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Colonist (The X-Files)
Colonist (The X-Files)
from Wikipedia
Colonist
A Colonist "bounty hunter" revealing his true face as a grey-like alien.
First appearance"The Erlenmeyer Flask"
Last appearance"This Is Not Happening"
Portrayed byVarious actors
In-universe information
Affiliated withSyndicate

The Colonists are an extraterrestrial species and are also the primary group of antagonists in the science fiction television show The X-Files as well as the first X-Files feature film. The mystery revolving around their identity and purpose is slowly revealed across the course of the series. In the series' plot, the Colonists are collaborating with a group of United States government officials known as the Syndicate in a plan to colonize the Earth, hence their name.[1]

Character arc

[edit]

According to the series mythology, an extraterrestrial lifeform, known in the series' mythology simply as the Colonists, were originally present on Earth in the early stages of human evolution. They highly resemble the well-known "grey aliens" in their mature form. In their immature stage, they are more yellowish-colored, tall, and very aggressive, possessing fangs, claws and scale-like texture of their skin. This immature form is a protective stage, able to viciously defend itself from birth. This outer skin is eventually shed when the alien develops into its mature form.[2][3] The immature form resembles that of a reptilian extraterrestrial and is referred to as the "long-clawed" form.

The aliens were forced to abandon the planet during the last ice age as their viral form is deactivated by extreme cold. Upon their departure, they left behind underground deposits of the black oil virus, in preparation for their return. The virus apparently contains the aliens' genetic blueprints, awaiting reconstitution when the master species returns to Earth. While away from Earth, the Colonists evidently sought out life throughout the universe in an effort to subdue other species and take over the universe.[4] Purportedly, the Colonists planned on returning to Earth in the year 2012, as The Smoking Man (William B. Davis) later remarks to Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) that the ancient Mayans were so terrified that they stopped their calendar on the exact date of colonization: December 22, 2012.[5] The Colonists eventually returned to Earth in 1947 when one of their ships crashed in New Mexico due to exposure to magnetite in the surrounding rocks. Shortly after this event, a select few power brokers, mainly in the United States and the Soviet Union (though some also came from other nations), first learned of the Colonist plot to retake the planet.[6] These men eventually formed the Syndicate; they included the Well-Manicured Man (John Neville), The Smoking Man, and Bill Mulder (Peter Donat), among others.[7]

The Syndicate threatened to use nuclear weapons to render the Earth uninhabitable to the Colonists due to extreme cold. As such, humanity was spared immediate invasion, and The Syndicate began negotiations with the Colonists. In 1973, an alliance was created and an agreement was reached that a small group of humans would be allowed by the Colonists to survive by becoming alien-human hybrids.[8] The date for recolonization was firmly established in 2012 so that both sides could work on creating an alien-human hybrid before the arrival of the Colonist fleet. These hybrids, if successful, would serve as a slave race for the Colonists – the Syndicate and other chosen humans would receive the hybrid genes and be spared.[9] In exchange for the Syndicate's cooperation, the Colonists handed over alien embryos as a source of genetic material for the hybrid experiments, as well as allowing limited military use of their technology and resources (such as the Alien Bounty Hunters),[10] and promising that the heirs of the Syndicate members, who were turned over to the Colonists as an act of good faith, would survive the takeover.[8] Meanwhile, both sides had a secret. The human conspirators would attempt to develop a vaccine for the alien virus in an effort to save all of humanity.[4][11] The Colonists pretended that mass infection of humanity by the black oil would make them a controlled slave race, but in reality the oil would give birth to new alien beings within the human hosts resulting in re-population rather than colonization.[2][3]

Alien factions

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Alien Bounty Hunters

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Character arc

[edit]
Alien Bounty Hunter
First appearance"Colony"
Last appearance"Without"
Portrayed byBrian Thompson
Various actors
In-universe information
Affiliated withColonists

The Bounty Hunters are a distinct group from the Colonist aliens.[12] Although all Colonist aliens are shape-shifters, the Alien Bounty Hunters readily take the shape of humans and are tasked with policing their plans and tracking down and eliminating any threats. The bounty hunters have green blood that contains a retrovirus which, when exposed to humans, is lethal. The alien blood can burn through most surfaces like an acid, and can kill a normal human if exposed for too long to its noxious fumes. In addition, the alien's blood causes human blood to coagulate into a jelly-like substance, but its effects can be neutralized by extreme cold. The Bounty Hunters, and any member of the Colonists' race, could also only be killed by piercing a small area at the base of the neck; the bounty hunters carried a kind of alien stiletto-like weapon to assassinate rogue aliens and to destroy imperfect alien-human hybrids. Once dead, their bodies would rapidly dissolve into a pool of their severely acidic blood, which would eventually evaporate.

Inconsistent with this arc, in season 8 episode 2 "Without" Scully kills the bounty hunter by shooting him with her gun. He oozes green blood, yet neither she, nor the other FBI agents who enter the room while the body is disintegrating, are affected by the green acid-like blood.

The Alien Rebels, those aliens that opposed the plans of the alien Colonists, are of the same species. The distinguishing characteristic of the Rebels is that they have had all of their facial orifices sealed shut in an effort to avoid absorption of and subsequent infection by the parasitic black oil; this led to a somewhat grotesque appearance. In the latter seasons of The X-Files, the role of the Bounty Hunters on Earth has largely been taken over by the Super Soldiers, human replacements capable of withstanding incredible amounts of damage.

Conceptual history

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In the two-part episodes "Colony" and "End Game", Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz along with some help from David Duchovny created what would become a recurring character named the Alien Bounty Hunter. According to Carter, Duchovny came to him and said "wouldn't it be great if we had like an alien bounty hunter?" Carter was positive towards the idea and acted upon it.[13] The actor Brian Thompson auditioned for the role in a casting session, where he was competing with another actor. Spotnitz and Carter did not have much time to cast this character, but they knew this casting would be important since they intended the character to become a recurring character. Thompson was chosen according to Spotnitz because he had a very "distinctive look" about him, most notably his face and mouth. After casting him, they told Thompson's agent that he needed a hair cut, because he was originally envisioned as a U.S. Air Force pilot who'd been shot down. When Thompson came to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada there had been some "misunderstanding" between them, and he had not been told of the hair cut. So the hairstyle seen in this and every episode since was a "compromise" between Thompson and the producers.[14]

Reception

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Critical reception to the Alien Bounty Hunters has been largely positive. Den of Geek also named the Alien Bounty Hunters among "The Top 10 X-Files Baddies". The review wrote positively of the Alien Bounty Hunters and described them as "the nasty minions of the colonists". The review wrote that their being written out of the series was a "shame".[15] The site awarded the bounty hunters a "Coolness" rating of four out of five, an "Impact" rating of two out of five, and a "Creepiness" rating of two out of five.[15]

Black oil

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Character arc

[edit]
Black Oil
A black oil infectee as seen in "Vienen"
First appearance"Piper Maru"
Last appearance"Vienen"
In-universe information
Affiliated withColonists
Syndicate

Purity, more commonly referred to as black oil, and called the "black cancer" by the Russians, is an alien virus that thrived underground on Earth, in petroleum deposits. The virus is capable of entering humanoids and assuming control of their bodies. It has sentience and is capable of communicating. It was revealed to be the "life force" of the alien colonists, which they seemingly used to reproduce their kind, as well as infect other alien races in order to conquer the universe.

The Syndicate in cooperation with the alien Colonists developed a delivery mechanism that would be used to introduce the virus into an unsuspecting public upon colonization. Africanized bees, extremely aggressive, that would sting indiscriminately, would carry the black oil virus through a transgenic corn crop specifically engineered to carry the virus and to attract the bees. The bees would be released on colonization and the infected human beings would become a slave race. The Syndicate, however, secretly tried to create a vaccine to protect themselves, which they code-named "Purity Control." While the Purity Control project ultimately fails, a rival Russian shadow group was successful in developing a weak vaccine that eventually fell into the hands of the Syndicate.

The plot to cooperate with the alien colonization plan was implemented with the aim of being given access to the black oil for the transgenic corn, in order to perform experiments with it in an effort to develop a vaccine. This attempt was semi-successful, as the "weak vaccine" administered to Scully while in the Antarctic alien ship was able to cure her infection and cause the entire ship to depart its underground residence. After the events of the 1998 film, the Syndicate, as well as Mulder and Scully, learned that the black oil can either take over a host's body or incubate within other life forms, including humans. Once infected with the gestational form of the black oil virus, a human host gestates the immature alien form after 96 hours, or sooner if the surrounding temperature is raised significantly, killing the host in the process.

Conceptual history

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The third season episode "Piper Maru" marked the first occurrence of the black oil. The on-screen appearance of the substance was achieved through visual effects, with the shimmering oil effect being digitally placed over the actors' corneas in post-production. The crew went through various iterations to find the two "right" types of fluids. According to physical effects crewman David Gauthier, they used a mix of oil and acetone, which he believed gave the substance a more globular look.[13] Special effects technician Mat Beck was able to digitally bend the oil effect around the shape of the actors' eyes.[16]

The season eight episode, "Vienen", marked the last appearance of the black oil in the series. Molasses and chocolate syrup were used for the visual effects of the black oil. The scene with the black oil coming out of the eyes, ears and mouth was mostly done on a visual effects stage. Due to the uncontrollable nature of the substance, it took nine takes to get the syrup to spill on the right places.[17]

Reception

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Critical reception to the black oil has been largely positive. Den of Geek named the black oil and the killer bees among "The Top 10 X-Files Baddies". The review applauded the black oil's creepy nature and noted that the black oil was "central part of the larger Colonisation Plan that underpins the big story arc of the series".[15] They awarded it a "Coolness" rating of four out of five, an "Impact" rating of three out of five, and a "Creepiness" rating of four out of five.[15] Furthermore, Den of Geek wrote positively of the Killer Bees and wrote that "you gotta love" them.[15] The review stated that they were "in the pantheon of 'cool shit to do in movies'" and that their presence added to the overall effect of the first movie.[15] The site awarded the bees a "Coolness" rating of five out of five, an "Impact" rating of two out of five, and a "Creepiness" rating of two out of five.[15]

Alien rebels

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Alien rebels
The faceless rebels, as seen in season five.
First appearance"Patient X"
Last appearance"One Son"
In-universe information
Affiliated withColonists

There also exists a faction of aliens who actively oppose Colonization. They are the same species as the Alien Bounty Hunter(s), free from the effects of black oil infection. The Rebels are distinguished by their grotesque appearance: the orifices on their face are morphed shut to avoid absorption of the parasitic black oil. Colonization has apparently begun in the Rebels' home environment, but members of this species are spared gestation to become Bounty Hunters for the Colonists' ongoing conquest efforts.[18] Although enemies of the Colonists, the Rebels can also be hostile to humanity; they carry prod-like weapons that can quickly incinerate a human and do not hesitate to use them. They burn abductees with chips in their necks at abduction sites in attempts to prevent colonization from proceeding.[4]

The Rebels have a vested interest in keeping the Colonists from finding out that a successful hybrid has been created. While the Rebels had an opportunity to destroy the hybrid, Cassandra Spender, they choose to let her survive in the hope that the Syndicate will join them in fighting the Colonists. If they refuse, Cassandra can be used to expose the truth and the conspiracy. The Rebels go so far as to infiltrate the Syndicate and bring up the possibility of fighting the Colonists. However, the Syndicate decides that fighting the Colonists would be futile.[19] At this point, a fully working vaccine has not been created, and it is therefore decided that the best thing for the Syndicate to do is to comply with the original deal and turn over the hybrid to the Colonists in the hope that they are spared the resulting takeover. Before this can be done, however, the Rebels kill all but a few members of the Syndicate in addition to Cassandra, the only living successful alien-human hybrid, before the Syndicate is able to send a signal to the Colonists. Without a successful hybrid, the timetable for the Colonist invasion will not be advanced and the date set for colonization remains December 22, 2012.[8]

Conceptual history

[edit]

Frank Spotnitz explained that, despite their tendency of killing human abductees, the rebels can really be viewed as allies of mankind. He said in the commentary of "One Son" that the faceless rebels and the human race are the only two species of advanced civilization in the galaxy that have not been consumed by the black oil. Thus, he notes that at the end of the episode "humanity has lost, Mulder has lost, and the rebels in fact save the day, ultimately by stopping the delivery of Cassandra Spender to the aliens".[20]

The initial look of the rebels was created by special effects supervisor Tony Lindala, during the production of "Patient X".[21] Spotnitz had a problem with the visual effects used for the rebels in "One Son", going so far as to say that the effects of them landing were among the worst ever created for the show. He noted that the effects were created on short notice, saying "It was one of those cases where you just run out of time, sorry to say."[20] Spotnitz later said that the overall production values were fantastic, but that he wished he could have changed some things about the episode; in particular, he wished to have done the scene wherein one of the Syndicate members changes into an alien rebel differently.[20]

Alien-human hybrids

[edit]
Alien-human hybrid
First appearance"Paper Clip" (first mentioned)
Last appearance"One Son"
Portrayed byVeronica Cartwright
In-universe information
Affiliated withColonists
Syndicate
The X-Files

Early attempts to create alien-human hybrids were pioneered by German and Japanese scientists shortly after World War II,[22] and for some time during the Cold War. However, these often met with failure, and the Syndicate started to rely more on their own scientists. According to the Alien Bounty Hunter, in the 1950s, Soviet geneticists found a unique genetic anomaly within identical twins. The Colonists and Syndicate scientists used this to eventually develop human clones with alien elements and partial hybrids, but they were still ultimately inferior.[23] Hybrids of this type include Samantha Mulder, Kurt Crawford, the Gregors, Ernest Calderon, and Dr. William Secare. Child and adult versions of Samantha and Kurt are also seen. These clones have the same caustic greenish blood of the aliens, have greater muscular strength and higher physical endurance levels than most normal humans, and can breathe underwater. In addition to their intended use by the alien colonists, the Syndicate is occasionally seen using these clones to perform various tasks, such as research and physical labor.[13]

The pinnacle of the project is Cassandra Spender (Veronica Cartwright), mother of Jeffrey Spender (Chris Owens) and ex-wife of The Smoking Man. Cassandra is a hybrid created through a process other than cloning, and worked on by both the Syndicate and the aliens themselves, although the exact methods used to transform her are never fully revealed. The experiment presumably began when she, along with other family members of the Syndicate, were turned over to the colonists in 1973.[19] For years, Cassandra was under the mistaken impression that she was to be an emissary of the aliens to spread a higher spiritual understanding to humanity,[4] but after her final abduction in the late 1990s she comes to realize the truth.[19] She is killed, along with most of the Syndicate, by the alien rebels.[8]

After being exposed to an alien artifact, Mulder slipped into a coma, although he was imbued with telepathic abilities.[24] In order to find a cure for her partner, Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) discovered a book containing Native American beliefs and practices; the books described how one man would be able to hold off the forces of the apocalypse and become humanity's savior. Meanwhile, The Smoking Man took Mulder and prepped to have his genetic material—the same material that allowed Mulder to become telepathic—implanted into him. He believed that Mulder had, in effect, become a perfect alien-human hybrid and that by taking his genetic material, he would be able to continue "The Project" and survive the coming alien onslaught.[25]

"Super Soldiers"

[edit]
"Super Soldiers"
First appearance"Per Manum"
Last appearance"The Truth"
Portrayed byAdam Baldwin
Various actors
In-universe information
Affiliated withColonists
New Syndicate

With nearly every Syndicate member dead, the Colonists began to clear up any evidence of alien life and began to create human replacements called "Super Soldiers", on which the Colonists had been working covertly as an alternative slave race should the hybridization experiments be unsuccessful.[26][27] To create Super Soldiers, the Colonists infect humans with a new strain of their virus, which slowly destroys and then rebuilds the body of the host. This process seems to involve a lengthy surgical procedure on abductees as opposed to simple infection (as with the black oil).[28] As they have normal red blood and can replace individuals within powerful positions, they provide an ideal way for the Colonists to infiltrate humanity to ensure that the plans for colonization are uninterrupted. They are identifiable however by small spiny protrusions on the backs of their necks or by detailed analysis of a blood sample which shows their DNA exists as a complex with iron. Although they cannot shapeshift, Super Soldiers are practically unstoppable. They can survive being crushed by a garbage compactor,[29] decapitation, and can rip through steel with their bare hands.[30] The only known way to kill them takes advantage of their metallic biochemistry: their bodies are torn apart by the magnetic fields present near large deposits of magnetite ore.[31] The Super Soldiers quietly fill the positions of power previously occupied by Syndicate members and rarely use human conspirators. By the end of season 9 they virtually replaced the Syndicate and were successful in chasing Mulder and Scully out of the FBI so that they can no longer investigate the X-Files and interfere with their plans. As of their last appearance, they were preparing for the final invasion in 2012.[9]

Reception

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Critical reception to the super-soldiers was mixed. The A.V. Club was highly critical of the final season and its mythology story, noting that the "new serialized storylines about so-called 'super soldiers'" resulted in a "clumsy mish-mash of" ideas that worked and did not.[32] Not all reviews were negative, however. Den of Geek also named the Super Soldiers among "The Top 10 X-Files Baddies". The site wrote moderately positively of the Super soldiers and applauded the show's continuity, citing their decision to make Billy Miles, a character who appeared in the series' pilot episode, the first super-soldier. However, the review did call them not "as interesting as what came before them".[15] The site awarded the super soldiers a "Coolness" rating of three out of five, an "Impact" rating of three out of five, and a "Creepiness" rating of two out of five.[15]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Colonists are an extraterrestrial race depicted as the principal antagonists in the mythology arc of the television series , with their defining objective being the conquest and colonization of through a engineered viral pandemic designed to eradicate most life, followed by repopulation using human-alien hybrids engineered as a subservient labor force. This scheme, originating from events traced to the 1947 , hinged on a clandestine pact between the Colonists and a shadowy consortium known as , which traded abductee test subjects and genetic material in exchange for promises of elite survival via a against the aliens' black oil —a sentient, possession-capable pathogen stored within the Colonists' bloodstream. The species reproduces via parasitic fetal implants resembling facehuggers, which gestate hybrids resistant to the , while their physical form consists of tall, grey-skinned vulnerable to extreme cold and iron; however, internal conflicts arose from a faction of faceless rebel aliens opposing the colonization, leading to Syndicate betrayals and partial thwarting of the invasion timeline projected for December 22, 2012. Later narrative developments, including global warming's disruption of the Colonists' cold-adapted physiology, ostensibly forced abandonment of the full-scale assault, though remnants of their technology and agents persisted in hybrid super-soldier forms. The arc's complexity, blending government cover-ups, FBI investigations by agents and , and escalating revelations across nine seasons and films, drew praise for atmospheric tension but criticism for plot inconsistencies and unresolved threads attributable to serialized improvisation over rigid foreplanning.

Overview

Definition and Role in Mythology

The Colonists represent an extraterrestrial species central to the overarching mythology of The X-Files, depicted as invaders intent on terraforming Earth through mass possession and subjugation of its inhabitants. Their colonization strategy relies on a sentient black oil virus, referred to as "Purity," which infects hosts, commandeers their nervous systems for control, and ultimately liquefies organic matter to enable alien gestation and planetary preparation. This process aims to eradicate or enslave humanity, transforming the planet into a suitable habitat for the Colonists' propagation, with evidence of their involvement tracing back to ancient crashes and abductions documented in the series' narrative. In the series' lore, Colonists manifest primarily through grey-skinned humanoids or shapeshifting forms, often using disguises to infiltrate societies, as exemplified by instances of aliens posing as historical figures or everyday individuals to advance covert operations. Their physical presence includes vulnerability to extreme cold and reliance on the for reproduction, with mature Colonists emerging from infected hosts after a period. The ' hierarchical structure implies a collective drive for expansion, motivated by the destruction of their homeworld through environmental collapse, prompting interstellar conquest. The Colonists' role in the mythology serves as the foundational antagonist force, orchestrating a multi-millennial conspiracy that encompasses government collusion, viral dissemination, and hybrid experimentation to ensure compliance or immunity among collaborators. This agenda propels key plotlines involving the Syndicate's uneasy alliance, which trades human test subjects for technology and survival assurances, only to face retribution upon betrayal attempts. Opposition from alien rebels and human investigators like Fox Mulder underscores the Colonists as symbols of existential peril, driving the narrative tension across seasons through revelations of their impending invasion timeline, projected for December 22, 2012.

Origins and Species Characteristics

The Colonists represent an extraterrestrial species central to the overarching mythology of The X-Files, portrayed as invaders intent on colonizing Earth through biological domination rather than direct conquest. Their origins remain partially obscured in the series, but evidence within the narrative indicates an ancient extraterrestrial provenance, with traces of their influence—manifested through the black oil virus, or Purity—dating to prehistoric eras, potentially deposited during early visits that coincided with meteor impacts or ice age events. This virus, theorized as a sentient extraterrestrial life form or pathogen, serves as both a tool for possession and a mechanism for terraforming, suggesting the Colonists' strategy evolved over millennia to exploit Earth's biosphere for their reproductive needs. Physically, the Colonists embody the classic "" archetype encountered in abduction lore: tall, emaciated humanoids standing approximately 1.5 to 2 meters in height, with smooth, ashen-gray skin stretched over elongated limbs and torsos. Their most distinctive features include disproportionately large, bulbous crania housing enlarged brains, and oversized, lidless black eyes that dominate a featureless face lacking prominent noses, ears, or expressive mouths—adaptations possibly suited to low-gravity environments or sensory reliance on non-visual spectra. These traits align with depictions in key mythological episodes and the 1998 film : Fight the Future, where their forms are revealed during gestation or post-viral emergence, emphasizing a optimized for efficiency over terrestrial adaptability. Behaviorally and technologically, the species exhibits collective hive-like coordination, with individuals rarely acting independently outside enforcer roles like Bounty Hunters. They possess advanced capabilities in interstellar propulsion, evidenced by saucer-shaped craft capable of rapid atmospheric entry and evasion of human detection systems, as well as biotechnological mastery enabling viral symbiosis and hybrid engineering. Reproduction occurs via embryonic implantation into hosts rendered malleable by Purity, which liquefies organic matter to nourish the developing Colonist, underscoring a parasitic lifecycle dependent on planetary-scale infestation rather than self-sustaining colonies. This approach reflects a pragmatic, resource-conserving ethos, prioritizing viral dissemination over immediate occupation.

Colonization Agenda

Historical Timeline of Involvement

  • Prehistoric Era: The Colonists deposited the black oil virus on Earth millions of years ago as a preparatory measure for future colonization, using it to infect early humans and lay the groundwork for genetic manipulation.
  • 1940s: Alien Colonist spacecraft began returning to Earth, encountering advanced human technology; several vessels crashed due to magnetite deposits, alerting U.S. authorities to the extraterrestrial presence and prompting initial investigations by the State Department.
  • 1947: The Roswell incident involved a Colonist craft crash, from which U.S. government officials recovered data detailing the colonization agenda, including plans to use Earth as a host planet via viral apocalypse; this spurred the formation of a secret negotiation group that evolved into the Syndicate.
  • Late 1940s–1950s: The Syndicate initiated covert negotiations, agreeing to collaborate with the Colonists by surrendering family members for experimentation and receiving an alien fetus to develop human-alien hybrids capable of surviving the impending black oil infestation; genetic data collection for post-colonization identification also began.
  • 1973: The Syndicate formally capitulated to the Colonists' demands after learning the full extent of the annihilation plan via black oil; systematic abductions commenced, including that of Samantha Mulder, to accelerate the hybrid program aimed at preserving a compliant human subclass for labor under Colonist rule.
  • 1990s: Colonist oversight intensified through Syndicate proxies, with mass abductions and hybrid testing ramping up; by 1998, the Syndicate anticipated colonization within approximately 15 years (circa 2012, aligned with ancient Mayan predictions), though rebel aliens began sabotaging efforts by targeting key facilities and personnel.
  • 1999: A viable pure human-alien hybrid was achieved, potentially advancing the timeline, but alien rebels executed most Syndicate members, disrupting direct collaboration and delaying overt colonization.
  • Early 2000s: Colonists shifted to deploying super soldiers as enforcers and infiltrators, continuing hybrid pursuits amid human resistance, with the 2012 invasion date ultimately failing to materialize due to ongoing interference.

Syndicate Collaboration and Betrayal

The Syndicate, a clandestine group comprising high-ranking government officials, scientists, and industrialists, initiated collaboration with the Colonists following extraterrestrial contact in the mid-20th century, primarily to mitigate the impending invasion by facilitating human-alien hybrid experiments and abductions. This pact, formalized in the 1950s, involved the Syndicate surrendering millions of abductees for testing in exchange for the aliens' promise to spare select human bloodlines through hybrid progeny capable of resisting the black oil virus. Key figures like the Cigarette Smoking Man (CSM) and William Mulder advanced the agenda, overseeing facilities such as the Ruskin Dam hybrid project, while internal dissenters like Assistant Director Skinner and Cancer Man opposed full capitulation. Tensions escalated as the Colonists demonstrated no genuine intent to honor the bargain, viewing the as expendable facilitators for total planetary subjugation via viral infestation. By 1999, with the first viable hybrid—Cassandra Spender—successfully produced, alien , identifiable by their morphology and scarred resistance to the virus, launched preemptive strikes against operations to derail . These insurgents incinerated abductee groups at sites like the New Syracuse facility on December 20, 2018 (in the show's timeline), eliminating potential hosts and forcing the into desperate countermeasures, including the destruction of hybrid evidence at Ruskin Dam. The betrayal culminated in the Syndicate's near-total annihilation during coordinated rebel assaults, as depicted in the events of February 14, 1999, where elder members were systematically executed, exposing the fragility of their alliance. CSM, surviving as a defector, confessed to Mulder that the aliens' endgame entailed universal extermination, rendering Syndicate concessions futile and confirming the group's role as unwitting pawns in a scheme devoid of reciprocity. This unraveling not only dismantled the Syndicate's infrastructure but also shifted momentum toward human resistance, though remnants like CSM persisted in shadowy pursuits.

Core Mechanisms

Black Oil Virus

The Black Oil Virus, also referred to as Purity or "the black cancer" by Russian scientists, is an extraterrestrial pathogen depicted as a sentient black liquid substance integral to the alien colonizers' invasion strategy in The X-Files mythology. It thrives within petroleum deposits underground and serves as a parasitic life force that enables the aliens to possess and control human hosts. The virus infects individuals by entering through the eyes or mouth, causing the host's irises to fill with the black substance, rendering them under its directive influence. Introduced in the episode "Piper Maru" (season 3, episode 15, aired February 9, 1996), the virus is first encountered by a French salvage crew diving on a sunken submarine, where exposure leads to possession and erratic behavior as the infected seek to propagate. In subsequent episodes such as "Tunguska" and "Terma" (season 4, episodes 9 and 10, aired November 24 and December 1, 1996), Russian experiments reveal its weaponization potential, with test subjects developing supersoldier-like traits before succumbing, highlighting its role in bioweapons research tied to Syndicate efforts. The virus communicates rudimentary intentions, directing hosts toward reproduction or locating vaccines like Purity, and gestates a nascent alien form within the body, ultimately killing the host upon emergence. Origins trace to prehistoric , where the colonist allegedly deposited the in reserves during an ancient visit, retreating during the but programming it for future reactivation to facilitate planetary takeover. It renders other alien entities vulnerable, serving as a selective agent in the colonization hierarchy, while human resistance exploits weaknesses like extreme cold or to neutralize it. In "" (season 8, episode 4, aired December 3, 2000), the manifests in Venezuelan crude , infecting oil workers and prompting FBI intervention, underscoring its persistence in fossil fuels as a vector for global dissemination. The substance's visual effects were achieved through digital overlay on actors' eyes, enhancing its eerie depiction as a primordial, oil-based extraterrestrial entity.

Alien-Human Hybrid Program

The alien-human hybrid program constituted a central component of the Colonists' colonization strategy, executed through intermediaries to engineer blending human and extraterrestrial . This effort aimed to produce a subservient population resistant to the black oil virus, intended as the mechanism for planetary subjugation by rendering humans infertile, vulnerable to possession, and ultimately eliminable via atmospheric dispersal. members, including figures like the , negotiated with Colonist representatives to exchange hybrid viability for limited human preservation, though the aliens viewed the program primarily as a means to ensure workforce continuity post-invasion. Early iterations focused on cloned hybrids derived from elites' DNA spliced with alien fetal material, often implanted in abducted women, but these proved unstable and prone to rebellion, as evidenced by the rogue hybrid clones encountered by FBI agent in 1995. Advancements in the program shifted toward on living subjects to achieve "pure" hybrids—fully transformed humans retaining cognitive faculties while gaining alien resilience, such as immunity to the purity virus. Procedures involved injecting hybrid DNA or viral agents into abductees, with facilities like the one operated by Dr. Enrique Calderon in testing scalability on infants derived from prior hybrid embryos. Jeremiah Smith, a healer hybrid deployed by around 1997, exemplified partial success, capable of and mass cellular regeneration to aid project subjects, though his defection highlighted enforcement vulnerabilities policed by alien bounty hunters. The program's pinnacle occurred in 1999 with Cassandra Spender, wife of Walter and mother to Mulder's informant Jeffrey, who underwent forced hybridization after black cancer onset, emerging as the first viable purebred specimen resistant to viral effects. Defects plagued the initiative, including "failed" hybrids manifesting grotesque mutations or uncontrolled , systematically terminated by bounty hunters to prevent leaks. Mulder's sister , abducted in 1973, was repurposed into hybrid component testing, her cellular material harvested for Syndicate cloning vats, underscoring the program's disregard for individual humanity in pursuit of aggregate utility. By season's end in 2002, the Syndicate's incineration during a hybrid handover to Colonists—intended to erase —signaled partial program culmination, though residual hybrids like (Scully's son, conceived via alien manipulation) persisted as potential vectors. Later media introductions, such as super soldiers in 2001 episodes, diverged by emphasizing cloned warriors over traditional hybrids, reflecting evolving narrative mechanics rather than core program fidelity.

Bounty Hunters as Enforcers

The Alien Bounty Hunters function as extraterrestrial enforcers within the Colonists' hierarchy, tasked with policing compliance to the colonization plan by eliminating defective hybrids, unauthorized clones, and any entities posing risks to the agenda. These Greys, capable of assuming disguises, primarily target failed experiments from the alien- hybrid program, ensuring no of imperfections survives to undermine the purity required for mass colonization. Their operations extend to terminating rogue aliens or collaborators who deviate, as seen in instances where they assassinate members or abductees revealing sensitive information. Introduced in the season 2 "Colony," which aired on February 17, 1995, the demonstrate their role by systematically killing a group of cloned physicians—remnants of early hybrid tests—who exhibit vulnerabilities incompatible with the ' standards. In the follow-up "End Game," aired May 19, 1995, a pursues after he acquires a , attempting to retrieve or destroy the specimen to prevent exposure of the program's flaws. These actions underscore their mandate to maintain secrecy and genetic integrity, often impersonating humans to approach targets undetected before executing them via a specialized driven into the base of the , a method that exploits ice-like to induce fatal disintegration. The Bounty Hunters' allegiance remains strictly to the Colonists, rendering them a source of tension with the Syndicate, whose human leaders view them as unpredictable overseers rather than allies. For instance, in season 5's "Nisei" and "731," aired November 24 and December 1, 1994, they eliminate Japanese experiment survivors and defective hybrids from Unit 731-derived tests, bypassing Syndicate oversight to enforce colonial purity. This autonomy highlights their role as impartial agents of the Colonists, prioritizing the eradication of substandard hybrids—detectable by failed responses to purity tests—over human negotiations. Their green, acidic blood and faceless, elongated true form further distinguish them, with vulnerabilities limited to the neck stab, reinforcing their utility as relentless, near-indestructible operatives in safeguarding the impending invasion timeline.

Opposition Forces

Alien Rebels

The Alien Rebels constitute a renegade faction within the extraterrestrial species intent on colonizing , actively working to thwart the dominant Colonists' agenda. Composed of the same Grey-like aliens as the Colonists, the Rebels distinguish themselves by surgically sealing their facial features—eyes, nose, and mouth—with a metallic substance to render themselves immune to possession by the black oil virus, the primary mechanism of alien reproduction and control. This modification enables them to combat the virus's spread without succumbing to infection, positioning them as resistance fighters in an interstellar conflict that extends to . Their primary objective centers on disrupting the Colonists' colonization efforts, including the destruction of hybrid programs and abductee populations leveraged for viral propagation. In episodes such as "Patient X" and "" (aired November 22 and December 13, 1998, respectively), the orchestrate attacks on groups of abductees, incinerating them en masse to deny the Colonists resources for their hybrid experiments and to sabotage collaborations. These actions reveal a strategic focus on undermining the black oil's dissemination, as the trigger gatherings that culminate in fiery purges, thereby halting potential viral outbreaks. Evidence from the series indicates their neutrality toward humans, with no demonstrated aggression absent direct ties to Colonist objectives; they even assist human figures like in limited capacities when aligned against common foes. The Rebels' campaign escalates in season 6's "Two Fathers" and "" (aired February 15 and 22, 1999), where they systematically assassinate key members—human collaborators who bartered Earth's subjugation for personal survival exemptions—effectively dismantling the alliance that facilitated alien incursions. Bounty Hunters, shapeshifting enforcers loyal to the Colonists, pursue and eliminate Rebel operatives, highlighting the intra-species warfare; Rebels counter this threat using advanced technology, including sarcophagus-like devices capable of resurrecting their kind from fatal injuries. This enmity underscores the Rebels' role as a , though their ultimate efficacy remains constrained by the Colonists' superior numbers and the Syndicate's residual influence prior to its eradication.

Human and Internal Resistance

Agents and , assigned to the FBI's X-Files division in September 1993, formed the core of organized human opposition to the Colonist agenda by investigating phenomena tied to alien activity and government concealment. Their work exposed patterns of abductions, viral infections, and operations, aiming to disseminate the truth and undermine the conspiracy's veil of secrecy essential for undetected colonization. Despite repeated threats, including Scully's 1994 abduction and implantation, their persistence led to revelations such as the 's hybrid program, directly impeding preparations for viral deployment. Allied human elements bolstered this resistance, including Assistant Director , who from 1994 onward shielded the X-Files unit amid internal FBI pressures, and —Byers, Langly, and Frohike—who supplied technical intelligence and broadcast attempts to alert the public, such as their thwarted 2001 plan to air proof of extraterrestrials. In key interventions, Mulder and Scully halted a 1998 bee-vectored outbreak in the , averting immediate mass infection, and collaborated with informant , who post-1999 experiments disclosed betrayals and rebel activities. Internal resistance within government and Syndicate circles manifested through selective information leaks and self-preservation maneuvers. Operative "Deep Throat" (Ronald Pakula) fed Mulder data on 1993 Iraq UFO retrievals before his 1993 assassination by enforcers, succeeded by "X" (who provided 1995 vaccine details on Tunguska experiments). , entangled with factions, revealed the rebels' war against Colonists to Mulder on March 8, 1998, in a Ruskin confrontation, shifting momentarily from antagonism. The 's hybrid research, initiated circa 1973, pursued human-alien offspring immune to the black oil virus as a covert survival strategy, though this effort collapsed amid 1999 purges and alien duplicity, with members like the supplying Mulder a sample in 1998 before his execution. These fractures highlighted causal tensions: collaboration yielded technological gains but invited betrayal, as Colonists prioritized total subjugation over negotiated coexistence.

Evolution in Later Seasons and Media

Super Soldiers Introduction

Super soldiers in The X-Files mythology represent a pivotal evolution in the alien colonization arc, depicted as synthetic human-alien hybrids engineered to serve as invincible infiltrators and enforcers ahead of the planned invasion. These entities appear indistinguishable from humans externally but possess superhuman strength, near-indestructibility, and immunity to the black oil virus that renders ordinary humans vulnerable to alien possession. Their physiology includes a critical spinal structure containing magnetite, which enables rapid regeneration from otherwise fatal injuries but also serves as a targeted vulnerability when disrupted. Introduced during the eighth season in 2001, super soldiers emerge as replacements for the dismantled , which had collaborated with the Colonists only to face and extermination by alien rebels. The first on-screen manifestations occur in episodes "" and "," where revived abductee Billy Miles, transformed via black infusion to rebuild his DNA, demonstrates their destructive capabilities by incinerating the Zeus Genetics facility—a hybrid research site—and converging on during the birth of her son . Other exemplars, such as Knowle Rohrer and Shannon McMahon, infiltrate and government ranks, underscoring their role in covert operations to eliminate threats to the Colonists' timetable. In the broader narrative, super soldiers function as vanguards programmed to eradicate human resistance and secure key hybrid assets like , whose telekinetic abilities position him as a potential disruptor to the scheduled for 2012. Unlike earlier alien proxies such as bounty hunters, they embody a shift toward autonomous, self-replicating forces aligned directly with Colonist interests, hunting protagonists and Scully while occasionally exhibiting internal conflicts—evident in McMahon's to aid FBI agents. Their deployment marks a escalation in the mythology's tension, prioritizing unstoppable pursuit over or hybrid .

Revival Seasons and Unresolved Elements

The revival seasons of The X-Files, comprising season 10 (six episodes, aired January 24 to April 13, 2016) and season 11 (ten episodes, aired January 3 to March 28, 2018), partially reengaged with the Colonist mythology through framing devices in the "My Struggle" episodes but prioritized new human-centric conspiracies over definitive closure on the arc. In "My Struggle," the season 10 opener and closer, broadcaster Tad O'Malley asserts that post-1947 Roswell crash recoveries enabled a cabal—descendants of —to weaponize alien-derived , including the Spartan for global , framing the Colonist threat as a manufactured pretext rather than an active extraterrestrial agenda. This retcon implies the prophesied 2012 colonization, as detailed in the season 9 finale "The Truth" (May 19, 2002), failed to occur due to Syndicate deceptions or alien internal disruptions, with no overt Colonist incursion by the mid-2010s timeline. Season 11's "" (January 10, 2018) and "" (March 28, 2018) shift emphasis to personal stakes, revealing Scully's engineered immunity via spliced alien DNA from abductee experiments and the hybrid origins of her son , who possesses latent Colonist-linked abilities like and as explored in "Ghouli" (January 24, 2018). These installments reintegrate hybrid program remnants—originally a Syndicate concession to Colonists for delaying purification via the black oil virus—but portray super soldiers, erstwhile enforcers of the , as sporadically active threats without tying them explicitly to renewed Colonist coordination. Creator Chris Carter described this evolution as expanding the into "timely" human-alien intersections, avoiding a singular resolution to maintain ambiguity. Unresolved elements persist prominently, including the Colonists' post-2012 operational status, as no canonical evidence confirms their fleet's dispersal or abandonment of Earth despite the elapsed deadline. The efficacy of faceless alien rebels—introduced in season 5's "Patient X" and "The Red and the Black" (1998) as saboteurs scarring Colonist faces and destroying vaccine facilities—against the broader invasion remains unclarified, with revival episodes alluding to rebel interference but providing no updates on their success in derailing colonization. Similarly, the super soldier program's alignment with Colonist overlords, established in seasons 8 and 9 as unstoppable harbingers immune to conventional harm, lacks integration or conclusion, appearing in season 11's "This" (January 24, 2018) as isolated anomalies rather than invasion precursors. Carter's 2025 reflections reaffirm the Colonists' intent to "colonize" via Syndicate pacts, underscoring the revival's failure to resolve these threads and leaving the extraterrestrial endgame open to interpretation.

Conceptual and Production History

Development by Writers

The Colonist storyline originated from series creator Chris Carter's conception of The X-Files as a narrative centered on a government conspiracy concealing an extraterrestrial plan to colonize Earth, with aliens using viral infection and human-alien hybrids as mechanisms for takeover. This overarching mythology was established from the show's 1993 premiere, though specifics like the black oil virus—intended as a colonization precursor—were introduced in episodes such as "Piper Maru" and "Apocrypha" in 1996, written by Carter and Chris Ruppenthal. Carter envisioned the invasion culminating on December 22, 2012, a date referenced in season 5 episodes to anchor the serialized arc while allowing episodic flexibility. Frank Spotnitz, who joined as a writer in season 2 and became , collaborated extensively with Carter on mythology episodes, co-writing key installments like "" (1998) that detailed the Syndicate's Faustian bargain with the Colonists: trading human genetic material for limited survival privileges amid impending subjugation. Spotnitz emphasized the storyline's foundational role, later stating in that unresolved elements, particularly the colonization itself, demanded closure, as "it feels wrong not to give it an ending around the alien colonization of Earth." Their approach involved gradual revelation to sustain suspense, with the writers referring to the invaders internally as "Colonists" to denote their imperial ambitions rather than mere visitors. Carter reflected on the plot's evolution in 2016, describing how the mythology expanded into a "much larger picture" beyond Mulder's initial beliefs, incorporating elements like the Syndicate's hybrid experiments as adaptive responses to alien demands. However, the original series concluded in 2002 without depicting the , leaving the arc open; Carter attributed this to narrative constraints, noting in interviews that the planned 2012 endpoint represented a "big right-hand turn" deferred in revivals. Spotnitz and Carter discussed extensions, including films, to resolve these threads, underscoring the writers' intent to prioritize causal progression from viral precursors to full-scale domination over standalone monster-of-the-week tales.

Influences from Real-World Conspiracy Theories

The portrayal of the Colonists in The X-Files draws heavily from mid-20th-century UFO conspiracy theories centered on extraterrestrial crashes and government-alien collaborations, particularly the 1947 in , where debris recovery sparked claims of extraterrestrial craft and bodies concealed by military authorities. This event, amplified in literature during the and , posited that recovered "extraterrestrial biological entities" (EBEs) initiated secret human-alien pacts, mirroring the series' narrative of crashed saucers yielding black oil and initiating negotiations with Colonists for hybrid technology. Chris Carter, the show's creator, incorporated such elements skeptically, viewing them as cultural phenomena rather than verified events, yet using them to construct the Colonists' long-term strategy involving viral and genetic infiltration. The Syndicate's role as human collaborators facilitating Colonist plans echoes the Majestic 12 (MJ-12) mythos, a purported secret committee formed in 1947 by President Harry Truman to oversee UFO recoveries and extraterrestrial diplomacy, as detailed in leaked documents circulated among ufologists since 1984. These documents, later deemed hoaxes by skeptics and federal investigations, described MJ-12 negotiating technology exchanges for human abductees, akin to the X-Files depiction of Syndicate members bartering population data and hybrid experiments to delay colonization while seeking personal immunity. Carter explicitly modeled the Syndicate on MJ-12 lore, synthesizing it with broader conspiracy narratives of elite cabals suppressing alien threats, though he emphasized the show's roots in reported eyewitness accounts over unproven claims. Such theories, propagated in books like William Cooper's Behold a Pale Horse (1991), influenced the arc's causal framework of interstellar imperialism, where Colonists exploit human vulnerabilities for planetary conquest. Alien-human hybrid programs central to Colonist reproduction parallel abduction hypotheses advanced by researchers like and , who in works such as Intruders (1987) and The Threat (1998) argued that greys conduct systematic ovum harvesting and fetal implantation to breed infiltrator hybrids resistant to Earth's environment. These accounts, derived from hypnotic regressions of alleged abductees reporting medical procedures and hybrid offspring, informed the series' rebel hybrids and breeding facilities, portraying Colonists as pragmatic invaders engineering a slave race for amid their own viral weaknesses. While these theories rely on critiqued for and lack of physical corroboration, Carter drew from them to evoke real reported traumas, blending them with first-contact to underscore themes of hidden existential risks without endorsing their veracity. The black oil virus, enabling possession and hybrid gestation, further synthesizes ufological motifs of parasitic alien control from 1980s abduction narratives, amplifying the Colonists' depiction as a hive-minded species prioritizing genetic dominion over direct conquest.

Reception and Analysis

Strengths in Building Tension

The Colonists' arc in mythology derives much of its suspense from a protracted revelation process, wherein the aliens' intent to repopulate using hosts via the black oil virus and hybridization experiments is unveiled gradually over the series' initial seasons. This slow-burn structure, commencing with hints in the 1993 pilot and escalating through key installments like "" (season 1, 24), fosters a cumulative dread by withholding full comprehension of the threat, compelling viewers to piece together fragmented evidence alongside Mulder and Scully. Such pacing mirrors real-world intelligence-gathering, where partial disclosures heighten uncertainty and paranoia, as noted in analyses praising the early mythology for its layered conspiracy buildup that delivers payoffs only after sustained investment. Interpersonal dynamics further amplify tension, with Scully's clashing against Mulder's conviction in the Colonists' existential peril, creating internal conflict that parallels the external governmental cover-up by . Episodes such as "" (season 3, episode 2), which exposes Nazi-linked experiments tied to alien incubation, exemplify how personal stakes—rooted in Mulder's family abductions and Scully's own ordeal—infuse the arc with emotional urgency, making each revelation a potential catalyst for betrayal or loss. This character-driven friction, coupled with atmospheric elements like shadowy informant meetings and visceral virus manifestations, sustains viewer immersion without relying on overt action, earning acclaim for evoking the psychological strain of suppressed truths. The Colonists' impersonal, hive-like collectivism contrasts sharply with human collaborators' self-serving motives, underscoring the arc's effectiveness in portraying an inexorable, otherworldly menace that defies negotiation or heroism. By 5's "The End" (episode 20), the burning of evidence symbolizes the fragility of resistance, building anticipatory horror toward the foretold 2012 colonization date and reinforcing a causal chain of escalating betrayals. Critics have highlighted this as a strength in sustaining long-form , distinct from episodic standalone stories, by embedding the aliens' plan within a web of verifiable deceptions that demand ongoing scrutiny.

Criticisms of Plot Complexity and Retcons

Critics have highlighted the Colonist mythology's escalating intricacy as a primary flaw, with the core invasion plan—centered on the black oil virus (Purity) terraforming Earth for alien settlement by 2012—layered with Syndicate negotiations for human survival, failed hybrid programs, and black market vaccine dealings. This web of elements, unfolding across seasons 3 through 7, transformed Mulder and Scully from active investigators into passive observers amid an impenetrable conspiracy, diminishing narrative stakes as the plot's scale rendered individual agency implausible. The season 8 pivot to super soldiers—biomechanical alien hybrids infiltrating governments to eliminate resistance and ensure success—exemplified added complexity without adequate payoff, as their role as a "second wave" enforcement mechanism cluttered the virus-centric Colonist agenda and strained credulity with unresolved proliferation post-Syndicate annihilation in 1999's "Two Fathers/." Reviewers noted such expansions prioritized escalating threats over coherent progression, fostering confusion over whether super soldiers supplanted or supplemented the original invasion blueprint. Revival episodes amplified retcon issues, with season 10's "My Struggle" (2016) declaring the entire Colonist threat a Cigarette Smoking Man-orchestrated hoax using reverse-engineered human tech, nullifying nine seasons of alien-driven lore including Roswell origins and viral colonization. This was partially undone in "My Struggle III" (2018), which reasserted extraterrestrial involvement but retroactively framed the inter-season 9-to-10 colonization delay and rebel faction conflicts as governmental deceptions, a double retcon that enraged viewers by erasing established dual-alien-race dynamics (Colonists versus rebels) in favor of human machinations. Such maneuvers, including dream-sequence dismissals of prior cliffhangers like the Spartan virus outbreak, drew rebukes for lazy rewriting that undermined the mythology's causal foundations, substituting shock paternity twists (e.g., Cigarette Smoking Man as William's father) for logical continuity and leaving super soldiers' post-2002 purpose dangling amid the negated invasion.

References

  1. https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/The_X-Files
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