The X-Files: I Want to Believe

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It's hard to say if "The X-Files: I Want to Believe" is exactly the movie fans of the revered series -- which aired from 1993 to 2002 -- are hoping for. The relatively straightforward plot involves only minor trickery, and you don't need much previous knowledge of the "X-Files" universe to follow it. The director, Chris Carter, the creator of the original show, has dispensed with the convoluted mythology that bogged down the show in the last third of its run. "I Want to Believe" comes off like a solid -- if not great -- episode from one of the show's early seasons, a reasonably suspenseful story made by a director with a sturdy sense of how to tell a story.

Yet it's the very modesty of "I Want to Believe" that makes it so admirable. Carter doesn't try to meet or exceed fans' expectations so much as create an intimately scaled dramatic universe for his fiercely beloved characters, Dana Scully and Fox Mulder, to inhabit, circa 2008. He also, wisely, has made a picture that's vastly different from the 1998 movie "The X-Files" (of which I remember very little, other than how disappointing it was). The story here involves a hunt for a missing FBI agent that's being led by a fellow agent (a no-nonsense Amanda Peet) with the help of a psychic priest with an unsavory past (played, with every nerve atwitch, by Billy Connolly). Scully (Gillian Anderson), now working as a physician at a Catholic hospital, has happily left FBI work behind, although the challenges of her new job aren't any easier: She's currently trying to treat a young boy who's suffering from a degenerative brain disease her colleagues assure her is untreatable. When the FBI approaches her, asking her to intercede in bringing the disgraced Mulder (David Duchovny) back to work to help find that missing agent, she agrees to help: She approaches Mulder, hunkered down in his messy study, a mountain man with a bushy beard who appears to spend his days muttering seminonsense about conspiracies and clipping random items of interest out of newspapers. Scully suggests it might be good for him to go back to work, and the visual evidence she needs to make that conclusion is right there in the ceiling of Mulder's study: The pencils lodged there, like makeshift darts, are surely the work of one very bored guy.

The plot of "I Want to Believe" -- the script is by Carter and Frank Spotnitz -- has been kept under close wraps, and I'll say nothing more about it other than that it contains numerous supernatural twisty turns and red herrings, and only a few glancing references to UFOs. What's more noteworthy, to me at least, is the interplay between Mulder and Scully, who are now very clearly a couple (a development that took shape in the show's last few seasons, after, I confess, I stopped watching). The details of their shared past -- the life these characters have lived together from 2002 to 2008, that is -- are never fully spelled out for us. We join their relationship already in progress, and the relaxed way in which Carter and his actors fill out the contours of that relationship is the best thing about "I Want to Believe."

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On the show, Duchovny's Mulder was always so understated that he sometimes appeared to be shimmering beneath the surface of any given story line. It was his job to spin out the craziest, most nutball theories, and it was Scully's job, as the woman of science, to poke holes in them. The recurring gag of the show was that Mulder, no matter how screwy his ideas were, was usually right -- although I don't think the intent was to suggest that man's intuition trumps that of womankind, but more to affirm that logic can take us only so far.

Here, Duchovny resuscitates the character of Fox Mulder, breathing life into him once again. Mulder becomes deeply involved in this new case, while Scully resists being pulled back into the darkness of her old job, her old life: Her new life, one that makes her responsible for the lives of her patients, is trying enough. Duchovny gives a nicely shaped performance here -- he still has the ability to suggest the boyish eagerness beneath Fox's blasé demeanor. But the movie really belongs to Anderson. The title has a double meaning, one that's different for each of the two main characters: Fox has always been eager "to believe"; for Scully, the desire has been more muted, but perhaps just as persistent. This is a woman of science who always wears a small gold cross around her neck -- but who also bristles when the parents of her young patient announce they want to stop his treatments and leave his fate up to God. While Mulder is engaged with trying to solve a supernatural mystery, Scully's suffering is rooted in the real world: She's a woman who has put her faith in science, though she's always aware of the ways science can let us down.

Anderson's face shows all of that, in the soft curve of her skeptical smile, or in the bemused expression that plays across her face as she listens to her partner's wackier theories. Now, he's no longer her work partner, but her partner in the tougher business of life. In "I Want to Believe" we get only glimpses of Mulder and Scully's private life together, and it's better that way: In one scene, surprising for its very casualness, they huddle in bed together beneath a comforter. Scully, consumed with worry about her patient, can't sleep; Mulder suggests he might have something to help, which makes her smile. The scene suggests the easy intimacy of people who've been together for years and who, miraculously, against all odds, still like each other. And if nothing else, "The X-Files: I Want to Believe" offers us some comforting continuity, reassuring us that characters we've come to love, and have so sorely missed, have gone on to lead lives without us. They don't need us to justify their existence by believing in them, and still we do -- maybe because, just like they do, we want to believe.
 
Ive heard its not that great, its not out here until friday, but I still think I'll go and see it because Im a huge fan of the show.

I also think I'll go see it. I've been watching whole series on DVD in past months and I didn't even remember how good it was - and still is. :thumbsup:
 
I saw the film. It blew. I wanted to support the film because I was/am a huge XFiles nerd. I hope there's a 3rd film which is geared to True Fans of the Show, not noobs...

"Fight the Future" was a much better film than this one.
 

PlasmaTwa2

The Second-Hottest Man in my Mother's Basement
I just bought seasons three and four on DVD. Wierd.

It's actually a really good movie, BlueBalls. It's not exactly like the show, and compared to the first movie it's pretty lackluster, but it still is a good movie. Duchovny and Anderson still have it.
 
I saw the film. It blew. I wanted to support the film because I was/am a huge XFiles nerd. I hope there's a 3rd film which is geared to True Fans of the Show, not noobs...

"Fight the Future" was a much better film than this one.

There are supposed to be three films because Chris Carter has a contract with the studio (I think, I heard that somewhere :dunno:) If there is a third it has to be in 2012, when the supposed invasion starts.

But if this film fails then I doubt they will come back for a third.


Gillian Anderson is still hot.
 

PlasmaTwa2

The Second-Hottest Man in my Mother's Basement
But if this film fails then I doubt they will come back for a third.

Well, it only made 10 million at the box office. I would say another X-Files movie won't be in the cards.

However, I think they would probably be up for a TV movie (Or possible miniseries) on Fox.

Gillian Anderson is still hot.

Yes, she is.
 
Well, it only made 10 million at the box office. I would say another X-Files movie won't be in the cards.

However, I think they would probably be up for a TV movie (Or possible miniseries) on Fox.



Yes, she is.

I do think they should at least rap up the whole story because the end of the series wasnt up to scratch. If that turns out to be a TV movie it doesnt bother me.
 
^^She is gorgeous! I would like to bang her and "Fox" is an idiot for not marrying her! He could be tappin' that every night and then the problems of the world wouldn't look so important to him!!!

I knew there wouldn't be any "alien" stuff in this film but if felt forced, tired, and not thought-through. I believe Chris Carter cranked out the screenplay in one single sitting.

A 3rd movie about an Alien Invasion...COULD BE great...or it could be very bad. I would be happy with a 3rd film about a Global Corp scandal where the fate of humanity is actually at stake (maybe some corporate pandemic virus turns people into Zombies or Mutant Flukemen! or something like that)...a little more Sci Fantasy might not be a bad thing for the XF franchise at this point...
 

PlasmaTwa2

The Second-Hottest Man in my Mother's Basement
A 3rd movie about an Alien Invasion...COULD BE great...or it could be very bad. I would be happy with a 3rd film about a Global Corp scandal where the fate of humanity is actually at stake (maybe some corporate pandemic virus turns people into Zombies or Mutant Flukemen! or something like that)...a little more Sci Fantasy might not be a bad thing for the XF franchise at this point...

Oh god, not flukemen! I remember seeing that episode when it first came out. I hate that episode! It's the only episdoe that freaks me out. :mad:
 
Well, it only made 10 million at the box office. I would say another X-Files movie won't be in the cards.

$10 million is very disappointing. The film cost $30million to make. Maybe it will recover costs if it does decently in Intl markets like the UK/France/Germany/Japan?
 
$10 million is very disappointing. The film cost $30million to make. Maybe it will recover costs if it does decently in Intl markets like the UK/France/Germany/Japan?

Im not sure about France, Germany and Japan but here its quite cult so I dont expect much of a box office although were only small so not much money is made here anyway.
 
Well, it only made 10 million at the box office. I would say another X-Files movie won't be in the cards.

Since Fox forced the budget limitation, I doubt that they expected an opening outside the teens. And, if the box office ceilings in the 50 millions, then Carter could probably talk Fox into a more ambitious third.

My thought is this: Carter should've made X-Files 2 as the first movie, then "Fight the Future" as the grander second.

However, I think they would probably be up for a TV movie (Or possible miniseries) on Fox.

Maybe. But, what budget do they give to TV movies?
 
I didn't really enjoy this movie. "Fight The Future" was so much better, I had a lot of high hopes for "I Want To Believe" and was just disappointed. I literally was falling asleep and there were only about 12 people watching the movie with me. I don't think I'll be buying this on dvd when it is released.
 
I dont plan on seeing it cuz I heard it does not follow the series with the alien conspiracy. Why they would not do that makes no sense.

I heard that they had something after the credits that had something to do with the conspiracy...is that true and would anybody care to share?

Peace.
 

Legzman

what the fuck you lookin at?
I'll definantly rent it when it comes out on DVD, not sure I wanna spend 15 bucks for me and the old lady to go see it.
 
I dont plan on seeing it cuz I heard it does not follow the series with the alien conspiracy. Why they would not do that makes no sense.

I heard that they had something after the credits that had something to do with the conspiracy...is that true and would anybody care to share?

Peace.

I don't know, I just left as soon as the credits popped up.
 

PlasmaTwa2

The Second-Hottest Man in my Mother's Basement
As a matter of fact, there is a scene. Although it's really really gay and does nothing, really.
 
I dont plan on seeing it cuz I heard it does not follow the series with the alien conspiracy. Why they would not do that makes no sense.

I heard that they had something after the credits that had something to do with the conspiracy...is that true and would anybody care to share?

Peace.

I hadn't heard that before. I left after the first minute of credits. I liked the XF theme and the first song that played after the theme song ended. I might go look at iTuning that one...

Even if they dropped a clue about a pending invasion...I would've just done this-->:dunno: since there might not be a 3rd film.

If I remember correctly...the "Syndicate" of power brokers and Cigarette Smoking Man were killed, the Syndicate was fried by the "Closed Eye Aliens" and CSM was "blown up" in the Anasazi Indian ruins by a missle..I don't remember who fired it.

Well-Manicured Man (British member of the Syndicate of Power), was killed in his limo in "Fight the Future" which was cool at the time, but proved to be the beginning of the end of the Alien Coverup Conspiracy...

I really thought "Fight the Future" blended nicely with the TV Series, Alien Conspiracy-wise, it was just the TV series lost its direction and then David Duchovny became an asshole and wanted off the show...

Ahh...XFiles...so many great memories. My favorite episode of all-time "Piper Maru"...I can still remember Alex Krycek leaving that Men's Room at the end of that episode..eyes turning Black...filled with Alien virus!!!:thumbsup::thumbsup:
 
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