE READING: www.geekwire.com/2016/return-of-the-x-files-brings-real-life-ufo-sleuths-back-out-of-the-shadows/
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X-FILES
Jan 24, 2016 18:26:11 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Jan 24, 2016 18:26:11 GMT -6
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X-FILES
Jan 26, 2016 13:30:55 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Jan 26, 2016 13:30:55 GMT -6
www.huffingtonpost.com.au/entry/x-files-return-new-episodes_us_569faea1e4b0a7026bf9bc29?section=australia 'X-Files' Creator: 'I Thought The FBI Was Going To Shut Me Down'A mysterious man told Chris Carter that his conspiracy-themed TV classic was too close to the truth.
01/22/2016 Lee Speigel / Reporter, The Huffington Post Alien conspiracies, monsters, cryptids, mutants, paranormal phenomena -- just a typical day for the fictional FBI agents of "The X-Files." But how close to fiction was it? Creator, writer and director Chris Carter tells a real-life tale about the show in its early days that's worthy of the show's catchphrase, "The truth is out there." "I had someone come up to me during the original run of the series, who said they worked in some high place in a secret government agency, [and] said that we were very close to the truth," Carter told The Huffington Post. "I didn't know whether to take that person at their word or not. I can tell you this: When I wrote the [1993] pilot, I called the FBI to do some research, and they were nice enough, but didn't really give me the time of day. "Then, all of a sudden, as we got close to airing, the FBI called and said, 'Who are you and what are you doing?' And for a second, I thought it was going to be the long arm of the law coming in to shut me down." The science fiction classic returns to TV this weekend after a 14-year absence, and Carter tells HuffPost Weird News that the feds eventually took a liking to him -- and he took a liking to them. "They became unofficial fans [of the 'X-Files']. And as a member of the FBI Citizens Academy, I've had a chance to shoot many a firearm with the FBI. I got to shoot a few rounds at the firing range at FBI headquarters in Washington." Sunday night's premiere of the long-awaited 10th season mini-series marks the first of six installments, combining the alien conspiracy mythology of the original "Monster of the Week" series with stand-alone episodes. "The X-Files" first invaded the consciousness of viewers in 1993, eventually producing more than 200 episodes over nine seasons along with two feature films. An ardent worldwide audience has anxiously waited to see the reunion of FBI agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), as they continue to unravel the fictional unsolved cases that have plagued the bureau. The show's updated catchphrase: "The truth is still out there" While Mulder's obsession with the paranormal propelled him forward in his quest to prove that Earth is visited by colonization-minded aliens, level-headed skeptic Scully spent an equal amount of time doing her best to remain focused, trying to provide logical explanations for all of the weird stuff they've come in contact with. One thing for sure, after more than a decade since the last time he wore Agent Mulder's alien conspiracy shoes, Duchovny told HuffPost it was a no-brainer stepping back into the character for the new season. "It was easy because we had so many years doing it with one another, and for those eight or nine years that we shot the show, we would've spent more time with each other than with our families. And, very much like a family, we fall into a certain way of being and relating and bring that to the characters. You can't fake that kind of history. It's such a gift for an actor to be able to have that much time with the people that he or she is working with." WATCH VIDEOS: www.huffingtonpost.com.au/entry/x-files-return-new-episodes_us_569faea1e4b0a7026bf9bc29?section=australia
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X-FILES
Jan 26, 2016 17:08:58 GMT -6
Post by paulette on Jan 26, 2016 17:08:58 GMT -6
I saw the first and second episode last night. I was disappointed. There was nothing hinted at - the gruesome was in my face from the get go (especially the second episode). I actually left the room at one point. Mulder looked puffy eyed and maybe hung over in the first one (he wore sun glasses a lot). He appeared healthier in the second one. Skully has aged (we've all aged so that's alright). It didn't look like her face moved much, especially her brow. That screams Botox to me and makes me sad. It's hard to show alarm or fear or any eye widening emotion if one's brow doesn't move. If this is catty of me - then it is. Instead of being separate episodes about different events, I think this is going to plow ahead with the "government is doing something nasty" theme.
I'll probaby watch it anyway. But Magic was also on and I really liked that. Interesting.
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X-FILES
Feb 4, 2016 14:01:45 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Feb 4, 2016 14:01:45 GMT -6
wagingnonviolence.org/2016/02/why-we-still-need-the-x-files/Mulder and Scully in the new season of “The X-Files.” (Facebook / The X-Files) Why we still need ‘The X-Files’ by Kate Aronoff / wagingnonviolence.org/author/katearonoff/ February 1, 2016 There are a lot of questions left at the end of the first two episodes of the long-awaited “The X-Files” reboot: What has show creator Chris Carter done with the series mythology? Why does Gillian Anderson seem incapable of aging, and why does she still not have her own desk? How is the Cigarette Smoking Man still alive? Of all the questions, on top might be whether “The X-Files” still matters in 2016. Premiering in 1993, “The X-Files” arose before the Internet — or cell phones, for that matter — had permeated American life. The paranoia directed at Soviet communism through the Cold War had turned inward, and FBI agents Dana Scully (Anderson) and Fox Mulder (David Duchovney) spent an hour each week sifting through provincial folklore and conspiracy theories that touched on everything from the Jersey Devil to JFK’s assassination to the Jonestown Massacre. Animated by a mix of series-spanning mythos and one-off “monster of the week” episodes, the show thrived on its ability to dig up the surreality of everyday life, extraterrestrial and otherwise — not to mention a sexual tension between Scully and Mulder thick enough to cut with a dull knife. Out there was a world — or many — beyond comprehension, worlds they (the mysterious Syndicate and/or the U.S. government proper) tried to keep under wraps, but couldn’t fully control. There were realities different from the ones we knew, whether in an alien war in the sky or sadistic, man-made genetic experiments. In Season 10’s bumpy first episode, YouTube conspiracy theorist Tad O’Malley (Joel McHale) jolts the agents into this particular stretch of the 21st century. Shamelessly modeled off of real-life Infowars sachem Alex Jones (if not leagues more charming), O’Malley is a devotee of Mulder and Scully. He’s determined to enlist them in pulling the last thread on the big sweater the government has been using to hide its prized secret: aliens. But as we learn from Mulder’s one-on-one with multi-abductee Svetta, that sweater itself has been a rouse. In reality, the government has spent countless funds and lives throwing the agents off the trail of a wide-reaching government “assault on its own people,” including everything from climate change to NSA surveillance. Or, as Scully calls the theory, “Fearmongering claptrap isolationist techno-paranoia so bogus, and dangerous, and stupid that it borders on treason.” True to form, she’s only convinced upon finding out that her own abduction decades earlier has left her with alien DNA — the result of government experiments to breed human-alien hybrids. (Never mind that this same plot point was raised at the end of Season 4 into the start of Season 5, when a rogue Department of Defense employee named Michael Kritschgau informed our heroes that they were being led expensively astray, and the government was behind everything. Or that Scully tested her own DNA to find that it matched that of an alien the government had supposedly planted in Antarctica.) CONTINUE READING: wagingnonviolence.org/2016/02/why-we-still-need-the-x-files/
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X-FILES
Feb 5, 2016 12:45:55 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Feb 5, 2016 12:45:55 GMT -6
I wasn't impressed with the new x files...sorry. The writing wasn't that interesting and the material lagged (to me). I'd become pretty jaded with it before it left the air..they just seemed to be beating a dead horse to death and didn't want to pay the price of really good writers. Mind you..I'm not talking from a paranormal point of view..I'm talking from material/acting/writing ...artistic. Just seemed like old actors trying to resurrect something tired. Aliens are. We don't need shows like the x files to convince those already convinced and nothing will convince those who don't want to see it. In my opinion
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X-FILES
Feb 8, 2016 13:20:57 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Feb 8, 2016 13:20:57 GMT -6
www.educatinghumanity.com/2016/02/x-files-ufo-investigator-nick-pope.html Sunday, February 7, 2016 Nick Popes Looks At the Parallels in His MoD Job and The X-FilesFormer MoD UFO & alien investigator Nick Pope In the runup to the X-Files reboot, the CIA has posted various UFO files online. “Top 5 CIA Documents Mulder Would Love To Get His Hands On,” they teased. One contains the bombshell admission that “interplanetary aspects and alien origin are not being thoroughly excluded from consideration”. Well, for 21 years I worked for the Ministry of Defence – and for much of the 1990s I ran their UFO project. My job was to investigate sightings and assess whether any were of “defence significance” – a phrase that was never defined, and thus meant whatever we wanted it to mean. The X-Files began while I was doing this job, and the parallels weren’t lost on my colleagues. People would whistle the theme tune as I walked past, and I even acquired the same nickname as Fox Mulder – “Spooky”. Occasionally it seemed that life was imitating art: I did begin to think that weather balloons and aircraft lights might not explain everything that crossed my desk, especially where UFOs were tracked on military radar. But my bosses disagreed, which only highlighted the perception that I was some maverick given a weird job no one else wanted. I did have clerical support, though they never paired me with a sceptical Scully. Despite what some people believe, we don’t have an alien spaceship squirrelled away in some remote RAF hangar. But we did downplay the department, telling parliament, the media and the public that UFOs were of very limited interest to us. When – in response to a vast number of Freedom of Information requests – the MoD decided to release its entire archive of UFO files, a rather different picture emerged. To date, some 60,000 documents have been made public, including many classified “Secret UK Eyes Only”. One of the most intriguing was codenamed Project Condign, which explored the flight safety implications of UFO, or Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon as we called them: “No attempt should be made to out-manoeuvre a UAP during interception.” It went on to speculate that some UFO sightings might be explained as exotic high-atmospheric plasmas. Another strange paper outlined the top explanations for extraterrestrial visitation when there was no evidence of hostile intent: a) military reconnaissance b) scientific study and c) tourism. While investigating new sightings was the bread and butter of the job, every day was unpredictable. One moment I could be preparing “lines to take” for the press office to use with journalists (aimed at faintly mocking the subject by throwing in terms such as “flying saucer” and “little green men”), or helping a child with a school project on UFOs, while the next I could be researching geographical distribution of sightings, or drafting material for defence ministers to use in parliament, where the subject was – and still is – raised from time to time. Naturally, I was fond of the show. I liked the monsters and human mutants, but I particularly enjoyed the central story about an extraterrestrial reality being kept not just from the public but from insiders such as Mulder and Scully. The gatekeepers of this coverup were a shadowy group known as the Syndicate, and the Smoking Man their best-known member. CONTINUE READING: www.educatinghumanity.com/2016/02/x-files-ufo-investigator-nick-pope.html
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X-FILES
Feb 23, 2016 15:57:31 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Feb 23, 2016 15:57:31 GMT -6
www.usatoday.com/story/life/entertainthis/2016/02/23/x-files-finale-my-struggle-ii-cliffhanger-new-season/80794848/ Could that infuriating 'X-Files' cliffhanger mean another season?by Hoai-Tran Bui, USATODAY February 23, 2016 Seriously, what the heck 'X-Files'?? Spoiler alert! The following contains spoilers for Monday night's season finale of The X-Files. Really, X-Files? You're going to end the new miniseries revival like that? Because that ending is less on the intriguing "nothing gets answered on The X-Files" side, and more on the infuriating "set fire to everything you love" side. The ending to the season finale, My Struggle II, had Scully rushing to bring the antidote to a bioweapon back to the hospital until she suddenly gets stopped by a beam of light coming from an alien ship above her. The camera zooms in on her terrified eyes looking to the sky, and we cut to black. For a series that has no guarantee of a next season, you can at least guarantee the Internet went insane over that ending. "Pure evil" is right, random Internet citizen. So what does that mean for another season? Honestly, we have no clue. Creator Chris Carter told The Hollywood Reporter that Fox wants more episodes, it's just a matter of when. "Right now I've got another project that I want to do first," Carter said. "So, for me, it's just a matter of trying to do (The X-Files) when it makes sense and not try to shoehorn something or hit a schedule." Duchovny hinted at a next season on The Ellen Show, after talking at length about eyebrows. (Check out 2:27 to avoid the eyebrow talk). "It's just a matter of getting everybody's schedules to jive," Duchovny said. "Gillian lives in London, I live — I don't know where I live. And Chris lives here. I would love to (do another season), I think we all would." Duchovny tweeted some words of assurance to the distraught fans, though we're not sure how assuring they are. At least you can live with the knowledge that Chris Carter is probably trolling you with that cliffhanger, and he does actually know where the story is going this time. "The X-Files traditionally ended with a cliffhanger, and we didn't want to do anything different," Carter said to The Hollywood Reporter. "This just happens to be a very big cliffhanger. I have an idea of where the story goes." www.usatoday.com/story/life/entertainthis/2016/02/23/x-files-finale-my-struggle-ii-cliffhanger-new-season/80794848/
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X-FILES
Feb 24, 2016 10:42:58 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Feb 24, 2016 10:42:58 GMT -6
I didn't watch it after the first one..it was disappointing to me...so I don't know about the 'cliff hanger'. Guess I'm just not that hungry for the paranormal any more ...ESPECIALLY if it's hollywoods version of greys.
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X-FILES
Feb 25, 2016 9:44:43 GMT -6
Post by paulette on Feb 25, 2016 9:44:43 GMT -6
Since when did series only go for 4 or 5 episodes? This run of X files had a semi-plot - except for lizzard man. Lizzard man was like a bad think tank event. The rest was missing something that I really liked - the passion to find what they were looking for (Mulder anyway) rather than dreading every minute of it. I remember an old one where Skully gets entranced by a shapeshifter or creature of some sort that is irresistably sexually attractive. He has to pull her out of its arms. (She probably won't have survived). Now THAT was an episode. Wondering what DNA she has and baby that they gave away but now may need for their own purposes - yawn....another yawn.....
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Deleted
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X-FILES
Feb 25, 2016 9:52:29 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2016 9:52:29 GMT -6
I second that yawn and raise you two
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X-FILES
Mar 24, 2016 21:54:10 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Mar 24, 2016 21:54:10 GMT -6
www.airspacemag.com/as-interview/interview-chris-carter-180958438/?no-ist For Chris Carter, the Truth is Still Out ThereThe X-Files creator wants to believe.By Diane Tedeschi /Air & Space Magazine / www.airspacemag.com/author/diane-tedeschi/April 2016 Chris Carter is the creator of “The X-Files,” a fictional TV show that follows FBI special agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully as they investigate the paranormal. Debuting in 1993, the series ran nine seasons, and critics and fans praised the show’s cinematic quality, the result of substantive scripts, thoughtful acting, advanced special effects, and multiple camera viewpoints. Indeed, the best episodes felt more like films than TV shows. On January 24, FOX began airing six new episodes, which ran through February 22. The closing scene of the final episode (Scully standing on a bridge in the middle of a traffic jam) surely leaves the door open for another season. Carter will be one of the speakers at Smithsonian magazine’s “The Future Is Here” festival, which will be held April 22–24 at the Sidney Harman Hall in Washington, D.C. Air & Space: I thought the Roswell scene in the new “X-Files” was beautifully done, and it had me wondering if you accept the official military explanation of Roswell.Carter: Well, the way I understand it—and I only know what I read—is that the military had put out one account of a crashed spacecraft and then withdrew that account and said it was a weather balloon. So that sounds very suspicious to me. But if you read—I’ll call it literature, and I say that with hesitation because I’m a skeptic—there were other crashes in addition to Roswell at places like Aztec [New Mexico], and they were supposed to be far better recoveries of downed craft. Now this is all what I read, and I find it fascinating. There’s that poster on Mulder’s wall: I want to believe. And I want to believe this stuff. But without hard evidence, it begs as many questions as it fails to deliver answers to us. In this age of digital media and smartphone cameras, do you think it’s possible for governments and large corporations to keep secrets?I think it’s increasingly difficult. I think that is a good thing. But I also think it’s difficult to determine—from all the various sources—what is the truth. You mentioned that you’re a skeptic. Do you have any tried-and-true practices for sorting through the glut of information to find what is accurate?Since the beginning of the show, we’ve gone to great lengths to try to. Let me preface this by saying, I think of “The X-Files” as a science show before I think of it as a science-fiction show. Because it’s based on science: hard science, conventional science. And it’s really Scully’s show because she is the anchor to which the sometimes-untethered Mulder is affixed. So to come back to your question, we’ve always been rigorous in our science, and we have reached out to the most reputable scientists. In the original series, we had researchers who did that. Now I think more often, we—like everyone else—sit at home and with the press of a button have 500 conspiracy sites at our fingertips. We weed through all of that. We see what seems credible, and try to do our best. Do you think that extraterrestrial intelligent beings exist?I want to believe that we’re not alone. That we have just yet to contact, discover, or recognize signs in whatever form. Do you think we can handle the truth? Are we ready for our SETI searches to uncover irrefutable evidence of extraterrestrial beings?It would be a game-changer to put it mildly. I think all wars would end tomorrow if we found out. CONTINUE READING: www.airspacemag.com/as-interview/interview-chris-carter-180958438/?no-ist
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X-FILES
Mar 27, 2016 18:34:17 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Mar 27, 2016 18:34:17 GMT -6
I worry about some intelligent race landing and the reception they would get. Well naturally I figure if they're intelligent they'll avoid us altogether..but should they ignore my heart-felt psychic message of don't land here...they're on their own. I think religions would go off the wall...extremists of all kinds would have new targets...people would be hunting ways to use and exploit...there would be assassination attempts...and the government would be trying to capture them for study and possible uses. Really..people would be milking them for the answers to age and cancer and AIDS..all disease..they'd be begging to know if they know God on a personal level..Everything from can't you bring about world peace to (pardon the stolen quote) can you bring back Elvis. What...in the name of anything could bring about world peace?? Well that would be aliens threatening everyone..and then that would only work as long as the threat existed. Nah...I don't have a lot of faith in mankind. I have all faith in man...the individual...the guy before the group infiltrates his brain..but as a whole?? I've just seen too much lately to like us very much and nothing to recommend us to any other race. My spidey sense is apparently wacko because I thought I knew some I find I know nothing about..and that for me is absolutely shocking. Avoid earth..run.
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X-FILES
Oct 22, 2016 13:11:57 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Oct 22, 2016 13:11:57 GMT -6
www.area51.org/new-season-done-the-x-files/ The New Season Is Done, So Let’s Talk About The X-Filesby AgentZero / www.area51.org/author/zero/ Movies & TV, Paranormal, UFOs We’ve seen the whole thing now, the entire comeback season of The X-Files. The result? Majorly mixed feelings for its longtime fans. Spoilers ahead. Do not continue if you haven’t seen the whole season yet. It may be too early to draw many conclusions; this show, and this particular set of episodes, will take some time to settle. I have the feeling that in a couple of weeks, the tiny storylines that arc through nearly all six episodes may seem clearer than they do now. (I’m talking about the Scully’s Mom’s Death Has Greater Meaning subplot, the We Have a Son Named William OMG OMG We Need to Find Him Now subplot, the Agents Miller and Einstein Are a Lot Like Mulder and Scully subplot, and possibly the Are the Lone Gunmen Truly Dead sort-of-subplot.) Mulder Confronts CSM Still, I think I know these things: Chris Carter is the George Lucas of The X-Files. Chris thinks he knows what makes the show appealing. He’s often wrong. If you watch the very first few episodes of the series—season one—there is a sense of ineffable mystery about the show. Anything could happen! Classics like “Fallen Angel”, “Deep Throat”, and “E.B.E.” are great because they show our dynamic duo dealing with unsolvable enigma. There was the Cigarette-Smoking Man, standing ominously in the room, a symbol of the unknowable power of the Majestic 12. The X-Files had a sense of Big Mystery—you could know bits and pieces but never enough to solve it, to make it small. Therein lies the problem: Carter gave into people demanding to know what it all meant, and the show became focused on answers: the reason for the abduction of Mulder’s sister, the green alien blood, the reason for the whole government conspiracy to begin with. Worst of all: the Cigarette-Smoking Man started talking. Not only does this deflate the sinister nature of his presence, but actor William B. Davis was not gifted with an especially commanding voice—and let’s not even talk aboot his Canadian accent, eh. The current set of episodes suffers from the same kinds of problems; the best of the lot were penned by other writers, including the very awesome Darin Morgan (who also wrote “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space”). But the most important episodes lay most everything bare; there is little sense of deep mystery at work. It was gratifying just to see the old gang back together—mostly. Some are taking the opportunity to say the show has lost everything it every had, that the Mulder/Scully chemistry is just gone, that all the episodes were completely stupid, and that the show is just not scary anymore. I don’t believe them—I don’t even think the people who say crap like this even believe it. It’s just fun to join the negativity bandwagon, no? The chemistry is definitely still there. There were moments where I was frightened. And even in the weaker episodes there were moments of brilliance (Mulder got high on fake ‘shrooms and went line-dancing with a cowboy hat and boots, people!). Did we really need to see Annabeth Gish as Agent Monica Reyes again, though? I didn’t. The only thing she reminds me of is that during the later, weaker part of the series’ original run, when Duchovny got tired and mostly left the show, they tried to replace Mulder and Scully with Reyes and what’s-his-name-I-don’t-care-enough-to-look-it-up. Bad memories. Sucky episodes. Oh, and when rumors flew about the Lone Gunmen appearing in this new round of episodes, I certainly hoped for more than a hallucination of them, *bleep*. CONTINUE READING: www.area51.org/new-season-done-the-x-files/
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X-FILES
Dec 22, 2016 13:50:22 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Dec 22, 2016 13:50:22 GMT -6
X-FILES BLOOPERS
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X-FILES
Apr 21, 2017 12:26:23 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Apr 21, 2017 12:26:23 GMT -6
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X-FILES
Oct 8, 2017 18:03:11 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Oct 8, 2017 18:03:11 GMT -6
midnightinthedesert.com/gillian-anderson-calling-quits-x-files-season-11/ Gillian Anderson calling it quits on X-Files after Season 11Posted on October 8, 2017 The truth is out there…for one more season. According to Screen Rant, X-Files actress Gillian Anderson will say goodbye to playing Agent Scully and alien chasing after the show’s 11th season, which got its first teaser this past Thursday at New York Comic Con. When asked why she was returning for this upcoming season, Gillian responded with, “Because it felt like it wasn’t over. It didn’t feel like we necessarily deliver everything the fans were expecting of us last time, and so it was that.” Will Anderson miss the paranormal skeptic who has become a cultural icon among TV fans? “You may need to talk to me in a few years about that once I finally shut the door,” she said. “You know, there’s always been this may one more thing hanging over, but when the door is finally shut call me up and ask me that question again.” Speaking with Deadline, she also expressed her view that the show could possibly exist without her. ““I’m trying to finish this season. I certainly think the show has much more life in it. So, I can’t answer that question definitively but I can tell you that there are more stories to tell.” Season 11 is set to land on Fox in January 2018. midnightinthedesert.com/gillian-anderson-calling-quits-x-files-season-11/ MORE INFO: www.cnet.com/au/news/x-files-trailer-season-11-fox-mulder-dana-scully-david-duchovny-gillian-anderson/?ftag=COS-05-10aaa0b&linkId=43263700
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X-FILES
Oct 14, 2017 12:38:09 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Oct 14, 2017 12:38:09 GMT -6
tvline.com/2017/10/12/the-x-files-robert-patrick-season-11-doggett/ The X-Files Eyes Robert Patrick for Season 11 Encore as DoggettBy Michael Ausiello / tvline.com/author/michael-ausiello/ October 12 2017 We want to believe this will work out: The X-Files is trying to get Robert Patrick back for Season 11. Series creator Chris Carter tells TVLine exclusively that the Scorpion actor — who portrayed Agent John Doggett in Seasons 8 and 9 — was actually slated to appear in one of Season 11’s early installments. “I actually wrote him into an episode,” Carter reveals. “But then I found out he wasn’t going to be available to us [because of Scorpion] so I had to write him out of the episode… Scorpion is his first priority.” Carter then cryptically adds, “That’s not to say you won’t see him this season…” For his part, Patrick confirms to TVLine that it was a scheduling conflict with Scorpion that torpedoed his original encore, but says he’s “game” to make another go at it. (The X-Files is about to start production on Episode 6 of its 10-episode order.) A Doggett comeback makes sense considering that his former partner, Monica Reyes (Annabeth Gish), was revealed to be in cahoots with Cigarette Smoking Man in the Season 10 cliffhanger. Gish has already signed on to return in Season 11, and Carter says her mysterious alliance with CSM will be addressed “in an interesting way.” tvline.com/2017/10/12/the-x-files-robert-patrick-season-11-doggett/
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X-FILES
Nov 16, 2017 13:51:27 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Nov 16, 2017 13:51:27 GMT -6
X-FILES WILL BE BACK IN JANUARY 2018
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X-FILES
Dec 18, 2017 15:47:19 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Dec 18, 2017 15:47:19 GMT -6
NEWEST X'FILES TRAILER
Sneak Peek: What To Expect This Season | Season 11 | THE X-FILES
The X-Files Published on Dec 15, 2017
Creator Chris Carter and stars David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson & Mitch Pileggi tease the thrilling new season of The X-Files.
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X-FILES
Jan 2, 2018 14:29:49 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Jan 2, 2018 14:29:49 GMT -6
www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/la-et-st-x-files-anderson-carter-duchovny-20180102-story.html#nws=mcnewsletterGillian Anderson, David Duchovny and Chris Carter keep seeking the truth that's 'out there' as 'The X-Files' returnsDavid Duchovny and Gillian Anderson in the Season 11 opener of "The X-Files" which premieres Wednesday on Fox. (Robert Falconer/FOX) by Sarah Rodman Contact Reporter / www.latimes.com/la-bio-sarah-rodman-staff.htmlIf you have found yourself contemplating rewatching some old episodes of “The X-Files” to brush up before the upcoming Season 11 premiere on Fox this Wednesday, you’re in good company. “The mythology of this show, it was complex,” said series creator Chris Carter in a wild understatement. “Sometimes,” he admitted by phone from Vancouver, where he was recently finishing up the season finale, “I have to go back and remind myself of the way the puzzle pieces fit together.” After a 14-year hiatus, the beloved sci fi drama returned in 2016 for a quick-hit miniseries. The six episodes reacquainted viewers with the tangled history of FBI special agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) and their quest to ferret out the truth about aliens, the paranormal and all manner of monsters and monstrous men. Fox was pleased enough by the ratings success of the reboot to order up 10 more episodes — which Anderson says will be her last — to continue the pair’s journey. Reaction to the miniseries was mixed, even among the “X-Files” cast and crew, but all are optimistic that they found a groove with the upcoming season. “Last season we really went from a standing start, and this season I feel we have much more of a running start,” Carter said. “When it was proposed to me that ‘The X-Files’ would come back, it came out of the blue. When it was proposed to me when it would return again for Season 11, it was something I had been actively involved in and half-anticipated.” “I think we were rusty,” Duchovny said of the 2016 season by phone shortly after Christmas. “It felt like we were finding our way with it,” Anderson agreed. “It didn't necessarily feel like what it used to be and what it could be. It didn't feel like we were living its potential, necessarily.” But, she said by phone from Vancouver, that unfulfilled sense of how great it could be served as motivation. “Part of my decision to come at it again one more time was to have an opportunity to do that. And certainly there's more of an opportunity with 10 than there was with six, just because of the nature of the show and that it is so many different things, there are so many different worlds that we live in, and aspects of these characters that we get to play, and types of episodes that we do. So to have an opportunity to explore that full range through a larger arc was interesting, and with the hope and the understanding that that perhaps will create a better conclusion for ourselves and for the fans.” Those fans, said Carter, can count on the normal ratio of “monster of the week” to mythology episodes and expect the series to run the gamut emotionally from absurd and uproarious to poignant and pulse-pounding. As for this being the end, Anderson is resolved — “This is it for me,” she said — but Duchovny isn’t ready for that conversation, pointing out that he himself left the show at one point during its original run. “Gillian said it's been it before ... I don't know. We can make pronouncements or we could say, ‘Well, Fox might not want more.’ Who knows? I have no idea, so I'd rather not even dwell on the hypotheticals of it. I'd rather just enjoy these 10.” Time will tell, but for now, Anderson says, “It has been an extraordinary gift and I'm incredibly grateful for the existence of Scully in my life and for the gift that Chris gave me in casting me, and my friendship with David, and it's been a wonderful run, but I've got other things to do.” One of those things, unfortunately, will not be appearing again as the new god Media in the second season of “American Gods” on Starz. Anderson says the departure of showrunners Bryan Fuller and Michael Green means she will not return to the show. She does, however, have two feature films slated for 2018, including the espionage comedy “The Spy Who Dumped Me” with Mila Kunis and Kate McKinnon, and Duchovny is about to set off on a tour of Australia and New Zealand in support of his upcoming album “Every Third Thought,” out digitally January 26. For his part, Carter said he needed to focus on finishing up this season but could envision being struck by an idea of where to go next. “That happens all the time,” he said. “Every time I pick up a newspaper there's something that sparks.” And the news itself appears to have caught up with “The X-Files,” given the recent revelations by the Pentagon about the sanctioned government investigation into UFOs. As the show long contended, it would appear that the truth was indeed out there. Anderson, Duchovny and Carter, however, have disparate thoughts on the matter and the fact that the news didn’t make much of a ripple this holiday season. “It’s funny, I listen to this [New York Times] podcast called ‘The Daily,’ and they did a piece on it, which was nice to see,” Carter says. “We should be talking about it. But the only way that people are really going to sit up and pay attention is if a UFO becomes an IFO. It still seems loopy, in a way, because these are unidentified objects, and even though now there's reports of recovery of some of [them], everything still remains shadowy.” Anderson points out the preponderance of sobering, tangible current events that kept the news from creating a bigger buzz. “It fascinates me, but a percentage of my life is not spent in that world,” she said. “And so I think I read that and went, ‘Huh.’ Rather than, ‘Oh, my God. Don't you know what this means?’ Yeah it's a big deal, but so much of what's going on right now is a bigger deal than that. I mean, that there's somebody in office who is causing more damage to the world and our relationships with the rest of our fellow human beings than any alien race could do landing on this planet is of more concern than the fact that there were funds put into unusual research. I'm sorry.” For his part, Duchovny for once is playing the skeptic. “Yeah, it seems a little fishy to me that they're releasing all this information now,” he says wryly. “I would check with Fox publicity about that. I'm not exactly sure who's pulling the levers at this point.” ‘The X-Files’
Where: Fox
When: 8 p.m. Wednesday Jan. 3, 2018www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/la-et-st-x-files-anderson-carter-duchovny-20180102-story.html#nws=mcnewsletter
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X-FILES
Jan 3, 2018 14:47:43 GMT -6
Post by auntym on Jan 3, 2018 14:47:43 GMT -6
www.syfy.com/syfywire/chris-carter-x-files-gillian-anderson-scully?__source=Blastr_True_Anthem_Blastr_Twitter&utm_campaign=trueAnthem:+Trending+Content&utm_content=5a4c3cae9ebbef0007865d6a&utm_medium=trueAnthem&utm_source=twitter tonight's the night...FOX CHANNEL, 8:00PM EST.Chris Carter says it's not the X-Files without Gillian Anderson's Scully 1-2-2018 by Don Kaye / www.syfy.com/author/don-kayeGillian Anderson appears to be on her way out of The X-Files for real, which leaves the show's creator, Chris Carter, in a tough position. Anderson first said this past October that Season 11 of the series would be her last in the role of Dana Scully, and she seemed to reiterate that this week in a new interview with TV Insider, insisting, "I’ve said from the beginning this is it for me. I was a bit surprised by people’s [shocked] reaction to my announcement … because my understanding was that this was a single season." So when Chris Carter sat down earlier today for an "Ask Me Anything" session on Reddit to promote the Season 11 premiere, the first question he got was whether he was interested in continuing without Anderson. His response? "For me, the show has always been Mulder & Scully. So the idea of doing the show without her isn’t something I’ve ever had to consider." Asked if the character of Scully gets a "proper goodbye" at the end of the season, Carter said cryptically: "Was her character given a proper goodbye? I think you will want to sit down and watch the series finale very carefully." Carter quickly clarified that by "series finale," he meant the fourth in the series of episodes titled "My Struggle" ("My Struggle III" kicks off the season), saying, "The four ‘My Struggle’ episodes were all pieces of a whole, and Episode 10 (which is also the season finale) completes the whole." Carter said in that earlier TV Insider interview that there are a "lot more X-Files stories to tell," a phrase that Anderson herself used almost word for word ("there are more stories to tell") when asked if the show could continue without her. At this point, though, a Season 12 for The X-Files has yet to be announced. Could The X-Files continue without Dana Scully? The show managed to plow along without Mulder (David Duchovny) for most of its last three seasons during its initial nine-year run, although most fans would probably agree that — despite a few solid episodes — The X-Files was more or less on life support during that period. Even with its vast mythology and colorful cast of supporting characters — which we'll also see more of in Season 11 — The X-Files has always come down to the relationship between its two haunted, long-suffering FBI agents. Do you think the series should continue if one of them is taken out of the equation for good? The X-Files returns to Fox for a new 10-episode run on Wednesday. www.syfy.com/syfywire/chris-carter-x-files-gillian-anderson-scully?__source=Blastr_True_Anthem_Blastr_Twitter&utm_campaign=trueAnthem:+Trending+Content&utm_content=5a4c3cae9ebbef0007865d6a&utm_medium=trueAnthem&utm_source=twitter
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X-FILES
Jan 3, 2018 17:00:09 GMT -6
Post by paulette on Jan 3, 2018 17:00:09 GMT -6
No Scully? Hmmm. I reread my comments above and realized that I had watched later brought-sorta-to-life versions of the X files. And hadn't been impressed. I'll watch these for awhile. We'll see what we see.
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X-FILES
Jan 6, 2018 14:49:08 GMT -6
Post by paulette on Jan 6, 2018 14:49:08 GMT -6
Watched the debut for 2018. Duchovny looks terrible. Jowly, unhealthy....it like they try to keep him in sunglasses or with the light behind him. Gillian looks eeriely the same. that smooth expressionless forehead and careful lipstick - even when she's been clobbered with some ailment or other. There was a show that was on for a few years that featured the fact that some group or other had unleashed a plague on humans. At the end, seemingly everyone dies. Anyone remember that? It was well done. I'm not saying that life might not imitate art (we're probably overdue for a terrible population wiping plague)but it looks like X files is going down that path. Sigh. I used to really like the X files.I liked Scully willingly on her back with some energy sucking lover over her (Mulder of course intervened).
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X-FILES
Jan 7, 2018 11:28:30 GMT -6
via mobile
Post by jcurio on Jan 7, 2018 11:28:30 GMT -6
Glad someone watched it. 😊
Friday night I watched the movie “contagion” on tv. With gweneth Paltrow and matt Damon. Pretty realistic.
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