The X-Files (S1.Ep2): “Deep Throat”

X-Files (Season 1 – Episode 2): “Deep Throat” ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Director: Daniel Sackheim. Writers: Chris CarterChris Carter. Cast: David DuchovnyGillian AndersonJerry Hardin, Seth Green.

This is the episode which really sets up the so-called “X-Files Mythology” about Aliens, alien technology and Government conspiracy. It’s also the one that introduced us to the Deep Throat character who will become an essential part of this first seasonIt’s an essential episode which sets in motion so many elements which will become classic X-Files tropes, but also in a typical X-Files fashion it will leave most of the questions unanswered, so much so that a voice over was required at the end to help the audience a little bit (and even that became a signature of the series).I have to be honest, maybe because I’ve seen all the other episodes after this and I am used to a lot more outrageous events, or maybe because it’s based to commonly known stories and legends about Area 51 or the Roswell UFO incident, on this repeated viewing, I found it slightly weaker than the pilot and more obvious episode, though it does have a great ending and one of the most intriguing final lines: “They’ve been here for a long time”. Classic!! Duchovny and Anderson once again show their comedic timing while arguing about how possible or impossible the existence of aliens is. This is something they’ll do over and over again and yet they will always keep it fresh and make it work seamlessly. It is always a pleasure to watch is Gillian Anderson’s bemused smile as she tries to argue her way though Mulder’s theories. This was clearly not something in the script and yet their performances added the extra level of chemistry between the two of them.Something I have just realised, the title sequence had not ben worked out properly yet and it’s actually different from what it’s going to look like. Also worth mentioning the stoner character played by Seth Green (before his role in Buffy or Austin Power), the first of the many recognisable actors who went on to do many other things after this.

The X-Files (S01.Ep01): “Pilot”

The X-FilesSeason 1 – Episode 1: “Pilot” ⭐️⭐️⭐️ 1/2

Director: Robert Mandel. Writer: Chris Carter. Stars:David DuchovnyGillian AndersonCharles Cioffi 

My new blu-ray full set of all the seasons of the X-Files has been sitting on the shelf for almost a couple years now, looking at me and asking “when are you going to watch me again?” I thought tonight was as good as night as it’ll ever be.

It’s easy today, 28 years later, to underestimate the impact this TV Show has had, not just on Sci-Fi but on television in general.The X-Files was ground-breaking for the time and I’m pleased to see how a lot of it still works today.. A lot of the ingredients that made the series so delicious are in this pilot episode (though the iconic title music isn’t there yet): the mysteries, the government conspiracies, the flashlight at night, the banter between the sceptic (Scully) and the believer, the smoking man in a corner or the room, the gross stuff, the UFO… This is brilliant stuff already from the outset: tight, smartly written, looking more like a movie than a tv show has hardly ever looked and sounded: yes, of course Twin Peaks had been released a couple of years before, but that was this is the show that really broke the rules of television, keeping people in the shadows, only lit by flashlight or letting the action develop in white shots, as opposed to the usual big close ups. Even the typed-up captions on the screen with location, date and time was fresh at the time.

Of course the X-Files will go on getting better an better and by season 3 and 4 it’ll get as good as TV can ever get with episodes as gripping as any movie out there, attempting things TV had never done before (including an episode with one continuous take). Before Binge-TV became a thing (possibly with “24”) The X-Files was there (including people talking and speculating on this “new thing” called the internet)

But the real secret behind this series can be seen already in this pilot: the amazing chemistry between the two leads, possibly unbeaten still today, as far as TV is concerned is palpable. From the moment the two meet to the first unexpected hug leading to years of speculations on whether the two of them will ever get together. David Duchovny gets a lot of slack for his deadpan deliveries, but his understated performance fits the character so well that it’s hard to see anyone else playing the part (truth is, when he left the show towards the later seasons, the X-Files wasn’t quite the same anymore). But beyond the flat tone of his deliveries you can see how much he’s enjoying himself being Fox Mulder. He has a couple of wonderful moments in this episode, smiling and cracking jokes, but also he somehow manages to make the story about the abduction by alien of his sister believable. And then of course, Gilliam Anderson’s Dana Scully who will become he heart and soul of the series and who still to this day can surprise us and win awards left and right. I loved her at the time and I still do today. Her intensity is so powerful that actually does the work for both of them. I loved watching this episode again tonight and aside from the terrible clothes and huge computer monitors which date it all back to the 90s, everything else is still spot on and it made me want to start watching is all again, especially because I know it’s going to get a lot more sophisticated both technically and in terms of content and stories (and yes, it’s going to lose the plot on the mythology a little bit, I know, but those who have seen it all, know that there are a lot of great episodes even in the later seasons).It’s one of the few shows that was able to bring together adventures, sci-fi, horror, police procedures, mysteries and comedy all in one.

Roll on the X-Files again: the truth is out there! (On DisneyPlus)

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