The X-Files (film) 1998

Monday, July 7, 2008
at 2:22 PM

The X-Files (film)

This is a science fiction film based on the television series of the same name.

"Fight the Future" is the film's subtitle and/or tagline. It was used to distinguish the motion picture from the television series. In many places, the phrase appears to be part of the film's title — for example, in promotional materials and on the cover and spine of the DVD packaging. However, the opening title and closing credit sequences within the motion picture, and the studio boilerplate on the DVD packaging and promotional posters, state the title of the film as simply The X-Files.

If viewed in the context of the X-Files chronology, the film takes place between seasons five and six of the TV series.

These actors are those who also have roles on the TV show:

  • David Duchovny as Special Agent Fox Mulder
  • Gillian Anderson as Special Agent Dana Scully
  • Mitch Pileggi as Assistant Director Walter Skinner
  • William B. Davis as Cigarette-Smoking Man
  • John Neville as Well-Manicured Man
  • Dean Haglund as Richard 'Ringo' Langly
  • Bruce Harwood as John Fitzgerald Byers
  • Tom Braidwood as Melvin Frohike
  • Don S. Williams as First Elder
  • George Murdock as Second Elder

The following actors do not appear on the TV show:

  • Martin Landau as Alvin Kurtzweil
  • Jeffrey DeMunn as Ben Bronschweig
  • Blythe Danner as Assistant Director Jana Cassidy
  • Terry O'Quinn as Darius Michaud (he appears in the TV show, but as two other different characters)
  • Armin Mueller-Stahl as Conrad Strughold
  • Glenne Headly as Barmaid (uncredited)

Plot summary

The film opens in prehistoric times in a wordless sequence. A Neanderthal man stumbles upon what appears to be a large, primal, vicious alien in a cave (although the camerawork uses zooms and flash-edits to keep the creature from being visualized fully). The two fight, and the caveman wins, stabbing the alien to death. However, fans of the show will recognize the black oil as it bleeds from the alien's wounds and soaks into the Neanderthal. After a fade to modern-day small-town Texas, a little boy (Lucas Black) falls down a hole in his back yard, and finds a human skull. As he picks it up, black oil seeps out from the ground beneath his feet, and black slivers move up his legs until they reach his head - his eyes go black. Shortly afterward, a team of firemen descend to rescue him. They are presumably lost to the same fate as the boy.

In the summer of 1998, at the end of the show's fifth season, the X-Files were shut down, and Fox Mulder and Dana Scully were assigned to other projects. They are first seen assisting Special Agent in Charge (SAC) Darius Michaud (Terry O'Quinn), and his FBI team investigating a bomb threat to a federal building in Dallas, Texas. When Mulder separates from the team to scout out the building across the street, he discovers the bomb in a first-floor vending machine. He and Scully are able to evacuate the building and prevent hundreds of casualties before it explodes. (Several media commentators noted parallels between this and the real-life 1995 Oklahoma City Bombing.)

Mulder and Scully return to Washington, D.C., but instead of commending their roles in preventing the deaths of hundreds, they are instead chastised because four victims were still in the building: three firemen, and one little boy. They are both scheduled separate hearings in which their job performance will be evaluated.

That evening, Mulder encounters a paranoid doctor, Alvin Kurtzweil (Martin Landau), who explains that the four victims were already dead, and the bomb was allowed to detonate to destroy the evidence as to how they died. Mulder enlists Scully to travel with him to the morgue to examine the bodies. They learn that the bodies have suffered a complete cellular breakdown which could not have been caused by the bomb. Mulder leaves Scully in the morgue to fly back to Dallas to investigate evidence left from the explosion. He urges Scully to join him, and she shares evidence that the bodies were infected with an alien virus. They travel to the boy's home and find a brand-new park in place of the hole in which he fell. Unsure what to do next, they follow a team of tanker trucks to a massive cornfield surrounding two bright, glowing domes. When they infiltrate the domes, they find simply a large empty space. However, grates on the floor open up, and a massive swarm of thousands of bees chase the agents into the cornfield. Soon helicopters fly overhead, and the two make a harrowing escape back to Washington.

Upon their return, Mulder, finding the evidence disappearing rapidly, unsuccessfully seeks help from Kurtzweil, while Scully attends her performance hearing, and learns that she is being transferred to Salt Lake City, Utah. She informs Mulder that she would rather resign from the FBI than be transferred. Mulder is devastated at the thought of not having Scully as a partner to help him uncover the truth, telling her, "I don't know if I want to do this alone. I don't know if I even can. And if I quit now, they win." The two have a tender moment (they lean towards each other, as though to kiss), until she is stung by a bee which had lodged itself under her shirt collar. She has an adverse reaction, and Mulder calls for emergency help.

However, when an ambulance arrives to transport her, the driver shoots Mulder in the head, and whisks Scully to an undisclosed location. The real ambulance pulls to the scene moments later as the scene fades to black. Mulder awakens in a hospital (the bullet grazed his temple), and, with the help of The Lone Gunmen, sneaks out of the hospital. He is accosted by The Well-Manicured Man, who gives him Scully's location in Antarctica, along with a weak vaccine to combat the virus she is infected with. The Well-Manicured Man then kills his driver and himself before his betrayal of the Syndicate can be discovered.

Mulder journeys to Antarctica to save Scully, in the process discovering a secret lab run by the Cigarette-Smoking Man and his colleague Strughold. The lab is destroyed just after they escape to the surface, when the alien ship lying dormant underneath comes back to life and leaves its underground port, launching into the sky. Scully is unconscious while the ship flies directly overhead, and Mulder wakes her in time to allow her a hazy view of the gray ship disappearing into gray clouds; it is unclear whether Scully, in her weakened state, discerned anything.

Later, Mulder and Scully attend a hearing where their testimony is routinely ignored, and the evidence covered up. The only remaining proof of the whole ordeal is the bee that stung Scully, collected by The Lone Gunmen. She hands it over, stating, "I don't believe the FBI currently has an investigative unit qualified to pursue the evidence at hand."

The scene shifts to Mulder reading a copy of The Washington Post while sitting on a bench along The Mall. Scully walks up to him, and Mulder hands the newspaper to her with, "There's an interesting work of fiction on page twenty-four."

Mulder and Scully then return to the debate they had earlier in the hallway outside Mulder's apartment. Given, however, her experiences since and Mulder's despair of exposing the cover-up, Scully has now found herself in the reverse position of having to convince her partner to continue their pursuit of the X-Files.

"Listen," she says poignantly as she takes Mulder's hand in hers and looks at him intently. "If I quit now, they win."

At another crop outpost in Tunisia, Strughold receives a telegram. "The X-Files have been reopened. Stop. Please advise. Stop."

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