The Wrapreports that The X-Files—the second-most-paranoid TV show of the '90s, after Seinfeld—will return as a six-episode "limited series":
Fox
The series' Emmy Award-winning creator and executive producer Chris Carter is returning, alongside stars David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson, who'll reprise their roles as FBI Agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully, respectively, more than a decade after the show ended in 2002.
"I think of it as a 13-year commercial break," Carter said in a statement. "The good news is the world has only gotten that much stranger, a perfect time to tell these six stories."
Produced by 20th Century Fox Television and Ten Thirteen Productions, production is set to begin this summer. But, Fox has yet to determine an airdate for the limited series.
Speaking as an old fan, I'm happy but wary. The original X-Files was very much a product of the period that came after the Cold War and before the War on Terror, and it isn't always easy to plug a paranoid franchise from one historical moment into the fears of a different time. In the best-case scenario, Carter and company will seize the Zeitgeist again. In the worst-case scenario, we'll get something like AMC's weak attempt to "reimagine" The Prisoner.
I wrote a eulogy for The X-Files after the series was cancelled; an excerpt from that follows after the jump:
At a time when the world's cultures and subcultures traded and blended more freely than ever before, so did its schools of fear. Militiamen, hippies, black nationalists, ufologists—the mythologies of one group flowed freely into another's, even as radically different styles of conspiracism contended. It was the perfect era for a program like The X-Files, which changed its colors from week to week: sometimes a science fiction series, sometimes a supernatural fantasy, sometimes a political thriller, sometimes a self-aware comedy. For a genre show, it had a hard time sticking to one genre.
And for a show whose lead character focused so emphatically on exposing The Truth, it found those truths in a diverse set of places. In its best years—from its debut in 1993 to around 1997—the series found conspiracies in the military, in corporate America, and, of course, in the skies. Its heroes encountered militias and vampires, hackers and disgruntled postal workers, surveillance cameras and the country's most ubiquitous species of shadow government: a neighborhood association and its Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions. If a popular anxiety was afoot—justified or unjustified, conspiracist or more broadly paranoid—it turned up in The X-Files. (Sometimes the franchise managed to catch a fear before it entered the larger culture. The debut episode of a short-lived spinoff, The Lone Gunmen, featured a plot to crash a jet into the World Trade Center.)
The '90s were also a time of ironic paranoia, of a surrealist subculture less interested in exposing secret plots than in using conspiracy theories as a joke or a metaphor. This, too, turned up on the show. Several witty episodes, most of them scripted by Darin Morgan, cast doubt on the very notion of a single Truth—or, at least, of a Truth that can be captured in one master narrative.
At the same time, the series attempted to build such a narrative. This proved the show's undoing. The grand conspiracy that once stayed in the background—more an enticing set of hints than anything else—began to intrude more and more, and good storytelling gradually gave way to a plot that seemed less interesting with each new revelation.
You can read the rest of that article here. A more extended discussion of the show is in chapter 11 of my book The United States of Paranoia. And The Lone Gunmen's predictive programmingcompletely coincidental foiling of a 9/11-like plot is below:
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So the x-files will degenerate into a show about aging boomers who struggle with boredom and fidelity while chasing monsters through hickville each week.
I agree. I saw her on Top Gear and she looked more attractive (to my eye) at 46 than she ever did on X-Files. She's also more attractive when she uses her English accent.
Every "reboot" (as opposed to a "reimagining" like BSG) of a series that has been more than a few years off the air has been a failure to varying degrees. Arrested Development, Futurama, you name it. I'm even worried about Community and they have only been off the air for a year or two. I cannot see X-Files as being anything but disappointing. Trying to recapture a zeitgeist that you had years and years ago with writers who have moved on and aging actors (who have also moved on) is just a fool's errand. It's solely about making nostalgia money.
I think this is something of a Sturgeon's Law issue. Taken as a whole, the "rebooted" Futurama was just as good, but our memory has filtered out all the mediocre episodes from the original run and only remembers the really good ones. So it SEEMS like the original was better than the current series.
Pre-cancellation had some horrible episodes too, like "That's Lobstertainment!" or "A Leela of Her Own". It's just that most people don't remember them (in fact I didn't until I looked up "bad Futurama episodes" right now).
I don't know if I don't like Jeff Goldblum because he is anoying, or because I know too many people who really think he is super smart because he was a scientist in Jurassic Park and Independence Day (and don't seem to grok that he is an actor).
Oh come on, there are plenty of opportunities for paranoia these days that they can tap into. The president is a secret socialist Muslim bent on humbling and bankrupting the United States, and turn us into a sort of Northern Guatemala. Meanwhile, Silicon Valley billionaires conspire to turn themselves into immortal computer-enhanced transhumanist ?bermensch who will spy on us through social media, and control us by manipulating our Facebook feeds and Google results. And GMOs. Don't forget GMOs.
They would almost have to be monster-of-the-week episodes. The long arc stories have already been more or less resolved. Also - spoiler alert - wasn't the alien invasion scheduled for 2016?
Besides the alien rebels vs the alien invader plot-line was very meh to begin with. What they need to do is team up with all the employed folks from weekly world news and do a Batboy episode.
I still say the first episode of "Enterprise" should have started with Captain Archer beaming onto the bridge of NX-01, looking around and muttering, "Oh, boy!"
So the x-files will degenerate into a show about aging boomers who struggle with boredom and fidelity while chasing monsters through hickville each week.
So....The Big Chill meets Godzirra?
Right On!
Aging gen-x'ers, I think. I hate to break it to you, but boomers are pretty well aged at this point.
Oh, God, please no
I don't know. I have a perverse interest in seeing Scully with age lines and sagging breasts.
Didn't she already have the sagging breasts?
There are too many fakes online to answer that question.
She was just recently on Top Gear. She's had lots of work done in the face, but she looks pretty good otherwise.
You... clearly have not watched the Hannibal TV show. Or The Fall. Gillian Anderson has never looked better.
I agree. I saw her on Top Gear and she looked more attractive (to my eye) at 46 than she ever did on X-Files. She's also more attractive when she uses her English accent.
She and Julia Louis-Dreyfus must have made some pact with the devil. JLD is in her mid-50s and looks unbelievably good.
Every "reboot" (as opposed to a "reimagining" like BSG) of a series that has been more than a few years off the air has been a failure to varying degrees. Arrested Development, Futurama, you name it. I'm even worried about Community and they have only been off the air for a year or two. I cannot see X-Files as being anything but disappointing. Trying to recapture a zeitgeist that you had years and years ago with writers who have moved on and aging actors (who have also moved on) is just a fool's errand. It's solely about making nostalgia money.
You know they have new Community episodes ready now for your viewing. Two, I would think, at this point.
I didn't realize that they had started yet. Thanks for the heads up. I know what I'm watching later.
I DIDN'T DO IT SO YOU COULD WATCH THEM BEFORE ME.
it's about collecting a paycheck after your other options have faded out.
Agreed 100%
Futurama? It never missed a beat. And I thought it was even more popular after the break than before...
I don't know the newer Futurama episodes seem to have lost something.
Futurama was never good.
I think this is something of a Sturgeon's Law issue. Taken as a whole, the "rebooted" Futurama was just as good, but our memory has filtered out all the mediocre episodes from the original run and only remembers the really good ones. So it SEEMS like the original was better than the current series.
Wasn't the gay marriage episode in the reboot series? That one was so sledgehammer-subtle that it was particularly bad.
Pre-cancellation had some horrible episodes too, like "That's Lobstertainment!" or "A Leela of Her Own". It's just that most people don't remember them (in fact I didn't until I looked up "bad Futurama episodes" right now).
They were all bad. Futurama sucked.
That's why I hope at least key bits of the denouement of Lost has been in the can since the series prod'n.
http://users.bestweb.net/~robgood/teach
I wonder if they will run it on Friday nights - where XFiles started and I really liked the show? Or Sunday night, where I lost interest.
There really isn't anything on Friday nights, Sundays are pretty crowded.
Banshee and Strike Back are on Fridays. If you're in to sex and violence.
People care what might shows are on? Do you not DVR? What year is this?
They should have Jeff Goldblum be the new Mulder.
I don't know if I don't like Jeff Goldblum because he is anoying, or because I know too many people who really think he is super smart because he was a scientist in Jurassic Park and Independence Day (and don't seem to grok that he is an actor).
Those new apartment guide commercials don't help.
Have them watch him on Portlandia.
Oh come on, there are plenty of opportunities for paranoia these days that they can tap into. The president is a secret socialist Muslim bent on humbling and bankrupting the United States, and turn us into a sort of Northern Guatemala. Meanwhile, Silicon Valley billionaires conspire to turn themselves into immortal computer-enhanced transhumanist ?bermensch who will spy on us through social media, and control us by manipulating our Facebook feeds and Google results. And GMOs. Don't forget GMOs.
Monsanto, the most dangerous bond villain yet, producing boys from Brazil hybrid Hitler corn....
Oh come on, there are plenty of opportunities for paranoia these days that they can tap into.
Of course there are. The question is whether they can adapt to these 2015-vintage fears.
I have a cunning plan: Koch Trek.
Will they have an incomprehensible overarching plot they're clearly making up as they go along?
Honestly, mostly the monster-of-the-week or one-off episodes were the best.
They would almost have to be monster-of-the-week episodes. The long arc stories have already been more or less resolved. Also - spoiler alert - wasn't the alien invasion scheduled for 2016?
Besides the alien rebels vs the alien invader plot-line was very meh to begin with. What they need to do is team up with all the employed folks from weekly world news and do a Batboy episode.
Who knows, maybe with the goddamn aliens out of the picture, the show will get good again.
I always liked it better when it was monster of the week anyway.
You apparently don't know the technique of "the long arc we never told you about before". See for instance "The Final Problem".
Mulder is finally going to find his sister in North Korea?
The Smoking Man is now The Oversized Sugary Drink Man.
WAKE UP SHEEPLE!
Unfortunately years of Californication has made David Duchonvy permanently into Hank Moody.
TV revivals I still wants:
1. Quantum Leap
2. The Incredible Hulk
3. The Larry Sanders Show
4. The Adventures of Pete and Pete
5. Rocko's Modern Life
Surely, you've seen this?
I still say the first episode of "Enterprise" should have started with Captain Archer beaming onto the bridge of NX-01, looking around and muttering, "Oh, boy!"
All I can say is "hell yes!!". The X-Files is probably my favorite tv show of all time. Bring it on!!!
Ugh. I tried watching X-Files on Netflix a few years ago. I got bored halfway through Season 1. Couldn't finish it.