Mystery over big-screen return of 'The X-Files'
Friday, March 28, 2008
The X-Files, the cult 1990s television show that made conspiracy theories
respectable and gave serious consideration to the influence of aliens on
planet Earth, is to make a comeback.
Six years after the series ended on the small screen, the show's creator,
Chris Carter, is to release a feature film, the second spawned by the show
in the wake of 1998's The X-File: Fight the Future. But, true to the spirit
of a show that was always as much about mystery as it was about revelation,
the film does not yet have a title, and the film-makers are saying little or
nothing about its plotline. The film finished shooting less than two weeks
ago and is due out in US cinemas in late July. That much we know.
We also know the film will deal with the six-year period since the
television series ended, and offer answers about the mysterious child
carried and delivered by Agent Dana Scully, the FBI investigator played by
Gillian Anderson, who started out the series as the sceptic assigned to keep
an eye on her true-believer partner, Fox Mulder, played by David Duchovny.
Carter and his co-writer Frank Spotnitz offered these and other clues at a
television festival forum in Los Angeles this week, hinting, among other
things, that the bitter litigation that pitted them against their paymasters
at Rupert Murdoch's Fox empire has spilt over into this project.
Carter said Fox told him the movie had to happen "now or never". A
second film was originally supposed to have been made in 2005 (in fact a
script was ready from the moment the television show reached the end of its
nine-season run) but was scuppered by a lawsuit that Carter filed over
syndication rights to the show. That has been settled.
The Fox executives have also clashed with the film-makers over the title. "
I know what I want it to be," Carter told the television forum. "But
Fox has some ideas of their own." Asked whether the film would give
more information about William, the baby mothered by Agent Scully after an
apparent close encounter with an alien, Carter said: "It will not go
unconsidered in the movie."
The X-Files won 16 Emmys and a Peabody Award. But perhaps more important was
the cult status it enjoyed with television audiences across the planet,
playing on the age-old American obsession with conspiracies and the
paranormal stretching back at least as far as the mysterious 1947 crash in
Roswell, New Mexico, which millions of people believe was a botched alien
landing.
One of the eeriest scenarios was in the pilot episode of a spin-off entitled
The Lone Gunmen, named for three characters in The X-Files obsessed with the
assassination of John F Kennedy. In the episode, aired in March 2001, six
months before al-Qa'ida struck, the characters try to stop a shady
government plot to fly a plane into the the World Trade Centre in New York,
although the Bush administration still claims those attacks were
unforeseeable. In the episode, the attack was planned to ratchet up military
spending and provide an excuse to bomb dictators that the US was itching to
topple.