Monday, December 31, 2018

Case 05, File 14: The Red and the Black

AKA: Is The Title A Chessboard Reference, I Don't Get It


I mentioned this earlier, and I'm sure I will mention this again but at a certain point the Myth Arc episodes begin to get a little...frustrating. Not because the episodes themselves are bad or unengaging, but because you know that huge chunks of the plots of them will either be undone or just will never pay off. I brought this up at the beginning of the season because the big plot twists and status quo shakeups from Redux were destined to be undone, and now here we are.

Monday, December 24, 2018

Case 05, File 13: Patient X

AKA: I Have No Mouth But I've Got A Good Reason


As ongoing mystery stories get more dense and complex, it is inevitable that the authors have to begin making up stuff on the spot to keep the plot going, or more importantly to keep the audience coming back. Once you have established grand new revelations as your primary audience engagement, you have to keep coming up with new ones, which can lead to Mystery Inflation which is, to put it lightly, where the fun train stops. It happened to Lost, Battlestar Galactica, Attack on Titan and it was inevitable that it would happen to The X-Files.

Saturday, December 15, 2018

Case 05, File 12: Bad Blood

AKA: What We Do In The Texas Shadows


After Darin Morgan stopped writing for The X-Files, there was a desire to recreate some of the stuff he did for the show. Of course a lot of the later attempts (especially in Season 6 onwards) would forget that part of what made Morgan great was his shocking insight into his characters. But without that, the least they could do, is make the episode absolutely, screamingly, hilarious.

Friday, December 7, 2018

Case 05, File 11: Kill Switch

AKA: Their Only Crime Was Curiosity


90s understanding of hacking and computers was uh....quaint. Not to say that modern day understanding is any better, there's a lot of silly stuff out there. And sure there were a handful of pieces of media that got it right-ish, but those are not the ones that stick in people's minds, the ones that stick in people's minds are the ones that got it hilariously wrong, like Lawnmower Man or the ones that were profound like Neuromancer. So if you wanted to bring hacking to The X-Files, you should probably look into hiring the writer of Neuromancer. Especially if you already hired the author of Lawnmower Man.