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The X-Files
The X-Files
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The X-Files
Genre
Created byChris Carter
Starring
Music byMark Snow
Opening theme"The X-Files"
Ending theme"The X-Files"
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons11
No. of episodes218 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Production locations
CinematographyJohn Bartley
Bill Roe
Joel Ransom
Jon Joffin
Craig Wrobleski
Ron Stannett
Thomas Del Ruth
Running time42–46 minutes (48 minutes for pilot)
Production companies
Original release
NetworkFox
ReleaseSeptember 10, 1993 (1993-09-10) –
May 19, 2002 (2002-05-19)
ReleaseJanuary 24, 2016 (2016-01-24) –
March 21, 2018 (2018-03-21)
Related

The X-Files is an American science fiction drama television series created by Chris Carter. The original series aired from September 10, 1993, to May 19, 2002, on Fox, spanning nine seasons, with 202 episodes. A tenth season of six episodes ran from January to February 2016. Following the ratings success of this revival, The X-Files returned for an eleventh season of ten episodes, which ran from January to March 2018. In addition to the television series, two feature films have been released: the 1998 film The X-Files and the stand-alone film The X-Files: I Want to Believe, released in 2008, six years after the original television run ended.

The series revolves around Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Special Agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), who investigate the eponymous "X-Files": marginalized, unsolved cases involving paranormal phenomena. Mulder is a skilled criminal profiler, an ardent supernaturalist, and a conspiracy theorist who believes in the existence of the paranormal, whereas Scully is a medical doctor and skeptic who has been assigned to scientifically analyze Mulder's case files. Early in the series, both agents apparently become pawns in a much larger conflict and come to trust only each other and select others. The agents discover what appears to be a governmental agenda to hide evidence of extraterrestrial life. Mulder and Scully's shared adventures initially lead them to develop a close platonic bond, which develops into a complex romantic relationship. Roughly one third of the series' episodes follow a complicated mythopoeia-driven story arc about a planned alien invasion, whereas the other two-thirds may be described as "monster of the week" episodes that focus on a single villain, mutant, or monster.

The X-Files was inspired by earlier television series featuring elements of suspense, horror, and speculative science fiction, including The Twilight Zone, Night Gallery, Tales from the Darkside, Twin Peaks, and especially Kolchak: The Night Stalker. When creating the main characters, Carter sought to reverse gender stereotypes by making Mulder a believer and Scully a skeptic. The first seven seasons featured Duchovny and Anderson relatively equally. In the eighth and ninth seasons, Anderson took precedence while Duchovny appeared intermittently. New main characters were introduced: FBI Special Agents John Doggett (Robert Patrick) and Monica Reyes (Annabeth Gish), among others. Mulder and Scully's immediate superior, Assistant Director Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi), began to appear regularly. The first five seasons of The X-Files were filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, before production eventually moved to Los Angeles, apparently to accommodate Duchovny's schedule. However, the series later returned to Vancouver with the filming of The X-Files: I Want to Believe as well as the tenth and eleventh seasons.

The X-Files was a hit for the Fox network and received largely positive reviews, although its long-term story arc was criticized near the conclusion. Initially considered a cult series, it turned into a pop culture touchstone that tapped into public mistrust of governments and large institutions and embraced conspiracy theories and spirituality. Both the series and lead actors Duchovny and Anderson received multiple awards and nominations, and by its conclusion the show was the longest-running science fiction series in American television history. The series also spawned a franchise that includes spin-offs Millennium and The Lone Gunmen, two theatrical films, and accompanying merchandise.

Premise

[edit]

General

[edit]

The X-Files follows Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Special Agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson). Special Agent Mulder is a talented profiler and conspiracy theorist, and an ardent supernaturalist. He is also adamant about the existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life and its presence on Earth. These beliefs earn him the nickname "Spooky Mulder" and an assignment to a little-known department that deals with unsolved cases, the X-Files. His belief in the paranormal springs from the claimed alien abduction of his sister Samantha Mulder when Mulder was 12. Her abduction drives Mulder throughout most of the series. Because of this, as well as more nebulous desires for vindication and the revelation of truths kept hidden by human authorities, Mulder struggles to maintain objectivity in his investigations.[5]

Special Agent Scully is a foil for Mulder in this regard. As a medical doctor and natural skeptic, Scully approaches cases with detachment, even when Mulder, despite his considerable training, loses his objectivity.[6] She is partnered with Mulder initially so that she can debunk Mulder's nonconforming theories, often supplying logical, scientific explanations for the cases' apparently unexplainable phenomena. Although she is frequently able to offer scientific alternatives to Mulder's deductions, she is rarely able to refute them completely. Over the course of the series, she becomes increasingly dissatisfied with her own ability to approach the cases scientifically.[7] After Mulder's abduction at the hands of aliens in the seventh season finale "Requiem", Scully becomes a "reluctant believer" who explains the paranormal with science.[8]

Various episodes also deal with the relationship between Mulder and Scully, originally platonic, but that later develops romantically.[9] Mulder and Scully are joined by John Doggett (Robert Patrick) and Monica Reyes (Annabeth Gish) late in the series, after Mulder is abducted. Doggett replaces him as Scully's partner and helps her search for him, later involving Reyes, of whom Doggett had professional knowledge.[10][11] The initial run of The X-Files ends when Mulder is secretly subjected to a military tribunal for breaking into the top-secret Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center and viewing plans for alien invasion and colonization of Earth. He is found guilty and sentenced to death but escapes punishment with the help of the other agents, and he and Scully become fugitives.[12]

Mythology

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Key episodes, known as the "mytharc", were recognized as the "mythology" of the series canon; these episodes carried the extraterrestrial/conspiracy storyline that evolved throughout the series. "Monster of the week"—often abbreviated as "MotW" or "MoW"—came to denote the remainder of The X-Files episodes. These episodes, forming the majority of the series, dealt with paranormal (and in certain cases, merely criminal) phenomena, including: serial killers (with or without supernatural powers), cryptids, ghosts, mutants, science fiction technology, horror monsters and religious phenomena. Some of the "monster of the week" episodes featured satiric elements and comedic story lines.[13] The main story arc involves the agents' efforts to uncover a government conspiracy that covers up the existence of extraterrestrials and their sinister collaboration with said government. Mysterious men constituting a shadow element within the U.S. government, known as the Syndicate, are the major villains in the series; late in the series it is revealed that The Syndicate acts as the only liaison between mankind and a group of extraterrestrials that intends to destroy humanity. They are usually represented by the Cigarette Smoking Man (William B. Davis), a ruthless killer, masterful politician, negotiator, failed novelist, and the series' principal antagonist.[14]

As the series goes along, Mulder and Scully learn about evidence of the alien invasion piece by piece. It is revealed that the extraterrestrials plan on using a sentient virus, known as the black oil (also known as "Purity"), to infect mankind and turn the population of the world into a slave race. The Syndicate—having made a deal to be spared by the aliens—have been working to develop an alien-human hybrid that will be able to withstand the effects of the black oil. The group has also been secretly working on a vaccine to overcome the black oil; this vaccine is revealed in the latter parts of season five, as well as the 1998 film. Counter to the alien colonization effort, another faction of aliens, the faceless rebels, are working to stop alien colonization. Eventually, in the season six episodes "Two Fathers" and "One Son", the rebels manage to destroy the Syndicate. The colonists, now without human liaisons, dispatch the "Super Soldiers": beings that resemble humans, but are biologically alien. In the latter parts of season eight, and the whole of season nine, the Super Soldiers manage to replace key individuals in the government, forcing Mulder and Scully to go into hiding.[14]

Cast and characters

[edit]

Starring

[edit]
  • Fox Mulder is portrayed by David Duchovny:
    Mulder is an Oxford-educated FBI Special Agent, a conspiracy theorist, a talented criminal profiler, and an ardent supernaturalist who believes in the existence of extraterrestrials and a government conspiracy to hide the truth regarding them. He works in the X-Files division, which is concerned with cases marked as unsolvable; most involve supernatural/mysterious circumstances. Mulder considers the X-Files so important that he has made their study his life's main purpose.[15] After his abduction by aliens at the end of season seven, his role in the show diminishes and much of his work is taken on by Special Agent John Doggett.[16] He appears in an episode of The Lone Gunmen and in both the 1998 film The X-Files and the 2008 film The X-Files: I Want to Believe.[17][18][19]
  • Dana Scully is portrayed by Gillian Anderson:
    Scully is an FBI Special Agent, a medical doctor, and scientist who is Mulder's partner. In contrast to his credulity, Scully is a skeptic, basing her beliefs on scientific explanations.[7] However, despite her otherwise rigid skepticism, she is a Catholic, and her faith plays an important role in several episodes.[20] As the series progresses, she becomes more open to the possibility of paranormal happenings.[21] In the latter part of the eighth season, her position in the X-Files office is taken by Special Agent Monica Reyes, and Scully moves to Quantico to teach new FBI Special Agents.[22] She appears in both The X-Files feature films.[18][19]
  • John Doggett is portrayed by Robert Patrick (seasons 8–9):
    Doggett is an FBI Special Agent who makes his first appearance in the season eight episode "Within". Doggett served in the United States Marine Corps from the 1970s to the 1980s. Later, he started to work with the New York City Police Department, reaching the rank of Detective.[23] After his son's death, he joined the FBI's Criminal Investigations Division.[24] In 2000, Alvin Kersh assigned him to the X-Files unit as Scully's partner after an unsuccessful task force attempt to find Mulder.[23] He does not appear in The X-Files feature films.
  • Monica Reyes is portrayed by Annabeth Gish (season 9; also starring season 8; guest seasons 10–11):
    Reyes is an FBI Special Agent who was born and raised in Mexico City.[25] She majored in folklore and mythology at Brown University and earned a master's degree in religious studies. Her first FBI assignment was serving on a special task force investigating rituals.[26] She is a longtime friend of Doggett's and becomes his partner after Scully's departure.[22][26] She did not appear in The X-Files feature films.
  • Walter Skinner is portrayed by Mitch Pileggi (season 9–11; also starring seasons 3–8; recurring season 2; guest season 1):
    Skinner is an FBI Assistant Director who served in the United States Marine Corps in the Vietnam War. During this time, he shot and killed a young boy carrying explosives, an incident which scarred him for life.[27] Skinner is originally Mulder and Scully's direct supervisor.[28] He later serves the same position for Doggett and Reyes.[23] Although he is originally portrayed as somewhat antagonistic, he eventually becomes a close friend of Mulder and Scully.[23][29] He appeared in an episode of The Lone Gunmen and in both The X-Files feature films.[19][30]

Also starring

[edit]
  • Cigarette Smoking Man is portrayed by William B. Davis (seasons 4–7, 9; recurring seasons 1–3, 10–11):
    The Cigarette Smoking Man is the series' primary villain. In the ninth-season episodes "William" and "The Truth", it is suggested that he is Mulder's biological father.[31][32] In the seventh-season episode "Requiem", he is believed to have been killed after being pushed down a flight of stairs by Alex Krycek, until the ninth-season finale "The Truth", in which Mulder and Scully travel through remote New Mexico and reach a pueblo where a "wise man" reputedly lives, who is revealed to be Cigarette Smoking Man.[12][29] He also appears in the 1998 feature film.[33]
  • Alex Krycek is portrayed by Nicholas Lea (seasons 5–9; recurring seasons 2–3; guest season 4):
    Krycek is a Russian-American, the son of Cold War immigrants, and first introduced as an FBI Special Agent assigned as a temporary investigation partner to Fox Mulder.[34][35] Krycek proceeds to work with Mulder and attempts to gain his trust. However, it later becomes evident that Krycek is actually an undercover agent working for Cigarette Smoking Man. Krycek plays an important part in several events that are harmful to Mulder and Scully.[35][36][37][38][39]
  • Jeffrey Spender is portrayed by Chris Owens (season 6; recurring season 5; guest seasons 9, 11):
    Spender is a skeptic who is assigned to The X-Files after Fox Mulder's forced leave.[40] He is the son of Cigarette Smoking Man and his ex-wife, multiple abductee Cassandra Spender,[41] as well as possibly being the half-brother of Mulder.[31][32] Initially thought to have been murdered by Cigarette Smoking Man, Spender returns, horribly disfigured, in the ninth season and helps Scully's son William.[31]
  • Alvin Kersh is portrayed by James Pickens Jr. (season 9; recurring seasons 6, 8; guest season 11):
    As an assistant director (and later deputy director), he temporarily becomes supervisor to Special Agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully when they are assigned away from the X-Files division.[40] During this time, Cigarette Smoking Man often visits him in his office.[42] Kersh assigns Mulder and Scully mostly to menial tasks, such as terrorist details and Federal background checks.[43] Kersh is largely antagonistic to Mulder and Scully but in "The Truth" somewhat redeems himself by helping Mulder escape a death sentence.[32]

Production

[edit]

Conception

[edit]

Mulder and Scully came right out of my head. A dichotomy. They are the equal parts of my desire to believe in something and my inability to believe in something. My skepticism and my faith. And the writing of the characters came very easily to me. I want, like a lot of people do, to have the experience of witnessing a paranormal phenomenon. At the same time I want not to accept it, but to question it. I think those characters and those voices came out of that duality.

—Chris Carter on creating the characters of Mulder and Scully.[44]
Chris Carter created The X-Files and wrote the series pilot, along with several other episodes.

California native Chris Carter was given the opportunity to produce new shows for the Fox network in the early 1990s. Carter was tired of the comedies he had been working on for Walt Disney Pictures.[45] A report that said 3.7 million Americans believed they may have been abducted by aliens, the Watergate scandal, and the 1970s horror series Kolchak: The Night Stalker all contributed to trigger the idea for The X-Files. He wrote the pilot episode in 1992.[46]

Carter's initial pitch for The X-Files was rejected by Fox executives. He fleshed out the concept and returned a few weeks later, whereupon they commissioned the pilot. Carter worked with NYPD Blue producer Daniel Sackheim to further develop the pilot, drawing stylistic inspiration from the 1988 documentary The Thin Blue Line and the British television series Prime Suspect.[47] Inspiration also came from Carter's memories of The Twilight Zone as well as from The Silence of the Lambs, which provided the impetus for framing the series around agents from the FBI, to provide the characters with a more plausible reason for being involved in each case than Carter believed was present in Kolchak.[48] Carter was determined to keep the relationship between the two leads strictly platonic, basing their interactions on the characters of Emma Peel and John Steed in The Avengers series.[49][50]

The early 1990s series Twin Peaks was a major influence on the show's dark atmosphere and its often surreal blend of drama and irony. Duchovny had appeared as a transgender DEA agent in Twin Peaks and the Mulder character was seen as a parallel to that show's FBI Agent Dale Cooper.[51] The producers and writers cited All the President's Men, Three Days of the Condor, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Rashomon, The Thing, The Boys from Brazil, The Silence of the Lambs and JFK as other influences.[52] Episodes written by Darin Morgan often referred to or referenced other films.[53]

Casting

[edit]
Duchovny portrays Fox Mulder as a main character for season 1–7, 10 and 11 of the series, as well as an intermittent lead in the eighth and ninth.
Anderson portrays Dana Scully for the entire eleven seasons of the series. She was the first female writer and director of an episode in 2000.[54]

Duchovny had worked in Los Angeles for three years prior to The X-Files, focusing on feature films. In 1993 his manager Melanie Green gave him the script for the pilot episode of The X-Files. Green and Duchovny were both convinced it was a good script so he auditioned for the lead.[55] Duchovny's audition was "terrific", though he talked rather slowly. While the casting director of the show was very positive toward him, Carter thought that he was not particularly intelligent. He asked Duchovny if he could "please" imagine himself as an FBI agent in "future" episodes. Duchovny, however, turned out to be one of the best-read people that Carter knew.[56]

Anderson auditioned for the part of Scully in 1993. "I couldn't put the script down", she recalled.[54] For the role, the network wanted either a more established actress or one that was "taller, leggier, blonder and breastier" than the 24-year-old Anderson, a theater veteran with minor film experience. After auditions, Carter felt she was the only choice.[57][58][59] Carter insisted that Anderson had the kind of "no-nonsense integrity that the role required." For portraying Scully, Anderson won numerous major awards: the Screen Actors Guild Award in 1996 and 1997, an Emmy Award in 1997, and a Golden Globe Award 1997.[54]

The character Walter Skinner was played by actor Mitch Pileggi, who had unsuccessfully auditioned for the roles of two or three other characters on The X-Files before getting the part. At first, being asked back to audition for the recurring role puzzled him, until he discovered the reason he had not previously been cast in those roles—Carter had been unable to envision Pileggi as any of those characters, because the actor had been shaving his head. When Pileggi auditioned for Walter Skinner, he had been in a grumpy mood and had allowed his hair to grow. His attitude fit well with Skinner's character, causing Carter to assume that the actor was only pretending to be grumpy. Pileggi later realized he had been lucky that he had not been cast in one of the earlier roles, as he believed he would have appeared in only a single episode and would have missed the opportunity to play the recurring role.[60]

Before the seventh season aired, Duchovny filed a lawsuit against 20th Century Fox, claiming that Fox had undersold the rights to its own affiliates, thereby costing him huge sums of money. Eventually, the lawsuit was settled, and Duchovny was awarded a settlement of about $20 million, but the lawsuit put strain on Duchovny's professional relationships. Neither Carter nor Duchovny was contracted to work on the series beyond the seventh season; however, Fox entered into negotiations near the end of that season to bring the two on board for an eighth season.[61] After settling his contract dispute, Duchovny quit full-time participation in the show after the seventh season.[62] This contributed to uncertainties over the likelihood of an eighth season.[63] Carter and most fans felt the show was at its natural endpoint with Duchovny's departure, but it was decided that Mulder would be abducted at the end of the seventh season and would return in 12 episodes the following year.[64] The producers then announced that a new character, John Doggett, would fill Mulder's role.[65]

More than 100 actors auditioned for the role of Doggett, but only about ten were seriously considered. Lou Diamond Phillips, Hart Bochner, and Bruce Campbell were among the ten. The producers chose Robert Patrick.[10] Carter believed that the series could continue for another ten years with new leads, and the opening credits were accordingly redesigned in both seasons eight and nine to emphasize the new actors (along with Pileggi, who was finally listed as a main character).[11] Doggett's presence did not give the series the ratings boost the network executives were hoping for.[16] The eighth-season episode "This is Not Happening" marked the first appearance of Monica Reyes, played by Gish, who became a main character in season nine. Her character was developed and introduced due to Anderson's possible departure at the end of the eighth season. Although Anderson ultimately stayed through the ninth season, Gish became a series regular.[66]

Minor recurring characters

[edit]

Glen Morgan and James Wong's early influence on The X-Files mythology led to their introduction of popular secondary characters who continued for years in episodes written by others: Scully's father, William (Don S. Davis); her mother, Margaret (Sheila Larken); and her sister, Melissa (Melinda McGraw). The conspiracy-inspired trio The Lone Gunmen were also secondary characters.[67] The trio was introduced in the first-season episode "E.B.E." as a way to make Mulder appear more credible. They were originally meant to appear in only that episode, but due to their popularity, they returned in the second-season episode "Blood" and became recurring characters.[68] Cigarette Smoking Man, portrayed by William B. Davis, was initially cast as an extra in the pilot episode. His character, however, grew into the main antagonist.[69]

Filming

[edit]
"The End", the season five finale (1998), was the last episode to be filmed in Vancouver until the revival in 2016.

During the early stages of production, Carter founded Ten Thirteen Productions and began to plan for filming the pilot in Los Angeles. However, unable to find suitable locations for many scenes, he decided to "go where the good forests are" and moved production to Vancouver.[70] It was soon realized by the production crew that since so much of the first season would require filming on location, rather than on sound stages, a second location manager would be needed.[71] The show remained in Vancouver for the first five seasons; production then shifted to Los Angeles beginning with the sixth season.[72] Duchovny was unhappy over his geographical separation from his wife, Téa Leoni, although his discontent was popularly attributed to frustration with Vancouver's persistent rain.[73] Anderson also wanted to return to the United States, and Carter relented following the fifth season. The season ended in May 1998 with "The End", the final episode shot in Vancouver and the final episode with the involvement of many of the original crew members, including director and producer R.W. Goodwin and his wife Sheila Larken, who played Margaret Scully and would later return briefly.[74][75]

With the move to Los Angeles, many changes behind the scenes occurred, as much of the original The X-Files crew was gone. New production designer Corey Kaplan, editor Lynne Willingham, writer David Amann and director and producer Michael Watkins joined and stayed for several years. Bill Roe became the show's new director of photography and episodes generally had a drier, brighter look due to California's sunshine and climate, as compared with Vancouver's rain, fog and temperate forests. Early in the sixth season, the producers took advantage of the new location, setting the show in new parts of the country.[76] For example, Vince Gilligan's "Drive", about a man subject to an unexplained illness, was a frenetic action episode, unusual for The X-Files largely because it was set in Nevada's stark desert roads.[74] The "Dreamland" two-part episode was also set in Nevada, this time in Area 51. The episode was largely filmed at "Club Ed", a movie ranch located on the outskirts of Lancaster, California.[74][77][78]

Although the sixth through ninth seasons were filmed in Los Angeles, the series' second movie, The X-Files: I Want to Believe (2008), was filmed in Vancouver,[79] According to Spotnitz, the film's script was written for the city and surrounding areas.[79] The 2016 revival was also shot there.[80][81]

Music

[edit]

The music was composed by Mark Snow, who got involved with The X-Files through his friendship with executive producer Goodwin. Initially Carter had no candidates. A little over a dozen people were considered, but Goodwin continued to press for Snow, who auditioned around three times with no sign from the production staff as to whether they wanted him. One day, however, Snow's agent called him, talking about the "pilot episode" and hinting that he had got the job.[82]

The theme, "The X-Files", used more instrumental sections than most dramas.[83] The theme song's famous whistle effect was inspired by the track "How Soon Is Now?" from the US edition of The Smiths' 1985 album Meat Is Murder. After attempting to craft the theme with different sound effects, Snow used a Proteus 2 rackmount sound module with a preset sound called "Whistl'n Joe". After hearing this sound, Carter was "taken aback" and noted it was "going to be good".[84] According to the "Behind the Truth" segment on the first season DVD, Snow created the echo effect on the track by accident. He felt that after several revisions, something still was not right. Carter walked out of the room and Snow put his hand and forearm on his keyboard in frustration. By doing so, he accidentally activated an echo effect setting. The resulting riff pleased Carter; Snow said, "this sound was in the keyboard. And that was it."[83] The second episode, "Deep Throat", marked Snow's debut as solo composer for an entire episode. The production crew was determined to limit the music in the early episodes.[85] Likewise, the theme song itself first appeared in "Deep Throat".[84]

Snow was tasked with composing the score for both The X-Files films. The films marked the first appearance of real orchestral instruments; previous music had been crafted by Snow using digitally sampled instrument sounds.[84][86] Snow's soundtrack for the first film, The X-Files: Original Motion Picture Score, was released in 1998.[87] For the second film, Snow recorded with the Hollywood Studio Symphony in May 2008 at the Newman Scoring Stage at 20th Century Fox in Century City.[88] UNKLE recorded a new version of the theme music for the end credits.[89] Some of the unusual sounds were created by a variation of silly putty and dimes tucked into piano strings. Snow commented that the fast percussion featured in some tracks was inspired by the track "Prospectors Quartet" from the There Will Be Blood soundtrack.[90] The soundtrack score, The X-Files: I Want to Believe, was released in 2008.[91]

Opening sequence

[edit]
Shots from the show's original and current opening credit sequence

The opening sequence was made in 1993 for the first season, and remained unchanged until Duchovny left the show.[11][83] Carter sought to make the title an "impactful opening" with "supernatural images".[92] These scenes notably include a split-screen image of a seed germinating and a "terror-filled, warped face".[92] The latter was created when Carter found a video operator who was able to create the effect. The sequence was extremely popular and won the show its first Emmy Award, which was for Outstanding Graphic Design and Title Sequences. Producer Paul Rabwin was particularly pleased with the sequence, and felt that it was something that had "never [been] seen on television before".[83] In 2017, James Charisma of Paste ranked the show's opening sequence #8 on a list of The 75 Best TV Title Sequences of All Time.[93]

The premiere episode of season eight, "Within", revealed the first major change to the opening credits. Along with Patrick, the sequence used new images and updated photos for Duchovny and Anderson, although Duchovny only appears in the opening credits when he appears in an episode. Carter and the production staff saw Duchovny's departure as a chance to change things. The replacement shows various pictures of Scully's pregnancy. According to executive producer Frank Spotnitz, the sequence also features an "abstract" way of showing Mulder's absence in the eighth season: he falls into an eye.[11] Season nine featured an entirely new sequence. Since Anderson wanted to move on, the sequence featured Reyes and Skinner. Duchovny's return to the show for the ninth-season finale, "The Truth" marked the largest number of cast members to be featured in the opening credits, with five.[94] The revival seasons use the series' original opening credits sequence.[95]

The sequence ends with the tagline "The Truth Is Out There", which is used for the majority of the episodes.[92] For certain episodes, the tagline was changed to be more thematically-relevant; a list of the episodes that received alternate taglines is as follows:

Episode Tagline Source
"The Erlenmeyer Flask" "Trust No One" [96]
"Ascension" "Deny Everything" [97]
"Anasazi" "'éí 'aaníígÓÓ 'áhoot'é'"
("The truth is far from here" in Navajo)
[98]
"731" "Apology is Policy" [99]
"Herrenvolk" "Everything Dies" [100]
"Teliko" "Deceive Inveigle Obfuscate" [101]
"Terma" "E pur si muove"
("And still it moves" in Italian, a quote attributed to Galileo)
[102][103]
"Gethsemane" "Believe the Lie" [104]
"Redux" "All Lies Lead to the Truth" [105]
"The Red and the Black" "Resist or Serve" [106]
"The End" "The End" [107]
"Triangle" "Die Wahrheit ist irgendwo da draußen"
("The truth is out there somewhere" in German)
[108][109]
"The Unnatural" "In the Big Inning" [110]
"The Sixth Extinction II: Amor Fati" "Amor Fati"
("Love of fate" in Latin)
[111][112]
"Closure" "Believe to Understand" [113]
"Nothing Important Happened Today II" "Nothing Important Happened Today" [114]
"4-D" "erehT tuO si hturT ehT"
("The Truth is Out There", backwards)
[115]
"Trust No 1" "They're Watching" [116]
"Improbable" "Dio ti ama"
("God loves you" in Italian)
[117]
"My Struggle II" "This Is the End" [118]
"My Struggle III" "I Want to Believe/I Want to Lie" [119]
"This" "Accuse Your Enemies of that Which You are Guilty" [120]
"Ghouli" "You See What I Want You to See" [121]
"Kitten" "A War is Never Over" [122]
"Rm9sbG93ZXJz" "VGhlIFRydXRoIGlzIE91dCBUaGVyZQ="
("The Truth is Out There" in Base64)
[123]
"Nothing Lasts Forever" "I Want to be Beautiful" [124]
"My Struggle IV" "Salvator Mundi"
("Savior of the World" in Latin)
[125]

Broadcast and release

[edit]

Episodes

[edit]

Nielsen ratings

[edit]
Viewership and ratings per season of The X-Files
Season Timeslot (ET) Episodes First aired Last aired TV season Viewership
rank
Avg. viewers
(millions)
Date Viewers
(millions)
Date Viewers
(millions)
1 Friday 9:00 p.m. 24 September 10, 1993 (1993-09-10) 12.0[126] May 13, 1994 (1994-05-13) 14.0[127] 1993–94 105[128] 11.21[128]
2 25 September 16, 1994 (1994-09-16) 16.1[129] May 19, 1995 (1995-05-19) 16.6[130] 1994–95 63[128] 14.50[131]
3 24 September 22, 1995 (1995-09-22) 19.94[132] May 17, 1996 (1996-05-17) 17.86[132] 1995–96 55[133] 15.40[131]
4 Friday 9:00 p.m. (1–3)
Sunday 9:00 p.m. (4–24)
24 October 4, 1996 (1996-10-04) 21.11[134] May 18, 1997 (1997-05-18) 19.85[134] 1996–97 12[135] 19.20[136]
5 Sunday 9:00 p.m. 20 November 2, 1997 (1997-11-02) 27.34[137] May 17, 1998 (1998-05-17) 18.76[137] 1997–98 11[135] 19.80[136]
6 22 November 8, 1998 (1998-11-08) 20.24[138] May 16, 1999 (1999-05-16) 15.86[138] 1998–99 12[139] 17.20[136]
7 22 November 7, 1999 (1999-11-07) 17.82[140] May 21, 2000 (2000-05-21) 15.26[140] 1999–2000 29[141] 14.20[142]
8 21 November 5, 2000 (2000-11-05) 15.87[143] May 20, 2001 (2001-05-20) 14.01[144] 2000–01 31[145] 13.93[142]
9 20 November 11, 2001 (2001-11-11) 10.60[146] May 19, 2002 (2002-05-19) 13.25[147] 2001–02 63[146] 9.10[148]
10 Sunday 10:30 p.m. (Premiere)
Monday 8:00 p.m.
6 January 24, 2016 (2016-01-24) 16.19[149] February 22, 2016 (2016-02-22) 7.60[150] 2015–16 7[151] 13.60[151]
11 Wednesday 8:00 p.m. 10 January 3, 2018 (2018-01-03) 5.15[152] March 21, 2018 (2018-03-21) 3.43[153] 2017–18 91[154] 5.34[154]

The pilot premiered on September 10, 1993, and reached 12 million viewers.[126] As the season progressed, ratings began to increase and the season finale garnered 14 million viewers.[127] The first season ranked 105th out of 128 shows during the 1993–94 television season.[128] The series' second season increased in ratings—a trend that would continue for the next three seasons—and finished 63rd out of 141 shows.[128] These ratings were not spectacular, but the series had attracted enough fans to receive the label "cult hit", particularly by Fox standards. Most importantly, it made great gains among the 18-to-49 age demographic sought by advertisers.[128][155] During its third year, the series ranked 55th[133] and was viewed by an average of 15.40 million viewers, an increase of almost seven percent over the second season, making it Fox's top-rated program in the 18–49-year-old demographic.[156] Although the first three episodes of the fourth season aired on Friday night, the fourth episode "Unruhe" aired on Sunday night. The show remained on Sunday until its end.[156] The season hit a high with its twelfth episode, "Leonard Betts", which was chosen as the lead-out program following Super Bowl XXXI. The episode was viewed by 29.1 million viewers, the series' highest-rated episode.[134] The fifth season debuted with "Redux I" on November 2, 1997, and was viewed by 27.34 million people, making it the highest-rated non-special broadcast episode of the series.[137] The season ranked as the eleventh-most watched series during the 1997–98 year, with an average of 19.8 million viewers. It was the series' highest-rated season as well as Fox' highest-rated program during the 1997–98 season.[136][135]

The sixth season premiered with "The Beginning", watched by 20.24 million viewers.[138] The show ended season six with lower numbers than the previous season, beginning a decline that would continue for the show's final three years.[139][141][145][148] The X-Files was nevertheless Fox's highest-rated show that year.[157] The seventh season, originally intended as the show's last, ranked as the 29th most-watched show for the 1999–2000 year, with 14.20 million viewers.[141] This made it, at the time, the lowest-rated year of the show since the third season.[131][141] The first episode of season eight, "Within", was viewed by 15.87 million viewers.[143] The episode marked an 11% decrease from the seventh season opener, "The Sixth Extinction".[158] The first part of the ninth season opener, "Nothing Important Happened Today", only attracted 10.6 million viewers, the series' lowest-rated season premiere.[146]

The original series finale, "The Truth", attracted 13.25 million viewers, the series' lowest rated season finale.[147] The ninth season was the 63rd most-watched show for the 2001–02 season, tying its season two rank.[128][148] On May 19, 2002, the finale aired and the Fox network confirmed that The X-Files was over.[94] When talking about the beginning of the ninth season, Carter said, "We lost our audience on the first episode. It's like the audience had gone away and I didn't know how to find them. I didn't want to work to get them back because I believed what we are doing deserved to have them back."[159] While news outlets cited declining ratings because of lackluster stories and poor writing,[9] The X-Files production crew blamed September 11 terrorist attacks as the main factor.[160] At the end of 2002, The X-Files had become the longest-running consecutive science fiction series ever on American broadcast television. This record was later surpassed by Stargate SG-1 in 2007[161] and Smallville in 2011.[162]

The debut episode of the 2016 revival, "My Struggle", first aired on January 24, 2016, and was watched by 16.19 million viewers.[149] In terms of viewers, this made it the highest-rated episode of The X-Files to air since the eighth-season episode "This Is Not Happening" in 2001, which was watched by 16.9 million viewers.[163] When DVR and streaming are taken into account, "My Struggle" was seen by 21.4 million viewers, scoring a 7.1 Nielsen rating.[164] The season ended with "My Struggle II", which was viewed by 7.60 million viewers.[150] In total, the season was viewed by an average of 13.6 million viewers; it ranked as the seventh most-watched television series of the 2015–16 year, making it the highest-ranked season of The X-Files to ever air.[151] A few years later, the premiere episode of the eleventh season, "My Struggle III", was watched by 5.15 million viewers.[152] This was a decrease from the previous season's debut; it was also the lowest-rated premiere for any season of the show.[149] The season concluded with "My Struggle IV", which was seen by 3.43 million viewers, which was also a decrease from the previous season.[153][150] "My Struggle IV", which became the de facto finale for the series, was also the show's lowest-rated finale. In total, the season was viewed by an average of 5.34 million viewers, and it ranked as the 91st most-watched television series of the 2018–19 year.[154]

SVOD viewership

[edit]

According to the streaming aggregator JustWatch, The X-Files was the ninth most streamed television series across all platforms in the United States, during the week ending November 7, 2021.[165]

Films

[edit]

After several successful seasons, Carter wanted to tell the story of the series on a wider scale, which ultimately turned into a feature film. He later explained that the main problem was to create a story that would not require the viewer to be familiar with the broadcast series.[166] The movie was filmed in the hiatus between the show's fourth and fifth seasons and re-shoots were conducted during the filming of the show's fifth season. Due to the demands on the actors' schedules, some episodes of the fifth season focused on just one of the two leads.[167] On June 19, 1998, the eponymous The X-Files, also known as The X-Files: Fight the Future was released. The crew intended the movie to be a continuation of the season five finale "The End", but it was also meant to stand on its own. The season six premiere, "The Beginning", began where the film ended.[168]

The film was written by Carter and Spotnitz and directed by series regular Rob Bowman. In addition to Mulder, Scully, Skinner and Cigarette Smoking Man, it featured guest appearances by Martin Landau, Armin Mueller-Stahl and Blythe Danner, who appeared only in the film. It also featured the last appearance of John Neville as the Well-Manicured Man. Jeffrey Spender, Diana Fowley, Alex Krycek and Gibson Praise—characters who had been introduced in the fifth-season finale and/or were integral to the television series—do not appear in the film. Although the film had a strong domestic opening and received mostly positive reviews from critics, attendance dropped sharply after the first weekend.[169] Although it failed to make a profit during its theatrical release—due in part to its large promotional budget—The X-Files film was more successful internationally. Eventually, the worldwide theatrical box office total reached $189 million. The film's production cost and ad budgets were each close to $66 million.[170] Unlike in the series, Anderson and Duchovny received equal pay for the film.[168]

In November 2001, Carter decided to pursue a second film adaptation. Production was slated to begin after the ninth season, with a projected release in December 2003.[171] In April 2002, Carter reiterated his desire and the studio's desire to do a sequel film. He planned to write the script over the summer and begin production in spring or summer 2003 for a 2004 release.[172] Carter described the film as independent of the series, saying, "We're looking at the movies as stand-alones. They're not necessarily going to have to deal with the mythology."[173] Bowman, who had directed various episodes of The X-Files in the past as well as the 1998 film, expressed an interest in the sequel, but Carter took the job. Spotnitz co-authored the script with Carter.[79][174] The X-Files: I Want to Believe became the second film based on the series, after 1998's The X-Files: Fight the Future. Filming began in December 2007 in Vancouver and finished on March 11, 2008.[79][175][176]

The film was released in the United States on July 25, 2008, grossing $4 million on its opening day.[177] It opened fourth on the U.S. weekend box office chart, with a gross of $10.2 million.[178] By the end of its theatrical run, it had grossed $20,982,478 domestically and an additional $47,373,805 internationally, for a total worldwide gross of $68,369,434.[179] Among 2008 domestic releases, it finished in 114th place.[180] The film's stars both claimed that the timing of the movie's release, a week after the highly popular Batman film The Dark Knight, negatively affected its success.[181][182] The film received mixed to negative reviews. Metacritic, which assigns a rating out of 100 reviews from mainstream film critics, reported "mixed or average" reviews, with an average score of 47 based on 33 reviews.[183] Rotten Tomatoes reported that 32% of 160 listed film critics gave the film a positive review, with an average rating of 4.9 out of 10. The website wrote of the critics' consensus, stating, "The chemistry between leads David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson do live [sic] up to The X-Files' televised legacy, but the roving plot and droning routines make it hard to identify just what we're meant to believe in."[184]

Revival

[edit]

In several interviews around the release, Carter said that if the X-Files: I Want to Believe film proved successful at the box office, a third installment would be made going back to the TV series' mythology, focusing specifically on the alien invasion and colonization of Earth foretold in the ninth-season finale, due to occur on December 22, 2012.[185][186] In an October 2009 interview, David Duchovny likewise said he wanted to do a 2012 X-Files movie, but did not know if he would get the chance.[187][188] Anderson stated in August 2012 that a third X-Files film is "looking pretty good".[189] As of July 2013, Fox had not approved the movie, although Carter, Spotnitz, Duchovny and Anderson expressed interest.[190][191] At the New York Comic Con held October 10–13, 2013, Duchovny and Anderson reaffirmed that they and Carter were interested in making a third film, with Anderson saying, "If it takes fan encouragement to get Fox interested in that, then I guess that's what it would be."[192]

On January 17, 2015, Fox confirmed that they were looking at the possibility of bringing The X-Files back, not as a movie, but as a limited run television season. Fox chairman Dana Walden told reporters that "conversations so far have only been logistical and are in very early stages", and that the series would only go forward if Carter, Anderson, and Duchovny were all on board, and that it was a matter of ensuring all of their timetables are open.[193] On March 24, 2015, it was confirmed the series would return with series creator Chris Carter and lead actors David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson.[194][195] It premiered on January 24, 2016.[196] A year later, on April 20, 2017, Fox officially announced that The X-Files would be returning for an eleventh season of ten episodes,[197] which premiered on January 3, 2018.[198]

Future

[edit]

In January 2018, Gillian Anderson confirmed that season 11 would be her final season of The X-Files.[199] The following month, Carter stated in an interview that he could see the show continuing without Anderson.[200] In May 2018, Fox's co-CEO Gary Newman commented that "there are no plans to do another season at the moment."[201]

In October 2020, Chris Carter said: "I always thought there would be even more X-Files." He admitted that continuing the series at this point with Duchovny and Anderson is unlikely, but has plans to continue the franchise with an upcoming animated spinoff. "Being that Gillian has decided to move on with her career, we certainly couldn't do Mulder and Scully again. But that's not to say there isn't another way to do The X-Files. And so right now I think the future is unwritten." The rights are now owned by Disney.[202] By July 2025, Ryan Coogler was writing and producing a reboot of the series.[203]

Home media

[edit]

On September 24, 1996, the first "wave" set of The X-Files VHS tapes were released. Wave sets were released covering the first through fourth seasons.[204][205] Each "wave" was three VHS tapes, each containing two episodes, for a total of six episodes per wave and two waves per season.[206][207] For example, the home video release of wave one drew from the first half of the first season: "Pilot"/"Deep Throat", "Conduit"/"Ice" and "Fallen Angel"/"Eve".[206] Each wave was also available in a boxed set.[204] Unlike later DVD season releases, the tapes did not include every episode from the seasons. Ultimately twelve episodes—approximately half the total number aired—were selected by Carter to represent each season, including nearly all "mythology arc" episodes and selected standalone episodes.[206][207] Carter briefly introduced each episode with an explanation of why the episode was chosen and anecdotes from the set. These clips were later included on the full season DVDs.[206] Wave eight, covering the last part of the fourth season, was the last to be released. No Carter interviews appeared on DVDs for later seasons. Many of the waves had collectible cards for each episode.[208]

All nine seasons were released on DVD along with the two films.[209][210] Seasons 1 to 4 were in fullscreen and seasons 5 and onward were in widescreen with the top and bottom of the opening credits cropped off. It is not widely known how accurate this is to the original broadcasts. The entire series was re-released on DVD in early 2006, in a "slimmer" package. The first five slim case versions did not come with some bonus materials that were featured in the original fold-out versions. However, seasons six, seven, eight and nine all contained the bonus materials found in the original versions.[211] Episodic DVDs have also been released in Region 2, such as "Deadalive", "Existence", "Nothing Important Happened Today", "Providence" and "The Truth".[212] Various other episodes were released on DVD and VHS. In 2005, four DVD sets were released containing the main story arc episodes of The X-Files. The four being Volume 1 – Abduction, Volume 2 – Black Oil, Volume 3 – Colonization and Volume 4 – Super Soldiers.[213] A boxed set containing all nine seasons and the first film was made available in 2007, which contains all of the special features from the initial releases. The set also includes an additional disc of new bonus features and various collectibles, including a poster for the first film, a comic book, a set of collector cards and a guide to all 202 episodes across all nine seasons and the first film. Due to the fact that the set was released in 2007, the second film, which was released in 2008, is not included.[209]

Release of The X-Files' seasons on Blu-ray, restored in high-definition, was rumored to begin in late 2013.[214] The German TV channel ProSieben Maxx began airing first-season episodes reformatted in widescreen and in high-definition on January 20, 2014.[215] On April 23, 2015, Netflix began streaming episodes of The X-Files in high definition, marking the first time that the series has been made available in the high resolution format in North America.[216] In October 2015, it was confirmed that the complete series would be reissued on Blu-ray, and the full set was released on December 8, 2015.[217] The set was criticized for using the wrong fonts for the title sequence and season 8 was affected by color balance issues making the picture appear darker in most episodes (an issue known as "black crush"). These issues led to Fox offering corrected discs and eventually issuing new sets with the correct color balance.[218][219]

Spin-offs

[edit]

The Lone Gunmen

[edit]

The Lone Gunmen is an American science fiction television series created by Carter and broadcast on Fox and was crafted as a more humorous spin-off of The X-Files. The series starred the eponymous Lone Gunmen and was first broadcast in March 2001, during The X-Files's month-long hiatus.[68] Although the debut episode garnered 13.23 million viewers, its ratings began to steadily drop.[220] The program was cancelled after thirteen episodes.[221] The last episode was broadcast in June 2001 and ended on a cliffhanger which was partially resolved in a ninth-season episode of The X-Files titled "Jump the Shark", included in the DVD release of the series.[222]

Comic books

[edit]

The X-Files was converted into a comic book series published by Topps Comics during the show's third and fourth seasons. The initial comic books were written solely by Stefan Petrucha. According to Petrucha, there were three types of stories: "those that dealt with the characters, those that dealt with the conspiracy, and the monster-of-the-week sort of stuff".[223] Petrucha cited the latter as the easiest to write. Petrucha saw Scully as a "scientist [...] with real world faith", and that the difference between [Mulder and Scully] is not that Mulder believes and Scully doesn't; it's more a difference in procedure."[223] In this manner, Mulder's viewpoint was often written to be just as valid as Scully's, and Scully's science was often portrayed to be just as convincing as Mulder's more outlandish ideas.[223] Petrucha was eventually fired and various other authors took up the job.[223] Topps published 41 regular issues of The X-Files from 1995–98.

A crossover graphic novel between The X-Files and 30 Days of Night was published by WildStorm in 2010. It follows Mulder and Scully to Alaska as they investigate a series of murders that may be linked to vampires.[224]

In 2013, it was announced that The X-Files would return to comic book form with Season 10, now published by IDW. The series, which follows Mulder and Scully after the events of The X-Files: I Want to Believe, was released in June 2013. Joe Harris wrote the series, and Michael Walsh and Jordie Bellaire provided the artwork. It was later announced that Carter himself would be the executive producer for the series and would be "providing feedback to the creative team regarding scripts and outlines to keep the new stories in line with existing and on-going canon."[225] The series restarted the series' mythology, and the first arc of the story focused on "seek[ing] to bring the mythology of the Alien Conspiracy back up to date in a more paranoid, post-terror, post-WikiLeaks society."[225] In addition, sequels to popular "monster of the week" episodes were made.[225] The X-Files Season 10 concluded on July 1, 2015, after 25 issues.[226]

In August 2015, the X-Files Season 11 comic book began, also published by IDW. The eight-issue series served as a continuation of the TV show. Chris Carter was the Executive Producer of the comic book series, while the issues were written by Joe Harris and illustrated by Matthew Dow Smith and Jordie Bellaire.[227]

Potential series

[edit]

In August 2020, Fox announced that an animated comedy-oriented reboot series was in development, under the working title The X-Files: Albuquerque.[228] In March 2023, it was confirmed the series would not be moving forward.[229] The same month, it was reported that Ryan Coogler is developing a new reboot of the series, per series creator Chris Carter.[230] In February 2024, Carter confirmed he is not involved with its production.[231][232] In April 2025, Coogler said the X-Files reboot would be his next project after the film Sinners,[233] and he began working on the project by October of that year; Coogler said that he chose to work on the project due to his mother's love for the original series.[234]

Reception

[edit]

Critical reception

[edit]

The X-Files received positive reviews from television critics, with many calling it one of the best series that aired on American television in the 1990s. Ian Burrell from the British newspaper The Independent called the show "one of the greatest cult shows in modern television".[235] Richard Corliss from Time magazine called the show the "cultural touchstone of" the 1990s.[236] Hal Boedeker from the Orlando Sentinel said in 1996 that the series had grown from a cult favorite to a television "classic".[237] The Evening Herald said the show had "overwhelming influence" on television, in front of such shows as The Simpsons.[238] In 2012, Entertainment Weekly listed the show at #4 in the "25 Best Cult TV Shows from the Past 25 Years", describing it as "a paean to oddballs, sci-fi fans, conspiracy theorists and Area 51 pilgrims everywhere. Ratings improved every year for the first five seasons, while Mulder and Scully's believer-versus-skeptic dynamic created a TV template that's still in heavy use today."[239]

In 2004 and 2007, The X-Files ranked #2 on TV Guide's "Top Cult Shows Ever".[240] In 2002, the show ranked as the 37th best television show of all time.[241] In 1997, the episodes "Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose" and "Small Potatoes" respectively ranked #10 and #72 on "TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time".[242] In 2013, TV Guide included it in its list of the "60 Greatest Dramas of All Time"[243] and ranked it as the #4 science fiction show[244] and the #25 best series of all time.[245] In 2007, Time included it on a list of the "100 Best TV Shows of All Time".[246] In 2008, Entertainment Weekly named it the fourth-best piece of science fiction media,[247] the fourth best TV show in the last 25 years[248] and in 2009, named it the fourth-best in their list of the "20 Greatest Sci-fi TV Shows" in history.[249] Empire magazine ranked The X-Files ninth best TV show in history, further claiming that the best episode was the third season entry "Jose Chung's From Outer Space".[250] In 2013, the Writers Guild of America ranked The X-Files #26 on their list of the 101 Best Written TV Series.[251] In 2015, on The Hollywood Reporter's entertainment-industry ranked TV list "Hollywood's 100 Favorite TV Shows", The X-Files appeared at #3.[252] According to The Guardian, MediaDNA research discovered that The X-Files was on top of the list of the most innovative TV brands.[253] In 2009, it was announced that the show's catchphrase "The Truth Is Out There" was among Britain's top 60 best-known slogans and quotes.[254]

The X-Files has been criticized for being unscientific and privileging paranormal and supernatural ideas (e.g. the hypotheses made by Mulder). For instance, in 1998, Richard Dawkins wrote that "The X-Files systematically purveys an anti-rational view of the world which, by virtue of its recurrent persistence, is insidious."[255]

Accolades

[edit]

The X-Files received prestigious awards over its nine-year run, totaling 62 Emmy nominations and 16 awards.[256][257] Capping its successful first season, The X-Files crew members James Castle, Bruce Bryant and Carol Johnsen won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Graphic Design and Title Sequences in 1994.[257] In 1995, the show was nominated for seven Emmy Awards with one win. The following year, the show won five Emmys out of eight nominations, including Darin Morgan for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series. In 1997, The X-Files won three awards out of twelve, including Gillian Anderson for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series. In 1998, the show won one of fifteen. In 1999, it won one out of eight in the category for Outstanding Makeup for a Series. Season seven won three Emmys from six nominations. The following season would not be as successful, catching only two nominations and winning again in the Makeup category for "Deadalive". The ninth season received one nomination in Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Dramatic Underscore).[256][257]

The show was nominated for 12 Golden Globe Awards overall, winning five.[257][258] The first nomination came in 1994, when the show won Best Series – Drama.[257] The following year, Anderson and Duchovny were nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role and Best Actress in a Leading Role, respectively.[257][258] In 1997, the series won three awards; Anderson and Duchovny for Best Actress and Actor and for Best Series – Drama.[257] In 1998 and 1999, the show received the same three nominations. In 1998 the series won Best Series – Drama".[257][258] In 1999, the series won no award and received no nominations thereafter.[258]

The show was nominated for 14 SAG Awards overall, winning twice. In 1996 and 1997, Anderson won for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series. In 1996, the show won a Peabody Award for being able "to convey ideas that are both entertaining and thought-provoking".[259] The show has also been nominated for two American Cinema Editors awards, three Directors Guild of America Awards, nine Television Critics Association Awards and two Writers Guild of American Awards. The X-Files was nominated for nine Satellite Awards, winning two, and two Young Artist Awards, winning one.[260]

Influence

[edit]

Fandom

[edit]

As The X-Files saw its viewership expand from a "small, but devoted" group of fans to a worldwide mass cult audience,[261][262] digital telecommunications were becoming mainstream. According to The New York Times, "this may have been the first show to find its audience growth tied to the growth of the Internet".[263] Fans of the show became commonly known as "X-Philes", a term coined from the Greek root "-phil-" meaning love or obsession.[263] X-Philes reviewed episodes on unofficial websites, formed communities with other fans through Usenet newsgroups and listservs,[264] and wrote their own fan fiction.[265]

The X-Files also "caught on with viewers who wouldn't ordinarily consider themselves sci-fi fans".[261] While Carter argued that the show was plot-driven, many fans saw it as character-driven.[265] Duchovny and Anderson were characterized as "Internet sex symbols".[263] As the show grew in popularity, subgroups of fans developed, such as "shippers", hoping for a romantic or sexual partnership between Mulder and Scully, or those who already perceived one between the lines.[265] The usage of the term "ship" in its relationship sense appears to have been originated by Internet fans of The X-Files.[266][267][268][269][270][271][272]

Other groups arose to pay tribute to the stars[264] or their characters,[273] while others joined the subculture of "slash" fiction.[265] In the summer of 1996, a journalist wrote, "There are entire forums online devoted to the 'M/S' [Mulder and Scully] relationship."[264] In addition to "MOTW", Internet fans invented acronyms such as "UST", meaning "unresolved sexual tension", and "COTR", standing for "conversation on the rock"—referencing a popular scene in the third-season episode "Quagmire"—to aid in their discussions of the agents' relationship, which was itself identified as the "MSR".[274]

The producers did not endorse some fans' readings, according to a study on the subject:

Not content to allow Shippers to perceive what they wish, Carter has consistently reassured NoRomos [those against the idea of a Mulder/Scully romance] that theirs is the preferred reading. This allows him the plausible deniability to credit the show's success to his original plan even though many watched in anticipation of a romance, thanks, in part, to his strategic polysemy. He can deny that these fans had reason to do so, however, since he has repeatedly stated that a romance was not and would never be.

The Scully-obsessed writer in Carter's 1999 episode "Milagro" was read by some as his alter ego, realizing that by this point "she has fallen for Mulder despite his authorial intent".[265] The writers sometimes paid tribute to the more visible fans by naming minor characters after them. For example, Leyla Harrison, played by Jolie Jenkins and introduced in the eighth-season episode "Alone", was created and named in memory of an Internet fan and prolific writer of fan fiction of the same name, who died of cancer on February 10, 2001.[11]

Merchandise

[edit]

The X-Files spawned an industry of spin-off products. In 2004, U.S.-based Topps Comics, and[223][275] most recently DC Comics imprint Wildstorm, launched a new series of licensed tie-in comics.[276] During the series run, the Fox Broadcasting Company published the official The X-Files Magazine.[277] The X-Files Collectible Card Game was released in 1996, and an expansion set was released in 1997.[278]

The X-Files has inspired four video games. In 1997, Fox Interactive released The X-Files: Unrestricted Access, a game-style database for Windows and Mac, which allowed users access to every case file.[279] In 1998, The X-Files Game was released for the PC and Macintosh and a year later for the PlayStation. This game is set within the timeline of the second or third season and follows an Agent Craig Willmore in his search for the missing Mulder and Scully.[280] In 2004, The X-Files: Resist or Serve was released. The survival-horror game for the PlayStation 2 is an original story set in the seventh season. It allows the player control of both Mulder and Scully. Both games feature acting and voice work from members of the series' cast.[281] A mobile mystery investigation game The X-Files: Deep State was released in February 2018. The story of the game takes place between seasons 9 and 10 of the show and follows two FBI agents, Casey Winter and Garret Dale, as they investigate a conspiracy.[282] A six-player pinball game, The X-Files, was produced by Sega in 1997.[283][284]

Legacy

[edit]
The set for Mulder's office

The X-Files directly inspired other TV series, including Strange World,[261][285] The Burning Zone,[286] Special Unit 2,[287] Mysterious Ways,[288] Lost,[289] Dark Skies,[287][290] The Visitor,[261] Fringe,[287][291] Warehouse 13,[287] Supernatural,[287][292] and Gravity Falls,[293] with key aspects carried over to more standard crime dramas, such as Eleventh Hour[287][294] and Bones.[295] The influence can be seen on other levels: television series such as Lost developed their own complex mythologies.[289] In terms of characterization, the role of Dana Scully was seen as innovative, changing "how women [on television] were not just perceived but behaved" and perhaps influencing the portrayal of other "strong women" investigators.[59] Russell T Davies said The X-Files had been an inspiration on his series Torchwood, describing it as "dark, wild and sexy... The X-Files meets This Life".[296][297] Other shows have been influenced by the tone and mood of The X-Files. For example, Buffy the Vampire Slayer drew from the mood and coloring of The X-Files, as well as from its occasional blend of horror and humor; creator Joss Whedon described his show as "a cross between The X-Files and My So-Called Life".[298]

The X-Files's great popularity led to it becoming a touchstone of popular culture. The show was parodied in The Simpsons season eight episode "The Springfield Files", which aired on January 12, 1997. In it, Mulder and Scully—voiced by Duchovny and Anderson—are sent to Springfield to investigate an alien sighting by Homer Simpson, but end up finding no evidence other than Homer's word and depart. Cigarette Smoking Man appears in the background when Homer is interviewed, and the show's theme plays during one scene.[299] Nathan Ditum from Total Film ranked Duchovny and Anderson's performances as the fourth-best guest appearances in The Simpsons history.[300] In the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Trials and Tribble-ations", Benjamin Sisko is interviewed by Federation Department of Temporal Investigations agents Dulmer and Lucsly, anagrams of Mulder and Scully, respectively.[301] The pair were later expanded upon in Christopher L. Bennett's book Watching the Clock.[302] The X-Files has also been parodied or referenced in shows such as 3rd Rock from the Sun, Archer, NewsRadio, American Horror Story, The Big Bang Theory, Bones, Breaking Bad, Californication (which stars David Duchovny), Supernatural, Castle, Family Guy, Hey Arnold!, King of the Hill, South Park, and Two and a Half Men.[303] It also inspired themes in video games Deus Ex[304] and Perfect Dark.[305]

In the musical realm, the British band Catatonia released the single "Mulder and Scully", which became a top ten hit on the UK Singles Chart in 1998.[306] American singer and songwriter Bree Sharp wrote a song in 1999 called "David Duchovny" about the actor that heavily references the show. Although never a mainstream hit, the song became popular underground and gained a cult following.[307][308][309] Finnish band Sonata Arctica released, in 1999, "Letter to Dana", in which the title character, Dana O'Hara, is named after Scully.[310] The series has also been referenced in songs such as "The Bad Touch" by the Bloodhound Gang, "A Change" by Sheryl Crow, "Year 2000" by Xzibit, and "One Week" by Barenaked Ladies.[303]

Carter, Duchovny and Anderson celebrated the 20th anniversary of the series at a July 18, 2013, panel at San Diego Comic-Con hosted by TV Guide. During the discussion, Anderson discussed Scully's influence on female fans, relating that a number of women have informed her that they pursued physics careers because of the character. Anderson also indicated that she was not in favor of an X-Files miniseries, and Duchovny ruled out working with her on an unrelated project, but both expressed willingness to do a third feature film. Carter was more reserved at the idea, stating, "You need a reason to get excited about going on and doing it again."[311] On July 16, 2008, Carter and Spotnitz donated several props from the series and new film to the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History, including the original pilot script and the "I Want to Believe" poster from Mulder's office.[312]

In a 2018 interview with The Straits Times, series' writers Jim Wong and Glenn Morgan acknowledged that the show likely played a role in bringing conspiracy theories to a mainstream audience, helping to erode trust in public institutions.[313] Similarly, in a 2021 New York Times op-ed, series creator Chris Carter wrote: "'The Truth Is Out There,' 'Trust No One,' 'Deny Everything' went the provocative catchphrases on The X-Files, but that was in the '90s, when we had a relatively shared reality. The slogans are now a fact of life."[314] Vanity Fair writer Jordan Hoffman suggested that Carter's op-ed was imbued with "a bit of a mea culpa vibe".[315]

References

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from Grokipedia
is an American science fiction horror drama television series created by Chris Carter. The program follows FBI special agents , a believer in the , and , a skeptic tasked with debunking his work, as they investigate unsolved cases known as the X-Files, which often involve extraterrestrial activity, government cover-ups, and unexplained phenomena. Originally broadcast on the network from September 10, 1993, to May 19, 2002, the series comprised nine seasons and 202 episodes before returning for limited revivals in 2016 and 2018, bringing the total to 11 seasons and 218 episodes. The series achieved significant acclaim, earning 16 Primetime Emmy Awards from 62 nominations, including wins for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for and various technical categories such as and music composition. It also received for Best Television Series – Drama and acting performances by and Anderson. Two theatrical films extended the franchise: The X-Files: Fight the Future in 1998, which bridged seasons five and six, and The X-Files: I Want to Believe in 2008. The X-Files exerted a profound influence on , popularizing serialized storytelling blending "monster-of-the-week" episodes with overarching mythology arcs, and embedding phrases like "The truth is out there" into common lexicon while amplifying public interest in theories and institutional distrust. Its premise drew from real-world UFO lore and , fostering a dedicated fanbase that engaged through early online forums and conventions. Despite criticisms of unresolved plot threads in its mythology, the show's emphasis on empirical investigation juxtaposed with extraordinary claims resonated enduringly, inspiring subsequent genre series like and shaping perceptions of science versus belief in media.

Premise and Storytelling

Core Premise

The X-Files is an American television series created by Chris Carter that premiered on the on September 10, 1993. The program follows FBI Special Agents and as they investigate a backlog of classified as "X-Files," which involve anomalous phenomena resistant to rational explanation, such as extraterrestrial encounters, , abilities, and government conspiracies. Mulder, a profiler with a background in , approaches these cases with an unyielding belief in the , driven by personal trauma including the alleged of his sister in 1973, while Scully, a medical doctor, is assigned to the unit to offer scientific scrutiny and debunk Mulder's theories. This investigative partnership forms the foundational dynamic, pitting Mulder's intuitive, evidence-gathering methodology against Scully's empirical rigor, often leading to resolutions that challenge both perspectives. The X-Files office, a dimly lit basement workspace in the adorned with posters proclaiming "The Truth Is Out There" and "I Want to Believe," symbolizes the marginalization of their work within the FBI bureaucracy. Episodes typically blend procedural elements with horror and suspense, where "hidden forces"—including shadowy government operatives and a of conspirators—actively obstruct their inquiries, as evidenced by recurring interference from figures like the . At its core, the premise interrogates themes of trust in institutions, the limits of , and the plausibility of extraterrestrial involvement in human affairs, with Carter citing real-world inspirations like UFO lore and Watergate-era as drivers for the framework that underpins the series' serialized mythology. While many cases resolve as standalone "monster-of-the-week" anomalies, an overarching narrative arc reveals a multi-decade plot by alien colonists and human collaborators to colonize via black oil viruses and hybrid beings, though resolutions often prioritize ambiguity to sustain viewer engagement.

Monster-of-the-Week Episodes

Monster-of-the-week episodes in The X-Files are standalone installments that diverge from the series' central mythology arc of alien colonization and government cover-ups, instead centering on isolated cases involving creatures, mutants, or unexplained phenomena investigated by FBI agents and . These self-contained stories, which comprise the majority of the show's 218 episodes across 11 seasons, allowed writers to experiment with diverse horror and elements, including biological anomalies, vengeful spirits, and urban legends, often resolving within a single episode without advancing the broader conspiracy. By spacing out mythology episodes—typically 4 to 8 per 20- to 24-episode season—these plots prevented viewer fatigue from the serialized narrative while highlighting the agents' contrasting worldviews: Mulder's openness to the extraordinary and Scully's demand for . The format debuted in the third episode, "Squeeze," which aired on September 24, 1993, and introduced Eugene Victor Tooms, a shape-shifting mutant capable of contorting through narrow vents to consume human livers, marking the first explicit "monster" antagonist independent of extraterrestrial lore. Subsequent early examples included "Ice" (Season 1, Episode 8, aired December 10, 1993), featuring a parasitic organism frozen in Arctic ice that induces paranoid violence, and "The Host" (Season 2, Episode 2, aired September 23, 1994), which presented the Flukeman, a humanoid sewage mutant spawned from evolutionary adaptation in wastewater. Writers like Glen Morgan and James Wong pioneered many initial entries, blending procedural investigation with grotesque creature designs, while Darin Morgan later infused later seasons with satirical twists, as in "Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose" (Season 3, Episode 4, aired October 13, 1995), where a psychic insurance salesman foresees deaths amid comedic absurdity. These episodes contributed significantly to the series' syndication success and cultural endurance by offering accessible, rewatchable content that emphasized character dynamics over plot continuity, with over 100 distinct monsters introduced across the run. In seasons 6 through 9, following David Duchovny's departure, MOTW stories increasingly incorporated emotional depth, such as (Season 7, Episode 14, aired February 21, 2000), exploring Scully's grief through a folk curse. The 2016 and 2018 revivals revived the format with meta-humor, notably "Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster" (Season 10, Episode 3, aired November 14, 2016), a self-parodying tale critiquing the genre's conventions. Despite occasional criticisms of formulaic repetition, the variety sustained viewer engagement, as evidenced by their prominence in fan rankings and streaming recommendations.

Mythology Arc

The mythology arc of The X-Files encompasses the show's central serialized narrative, revolving around a global by human elites and extraterrestrial forces to facilitate alien of . This storyline posits that , termed Colonists, seeded via a parasitic black oil virus dating back to 35,000 B.C., with modern plans involving viral annihilation of humanity followed by and repopulation using hybrids. The arc contrasts with episodic standalone cases by driving long-term character development and revelations, comprising approximately 40-50 episodes across the original nine seasons, the 1998 film Fight the Future, and revival seasons 10 and 11. Initiated in the pilot episode, aired September 10, 1993, the narrative ties FBI agent Fox Mulder's obsession with his sister Samantha's 1973 abduction to broader evidence of extraterrestrial visitations suppressed by the U.S. . Early seasons introduce , a clandestine group of high-ranking officials including the (CSM), who collaborate with aliens to develop hybrid beings resistant to the impending Purity virus while trading human test subjects. Key informants such as Deep Throat expose elements like extraterrestrial biological entities (EBEs) recovered from 1947 Roswell crash debris, but face elimination to maintain secrecy, as depicted in season 1 finale "." The black oil, a sentient pathogen enabling alien possession and reproduction, emerges prominently in season 3 episodes "" and "," linking to experiments on human-alien hybrids and Scully's abduction, , and subsequent ovarian induced by ova harvesting. Mulder's quests reveal alien bounty hunters, shape-shifters, and a rebel faction opposing colonization by assassinating members and destroying records, culminating in the group's fiery extermination in season 5's "Patient X" and "." The 1998 film The X-Files: Fight the Future advances the plot with Scully's discovery of a vast UFO housing the virus, underscoring the scale of the threat. Later seasons shift to post-Syndicate fallout, introducing super-soldiers—immortal human-alien hybrids programmed as enforcers—who pursue Mulder, leading to his faked death and Scully's miraculous pregnancy with their son , conceived via alien influence or CSM's manipulation. Creator Chris Carter integrated personal stakes like William's powers and parentage into the mythology, evolving it from government cover-ups to interpersonal betrayals, though he acknowledged the arc's improvisational growth without a rigid initial blueprint. The 2016-2018 revivals delay due to solar flares, reintroduce CSM's survival and claims over William, and pivot toward human-engineered threats, resolving with William's escape amid ongoing uncertainties. This arc's causal chain—from ancient seeding to modern resistance—relies on empirical anomalies like implants and autopsies, yet its veracity remains fictional, grounded in the series' blend of documented UFO lore and speculative extrapolation.

Development and Production

Conception and Early Development

Chris Carter, a television writer and producer employed by since the early 1990s, conceived The X-Files in 1992 as his first pitched series under a development deal with the network. Drawing from his background as a major, Carter incorporated themes of government distrust rooted in his formative experiences during the , which he described as instilling a profound toward official narratives. The core concept centered on two FBI agents investigating unsolved cases involving paranormal phenomena, blending procedural elements with conspiracy-driven storytelling to explore unexplained mysteries. Carter's vision was influenced by earlier television formats that mixed horror, mystery, and skepticism, though he emphasized personal anecdotes and real-world paranoia over direct adaptations. He aimed to create a series that posed questions rather than providing resolutions, reflecting a narrative style that challenged viewers' expectations of conventional sci-fi drama. The initial pitch to Fox executives was rejected for lacking sufficient detail, prompting Carter to refine the premise by adding character backstories and serialized elements, which secured approval for a pilot episode. Development of the pilot, titled "Pilot," began in August 1992, with Carter scripting the episode to establish the investigative dynamic between the believer agent and skeptic ./Background_Information) Directed by Rob Bowman, production occurred in , , selected for its moody ambiance to enhance the eerie tone. The episode's temporary score and practical effects were finalized to sell the concept to the network, leading to an order for 20 additional episodes after positive internal screenings, marking the transition from conception to full series production./Background_Information) The pilot aired on September 10, 1993, launching the series on .

Casting Decisions

Chris Carter, the series creator, selected David Duchovny for the role of FBI Special Agent Fox Mulder after reviewing auditions, marking "Yes" on Duchovny's notes despite the actor's limited fame at the time, as Carter advocated strongly for him to embody the character's obsessive belief in the paranormal. For the skeptical counterpart, Dana Scully, Carter chose Gillian Anderson following her audition, where he noted "Test" to indicate the need for network approval. Fox executives pushed back, seeking a taller, more conventionally sexy actress akin to a "bombshell," but Carter defended Anderson's casting, explaining that her intelligence and grounded presence aligned with the character's scientific rationalism, stating, "Even though Gillian's beautiful, she wasn't their idea of sexy… they didn’t understand what I was trying to do with the show." Among supporting roles, landed after three auditions; the first two for minor FBI agents failed, but on the third, Pileggi infused the reading with authoritative attitude born of frustration, a quality Carter deemed perfect for the stern yet conflicted supervisor. originated as an unnamed, chain-smoking FBI operative in the pilot episode, a minor part that evolved into the shadowy , a pivotal conspiracy figure, due to the character's enigmatic presence and Davis's understated menace.

Filming Locations and Techniques

The X-Files was primarily filmed in , , for its first five seasons, leveraging the city's dense forests, mountainous terrain, and frequent rainfall to depict the Pacific Northwest's moody, isolated settings essential to the series' atmospheric tension. Specific Vancouver locations included for outdoor scenes, for urban woodland exteriors, and various studios like North Shore Studios for interiors. The choice of Vancouver stemmed from its practical proximity to natural environments unavailable near , allowing for cost-effective shooting of "monster-of-the-week" episodes requiring wilderness backdrops. Production relocated to Los Angeles starting with season 6, a decision driven by lead actor David Duchovny's request to remain closer to his family, as his wife was based there for her own projects. In Los Angeles, filming shifted to studio lots such as 20th Century Fox Studios and Los Angeles Center Studios, with exteriors often using urban or desert sites to approximate diverse U.S. locales, though this change reduced the prevalence of rainy, forested scenes. The move facilitated easier access to Hollywood resources but altered the visual tone, prompting adjustments in episode scripting to favor indoor and city-based narratives. Cinematography emphasized low-light, shadowy aesthetics to evoke and the unknown, pioneered by director of photography John S. Bartley in the early seasons through lighting and high-speed 35mm film stocks like 5298, enabling wide-open apertures for depth-of-field effects in dim environments. This technique masked practical effect limitations while heightening suspense, as seen in episodes relying on subtle contrasts rather than overt illumination. Special effects leaned heavily on practical methods in initial seasons, utilizing prosthetics, , and for creatures like the contortionist mutant Eugene Victor and the parasitic Flukeman, prioritizing tactile realism over digital augmentation to fit the show's modest budget and tight schedule. CGI emerged later for expansive elements such as UFOs in season 5 and the 1998 film, blending with practical work under supervisors like John C. Wash, though early reliance on in-camera tricks and miniatures maintained a grounded . Revival seasons (10-11) accelerated CGI use for mutations and spacecraft, reflecting technological advances but diverging from the original's minimalist approach.

Music Composition and Iconic Elements

served as the primary composer for The X-Files, creating the main theme and scoring over 200 episodes across the original nine seasons from 1993 to 2002, as well as the revival seasons in 2016 and 2018. His work emphasized atmospheric tension through synthesizers, percussion, and unconventional sounds, often evoking unease without relying on traditional orchestral swells. Snow composed cues on a tight schedule, typically producing 30-40 minutes of original music per episode using digital workstations like the and early software, which allowed for layered electronic textures mimicking organic dread. The series' main theme, introduced in the second episode aired on September 24, 1993, features a distinctive six-note over a pulsing and echoing synth , generated via a sampled patch on a keyboard run through a harmonizer for an ethereal quality. Series creator Chris Carter requested a sound reminiscent of ' guitar tones, prompting Snow to experiment with processed keyboard effects that accidentally produced the signature whistle during a late-night session. This motif, spanning roughly 30 seconds in its core form, recurs in variations throughout episodes, signaling transitions to intrigue or mythology arcs, and became a cultural staple, charting internationally in remixed versions by 1999. Iconic musical elements extend beyond the theme to Snow's episodic scores, which integrated diegetic sounds like distorted radios or alien hums with minimalist motifs to underscore in "monster-of-the-week" stories. For mythology-heavy episodes, such as those involving , recurring cues employed low-frequency drones and rhythms to build conspiracy-laden suspense, often without vocals to maintain ambiguity. Snow's avoidance of bombastic cues in favor of subtle, evolving ambiences contributed to the show's enduring auditory identity, influencing later sci-fi scoring by prioritizing implication over explicit resolution. Soundtrack releases, including Songs in the Key of X (1996), compiled Snow's originals alongside licensed tracks, highlighting the theme's versatility in evoking existential mystery.

Principal Cast and Characters

Lead Actors and Roles

portrayed FBI , the protagonist who led the X-Files unit, a division handling unsolved cases suggestive of and government conspiracies. , a former Oxford-educated and FBI profiler nicknamed "Spooky Mulder" for his unorthodox theories, was driven by the 1973 disappearance of his , which he attributed to , shaping his lifelong pursuit of the truth behind extraterrestrial phenomena. Gillian Anderson played FBI Dana , a medical doctor with an undergraduate degree in physics, initially assigned on September 10, 1993—the date—to scientifically scrutinize and debunk Mulder's investigations. Scully's rational, empirical approach contrasted Mulder's intuitive beliefs, though repeated encounters with inexplicable events gradually eroded her and deepened her partnership with him. Anderson, then 25, and Duchovny formed an immediate professional rapport during auditions, contributing to the on-screen chemistry that defined the duo across 202 episodes from 1993 to 2018.

Supporting and Recurring Characters

FBI Supervisors Walter Skinner, portrayed by Mitch Pileggi, functioned as the primary FBI Assistant Director overseeing Agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully's investigations into the X-Files from the series' early seasons. Introduced in the episode "Little Green Men" on September 23, 1994, Skinner initially enforced bureaucratic constraints but evolved into a reluctant ally, providing covert support amid internal FBI conflicts and personal risks, including a near-fatal nanobot infection in the 1998 episode "S.R. 819." His character arc reflected tensions between duty and intuition, appearing in over 100 episodes across the original nine seasons and revivals. Alvin Kersh, played by James Pickens Jr., emerged as a deputy director and antagonist in season 5's "The Beginning" on May 17, 1998, reassigning Mulder and Scully to administrative duties to suppress X-Files work under influence. Promoted to deputy director by 2000, Kersh's oversight in seasons 8 and 9 prioritized careerism and containment, though he later facilitated escapes during the 2002 finale "The Truth." His tenure marked a shift toward institutional obstruction, contrasting Skinner's . Antagonists and Shadow Figures The (CSM), depicted by , debuted uncredited in the pilot episode on September 10, 1993, as a shadowy government operative linked to the Syndicate's alien colonization conspiracy. Evolving from a background smoker to a central manipulator—implicated in assassinations and Mulder's family secrets—CSM appeared in 79 episodes, surviving apparent deaths like a 1996 helicopter crash and a 2018 revival shooting, embodying entrenched power structures. Davis's portrayal drew from initial script minimalism, expanding via fan response into a nicotine-fueled enigma. Informants and Allies The Lone Gunmen—John Fitzgerald Byers (), Melvin Frohike (), and Richard "Ringo" Langly ()—premiered in the season 1 episode "E.B.E." on May 13, 1994, as conspiracy theorists publishing The Lone Gunman tabloid and aiding Mulder with surveillance and hacks. Recurring in 15 X-Files episodes plus their 2001 spin-off series of 13 episodes, the trio supplied gadgets and intel on government cover-ups, with fates diverging in season 9's "Jump the Shark" (April 13, 2002) where two sacrificed themselves, and Langly's revival death in season 11's "" (January 24, 2018). Later Season Recurrents , enacted by , joined as Scully's partner in season 8's premiere on November 6, 2000, tasked by Kersh to monitor her amid Mulder's abduction; a skeptic rooted in personal loss, Doggett investigated cases skeptically before gradual openness. , played by , entered in season 8's "This Is Not Happening" on February 18, 2001, as Doggett's intuitive counterpart with prior X-Files exposure, partnering him in season 9 while harboring ties revealed in the finale. Both featured in the 2008 film The X-Files: I Want to Believe and briefly in revivals, bridging and belief.

Episodes and Narrative Structure

Episode Count and Seasonal Breakdown

The X-Files produced a total of 218 episodes over 11 seasons, with the original nine seasons accounting for 202 episodes broadcast from September 10, 1993, to May 19, 2002, on . Revival seasons 10 and 11, limited runs prompted by renewed interest, added 6 and 10 episodes respectively, airing on in 2016 and 2018. Episode counts per season fluctuated due to network scheduling, production interruptions from feature films like The X-Files: Fight the Future (1998) following season 5, cast negotiations, and the 2001 writers' strike impacting season 9's finale. Early seasons typically featured 24 or 25 episodes, reflecting standard network TV orders, while later original seasons trended shorter amid rising costs and shifting viewer habits; revival seasons were intentionally concise miniseries formats. The following table summarizes the episode counts and primary air date ranges for each season:
SeasonEpisodesAir Date Range
124September 1993 – May 1994
225September 1994 – May 1995
324September 1995 – May 1996
424October 1996 – May 1997
520November 1997 – May 1998
622November 1998 – May 1999
722November 1999 – May 2000
821November 2000 – May 2001
920November 2001 – May 2002
106January – April 2016
1110January – March 2018
Seasons 1 through 4 maintained higher episode volumes to build the series' audience and mythology arc, with season 2's extra episode stemming from an expanded order after initial success. Seasons 5 and 6 adjusted downward partly to accommodate the 1998 film production, which paused TV filming, while seasons 7–9 saw further reductions due to David Duchovny's reduced involvement and escalating per-episode expenses exceeding $3 million by season 8. The revival's brevity aligned with modern serialized trends, prioritizing quality over quantity amid declining linear TV viewership.

Key Mythology Episodes

The mythology episodes of The X-Files form a serialized arc distinct from the procedural "monster-of-the-week" format, focusing on an extraterrestrial colonization conspiracy orchestrated by grey aliens intending to repopulate Earth via a delivered through black oil, with human collaborators in a shadowy aiding the effort in exchange for survival. This storyline, which creator Chris Carter developed incrementally without a rigid blueprint, intertwines government cover-ups, alien abductions, hybrid experiments, and the personal quests of agents and , culminating in revelations of rebel aliens sabotaging the plan. Approximately 52 episodes across nine seasons and two revivals advance this plot, introducing elements like the as a key antagonist, informant betrayals, and Scully's abduction-linked infertility and cancer. Pivotal early episodes establish the conspiracy's foundations. The series premiere, "Pilot" (Season 1, Episode 1, aired September 10, 1993), introduces Mulder's belief in extraterrestrials based on his sister Samantha's abduction and Scully's , while hinting at internal FBI obstruction and the Cigarette Smoking Man's oversight. "Deep Throat" (Season 1, Episode 2) reveals military crashes of extraterrestrial craft and informant Deep Throat's warnings of compartmentalized government knowledge. The Season 1 finale, "" (Season 1, Episode 24), exposes alien-human hybrids with green blood, a secret facility with extraterrestrial fetuses, and Deep Throat's assassination, enforcing the mantra "trust no one" amid escalating cover-ups. The Season 2-3 arc deepens familial and global stakes. "Duane Barry" (Season 2, Episode 5) depicts a former abductee's rampage leading to Scully's kidnapping by aliens, confirmed in "Ascension" (Season 2, Episode 6). The trilogy "Anasazi" (Season 2, Episode 25), "The Blessing Way" (Season 3, Episode 1), and "Paper Clip" (Season 3, Episode 2) uncovers a digital tape of extraterrestrial autopsies, Navajo rituals aiding Mulder's recovery from an apparent death, and Operation Paperclip's Nazi scientists experimenting with alien inoculations via vaccines, solidifying the Syndicate's role in hybrid programs. "Colony" (Season 2, Episode 16) and "End Game" (Season 2, Episode 17) introduce the Alien Bounty Hunter assassinating clones, revealing Samantha's survival as a hybrid and Mulder's pursuit to New Mexico. "Piper Maru" (Season 3, Episode 15) and "Apocrypha" (Season 3, Episode 16) detail the black oil virus's possession of humans and its burial in a 1930s shipwreck, linking to Syndicate salvage operations. Later seasons resolve and complicate the invasion timeline set for December 22, 2012. "" (Season 4, Episode 15) explores Scully's brain cancer from abduction experiments, involving clone facilities and survivor networks. The ""/"Redux I & II" arc (Season 4, Episodes 24; Season 5, Episodes 1-2) fabricates alien bodies to discredit Mulder, leading to his faked death and reinstatement. "Two Fathers" and "One Son" (Season 6, Episodes 11-12) depict the Syndicate's annihilation by colonists, with rebel aliens vaccinating humans against the . "" (Season 7, Episode 22) results in Mulder's abduction, transitioning to agent . "" (Season 8, Episode 18) revisits black oil infecting oil rig workers, destroyed by Mulder and Doggett. "" (Season 9, Episode 16) discloses Scully's son as a superhuman hybrid, whom she relinquishes for safety. Revival episodes like "" (Season 10, Episode 6) introduce a human-orchestrated plague mimicking the alien , with UFOs intervening ambiguously.

Notable Standalone Episodes

Rankings of the scariest episodes are subjective and vary by source, but "Home" (season 4, episode 2) is most frequently ranked as the scariest due to its graphic themes of inbreeding, incest, and violence in an isolated family. Other commonly top-ranked episodes include "Squeeze" (season 1, episode 3) for the contortionist killer Eugene Tooms, "Irresistible" (season 2, episode 13) for psychological horror and necrophiliac stalker, "Die Hand Die Verletzt" (season 2, episode 14) for occult and demonic elements, and "Roadrunners" (season 8, episode 4) for body horror with parasites. "," the fourth episode of the third season, originally aired on October 13, 1995, and centers on FBI agents Mulder and Scully investigating a targeting fortune tellers, with assistance from a reluctant , Clyde Bruckman, portrayed by . Written and directed by , the episode explores themes of and mortality through Bruckman's visions of death, culminating in his own foreseen . It received critical acclaim for its philosophical depth and humor, earning a 9.2/10 rating on from over 8,300 user votes and the 1996 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Series. "Jose Chung's From Outer Space," the 20th episode of season 3, premiered on April 12, 1996, and deconstructs UFO abduction narratives through conflicting eyewitness accounts gathered for author Jose Chung's book, featuring elements like men in black and hallucinatory aliens. Penned by Darin Morgan, it satirizes government cover-ups, media sensationalism, and the unreliability of testimony, with guest star Charles Nelson Reilly as the eccentric writer. The episode garnered an 8.8/10 IMDb rating from more than 7,300 reviews and is frequently cited for its postmodern self-awareness and critique of conspiracy tropes central to the series. "Bad Blood," season 5 episode 12, broadcast on February 22, 1998, presents a investigation in through dueling Rashomon-style recollections by Mulder and Scully, revealing discrepancies in their perceptions of events including a teenage victim's death and a coroner's involvement. Directed by Cliff Bole and written by , it emphasizes the agents' contrasting personalities via comedic exaggeration, such as Mulder's stake-wielding bravado and Scully's skepticism. The episode holds a strong reception in fan rankings for its levity amid procedural tension, appearing in top standalone lists for blending horror with character-driven humor. "Home," the second episode of season 4, aired on October 11, 1996, and follows the agents probing the murder of a deformed infant in rural Pennsylvania, uncovering a reclusive family's extreme measures to preserve their isolated existence, marked by and violence. Written by and James Wong, it earned the series' first TV-MA rating for its graphic depictions of , , and , prompting viewer complaints about excessive brutality. restricted reruns for three years following its debut, airing it only once more on Halloween 1999, though it later appeared on and is noted in horror compilations for its unflinching rural gothic terror. "Squeeze," season 1 episode 3, which debuted on September 24, 1993, introduces the mutant Eugene Victor , a liver-eating creature capable of elongating its body to commit murders undetected in urban settings. Co-written by and James Wong, it establishes the monster-of-the-week formula by focusing on a self-contained threat without advancing the alien arc, setting a template for 101 of the original 202 episodes. The episode's creature design and procedural investigation influenced subsequent standalone stories, with its sequel "Tooms" airing April 22, 1994, reinforcing Tooms as a recurring .

Feature Films

The X-Files: Fight the Future, directed by Rob Bowman from a screenplay by Chris Carter and , was released theatrically on June 19, 1998, serving as a bridge between the show's fifth and sixth seasons. The film advances the central mythology involving alien colonization and government cover-ups, depicting FBI agents () and () reassigned after a bombing in exposes traces of extraterrestrial "black oil" and forces them to evade bureaucratic interference while pursuing leads in . Produced with a budget of $66 million, it earned $83.9 million domestically and $105.3 million internationally, totaling $189.2 million worldwide. Critics praised the film's expansion of the series' paranoid atmosphere and , with granting it three out of four stars for its "moody" tone and the leads' chemistry, though some noted plot complexities alien to newcomers. It received a 7/10 average user rating on from over 113,000 votes, reflecting fan appreciation for mythology progression despite denser serialization. The second film, The X-Files: I Want to Believe, directed and co-written by Carter with Spotnitz, premiered on July 25, 2008, six years after the original series concluded. As a standalone story eschewing extraterrestrial elements, it reunites a retired Mulder and Scully to aid an FBI investigation into a missing agent, guided by visions from a convicted pedophile () claiming psychic abilities, while exploring themes of faith, redemption, and their personal relationship. Budgeted at around $30 million, it grossed $21.4 million domestically and $47 million internationally, for a worldwide total of $68.4 million, failing to recoup costs amid competition and audience expectations for mytharc content. Reception proved mixed, with a 32% approval rating on based on 167 reviews, where detractors criticized its procedural focus and lack of high-stakes sci-fi as diluting the franchise's appeal. aggregated a 47/100 from 33 critics, highlighting strengths in character introspection but weaknesses in pacing and stakes. The film holds a 5.9/10 on from nearly 96,000 users, with fans divided over its monster-of-the-week style versus the anticipated payoff.

Spin-offs and Tie-ins

The Lone Gunmen, a short-lived television series derived from the recurring characters in The X-Files, premiered on on March 4, 2001, and consisted of 13 episodes broadcast through July 29, 2001. Centering on the conspiracy-obsessed trio—John Fitzgerald Byers (), Melvin Frohike (), and Richard "Ringo" Langly ()—alongside new characters like Jimmy Bond ( as Yves Adele Harlow), the show depicted their investigations into corporate and governmental intrigue using hacking and gadgetry. The pilot episode featured a plot wherein U.S. government insiders remotely hijack a commercial airliner to deliberately crash it into the World Trade Center as a false-flag operation to justify increased defense spending, an element that drew retrospective scrutiny after the , 2001, attacks occurring six months later. The series was canceled after its first season primarily due to insufficient viewership ratings, despite initial promotion as an extension of The X-Files mythology. Beyond television, The X-Files expanded through comic books, beginning with Topps Comics' launch of a tie-in series in 1995 amid the show's peak popularity, which included ongoing issues, limited series, and crossovers featuring Mulder and Scully confronting supernatural threats outside the televised canon. Subsequent publishers like WildStorm (under DC Comics) and IDW Publishing produced additional volumes, notably IDW's Season 10 and Season 11 (2013–2015), which bridged the narrative gap between the original series finale and the 2016 revival by depicting unresolved Syndicate conspiracies and alien colonization arcs. These comics maintained fidelity to the source material's themes of paranoia and unexplained phenomena but operated as non-canonical supplements, with creators emphasizing standalone storytelling to avoid conflicting with televised events. Prose novels formed another major tie-in, with Harper Prism releasing over 20 official books from 1995 to 2000, authored by writers such as and Les Martin, which explored "monster-of-the-week" cases and mythology extensions involving FBI agents Mulder and Scully. Titles like Goblins (1994) and (1995) delved into entities and government cover-ups, often incorporating procedural elements absent from the screen. Video games provided interactive tie-ins, most prominently (1998), a first-person adventure developed by Hyperion Software and published by Fox Interactive for Windows PC, where players controlled agent Craig Willmore in a probing a cult's paranormal experiments and linking to the show's antagonist. The game received mixed reviews for its puzzle-solving mechanics and voice acting by and but was praised for immersive atmosphere tying into the franchise's investigative core. Lesser extensions included the 1999 pinball game The X-Files: Enhanced Edition by Razorworks, simulating episode-inspired tables with multiball features representing alien abductions and conspiracies.

Broadcast History and Commercial Performance

Original Broadcast and Viewership Ratings

The X-Files premiered on the on September 10, 1993, with the pilot episode introducing FBI agents and investigating cases. The series ran for nine seasons, totaling 202 episodes, and concluded with the two-part finale "The Truth" on May 19, 2002. Initially scheduled on Friday nights at 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time for seasons 1 through 5, the show shifted to Sundays at the same time starting in season 6, a move coinciding with its heightened cultural prominence and broader appeal beyond niche audiences. The pilot episode earned a Nielsen household rating of 7.9 with a 15 share, corresponding to roughly 12 million viewers in an era when Fox was expanding its primetime footprint amid competition from established networks./Background_Information) Early seasons posted modest but steady gains, building a dedicated following through word-of-mouth and syndication previews, though the first season ranked 105th overall in Nielsen standings with average viewership around 7-8 million per episode. Ratings surged in subsequent years, reflecting the show's serialization of mythology arcs and standalone "monster-of-the-week" stories that captured mid-1990s fascination with government conspiracies and the unexplained. Peak viewership occurred during seasons 4 through 6, when episodes routinely exceeded 20 million viewers; the season 4 entry holds the record at 29.1 million, bolstered by its lead-in and themes of regeneration that resonated amid contemporary UFO discourse. This era saw The X-Files consistently ranking in the top 20 programs, with season 5 and 6 averages approaching 19-20 million viewers per episode. Declines set in from season 8 onward, exacerbated by David Duchovny's reduced role after season 7 due to health issues and creative fatigue, dropping averages to the 6-8 million range by season 9. The finale drew 13.2 million viewers, a solid but diminished figure compared to mid-run highs, signaling audience fatigue with unresolved mythology threads.

Revival Seasons

The tenth season, a limited revival series comprising six episodes, premiered on the Fox network on January 24, 2016, with the mythology-focused "My Struggle." The premiere garnered 16.2 million viewers in live-plus-same-day Nielsen measurements and rose to over 20 million with three-day delayed and streaming viewership included. The season maintained solid performance in its time slot starting , averaging a 3.19 rating in the adults 18-49 demographic and approximately 9.5 million total viewers per , bolstered by multi-platform consumption that exceeded initial linear broadcasts. Encouraged by these figures, which represented Fox's strongest scripted series return in years, the network commissioned an eleventh season of ten episodes on April 20, 2017. This season aired from January 3, 2018, to March 21, 2018, but experienced a marked decline in audience engagement. The premiere, "," drew only 5.2 million live-plus-same-day viewers and a 1.4 rating in adults 18-49, reflecting drops of roughly 68% and 77% respectively from the tenth season's premiere metrics. Overall viewership for the eleventh season trended lower amid competition from streaming services and shifting viewer habits, contributing to Fox's decision against further renewals despite the franchise's enduring brand value.

Home Video and Streaming Availability

The X-Files was initially released on , with full seasons made available in tape collections during the , including multi-tape box sets containing episodes from early seasons. DVD releases began in the early , featuring individual season sets and complete series collections, such as a 59-disc edition covering seasons 1 through 9 released in in 2006. Complete DVD sets encompassing all 11 seasons and the feature films became available through retailers like Amazon. Blu-ray editions followed, with a collector's set for the original nine seasons issued in 2015, including over 23 hours of bonus content. A comprehensive Blu-ray release of seasons 1 through 11 was distributed on October 15, 2018, in regions including the . For streaming, the series was accessible on through July 2025, after which all 11 seasons departed the platform on August 1, 2025. As of October 2025, The X-Files remains available for streaming on Disney+, which includes all seasons and both feature films. Episodes are also offered for digital purchase or rental on platforms such as Amazon Video and Apple TV.

Recent Reboot Developments

In March 2023, series creator Chris Carter revealed that director was developing a of The X-Files, emphasizing a cast with greater diversity than the original series. Carter, who holds the rights, granted Coogler his explicit blessing for the project while clarifying he would not be directly involved in production. The announcement, made during a casual , surprised fans accustomed to revivals featuring leads and , as Carter described the reboot as a fresh take unbound by prior casting constraints. By October 2025, Coogler provided updates confirming the reboot as his next project before Black Panther 3, with early script pages already shared with his mother—a longtime fan whose enthusiasm influenced his involvement. In December 2025, Coogler elaborated that the series will blend monster-of-the-week episodes with an overarching conspiracy arc, stating it "wouldn't be X-Files if we didn't do both." He disclosed receiving advice on television storytelling from Vince Gilligan, an alumnus of the original series. Coogler expressed admiration for original stars Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny, noting discussions with Anderson about potential involvement but without confirming returns for her or Duchovny. He pledged to "do right" by the franchise's audience, addressing speculation about maintaining core elements like government conspiracy and investigations amid modern production demands. Casting remains unconfirmed but has fueled rumors of talents such as in lead roles, aligning with the project's diversity focus. Original protagonists' actors have responded variably: Duchovny expressed support in September 2025, viewing the effort as independent from past iterations and wishing the team success without personal participation. Anderson hinted at potential cameo or advisory input but has not committed, consistent with her prior reservations about returning to the role post-2018 revival. The series is slated for Disney+, leveraging the platform's ownership of properties, though no production timeline or premiere date has been set as of late 2025. Carter separately noted in July 2025 that unresolved mythology threads from the 2018 season contain deliberate clues for future expansion, potentially informing the reboot's narrative continuity.

Critical Reception

Early Praise and Evolution

The X-Files premiered on on September 10, 1993, earning initial acclaim for its blend of investigative procedural elements with , distinguishing it from contemporary network television fare. Critics highlighted the series' atmospheric tension, derived from shadowy cinematography and restrained horror influences, as well as the credible dynamic between protagonists and , portrayed by and , respectively. Season 1 aggregated a score of 70 from 14 reviews, reflecting praise for its seductive paranoia and episodic structure that alternated standalone mysteries with emerging serialized intrigue. The series' early success was underscored by prestigious recognitions, including a 1994 Peabody Award for forging a universe where empirical skepticism clashed with supernatural possibilities, often resolving in ambiguous outcomes that encouraged viewer speculation. At the 1995 Golden Globe Awards, The X-Files secured the prize for Best Television Series – Drama, affirming its appeal amid competition from established dramas. Subsequent seasons sustained this momentum, with Season 2 earning the show's inaugural Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Main Title Design and nominations for sound mixing, signaling growing technical and polish. Critical consensus evolved favorably through the mid-1990s, as Seasons 2 through 5 balanced "monster-of-the-week" episodes with deepening mythology arcs, achieving Tomatometer scores above 90% for several, including a perfect 100% for Season 4 based on limited reviews. Reviewers commended the escalating stakes in the alien conspiracy storyline and character growth, such as Scully's gradual openness to the , which enriched thematic explorations of institutional distrust. However, by Seasons 6 and 7, some outlets noted emerging fatigue with repetitive motifs and unresolved subplots, though overall reception remained strong, buoyed by the 1998 feature film The X-Files: Fight the Future, which grossed $189 million worldwide and reinforced the franchise's cultural footprint. Post-2000, following Duchovny's reduced role, critiques intensified regarding the mythology's convolution and dilution of core Mulder-Scully interplay, with Seasons 8 and 9 drawing lower aggregate scores—around 80% on —and accusations of narrative stagnation despite strong standalone episodes. The 2016 revival (Season 10) elicited mixed responses, lauded for recapturing procedural essence in select installments but faulted for rushed serialization and outdated production values, yielding a 69% Tomatometer rating. Season 11 in 2018 showed marginal improvement to 77%, yet persistent criticisms of meandering plots highlighted a broader evolution from tightly coiled early intrigue to a more diffuse legacy burdened by fan expectations and canonical bloat.

Season-Specific Critiques

Critics have frequently praised Seasons 1 through 3 for establishing the series' core strengths, including a balanced mix of standalone "monster-of-the-week" episodes and an emerging mythology arc centered on conspiracies and extraterrestrial phenomena. Season 1, in particular, received an 83% approval rating on based on reviews highlighting its serious approach to sci-fi procedural elements and avoidance of campiness, with strong character dynamics between agents Mulder and Scully driving early intrigue. Season 3 is often ranked as the series' peak by outlets like , commended for consistent quality, emotional depth in episodes like "," and effective advancement of the mythology without excessive convolution. Seasons 4 and 5 maintained high regard for their blend of horror-tinged standalone stories and mythology progression, though some reviewers noted early signs of formulaic repetition in the latter, such as tiresome myth-arc developments and less innovative standalone episodes like "." Season 6 shifted toward more experimental, lighthearted monster-of-the-week entries following the production's relocation to , earning mixed responses for fun but uneven execution, with critics at appreciating episodes like "" while critiquing filler like "." Season 7 faced scrutiny for concluding unresolved threads like Samantha Mulder's storyline in a manner perceived as rushed, alongside tired motifs in episodes such as "." The departure of after Season 7 contributed to a perceived decline in Seasons 8 and 9, with Season 8 introducing as Agent Doggett and repositioning Scully as a believer, which some praised for fresh dynamics but others faulted for reduced Mulder-Scully interplay and weaker episodes like "." Season 9 drew sharp criticism for its convoluted mythology, absence of Mulder for much of the run, and underwhelming finale "The Truth," positioning it near the bottom in rankings due to diminished character focus and narrative satisfaction. Revival Seasons 10 and 11, airing in 2016 and 2018, elicited disappointment from many reviewers for failing to recapture the original spark, with Season 10 earning a 70% score amid complaints of nostalgic reliance over substantive plotting and muddled myth-arc episodes. Season 11 improved slightly to 75% but was critiqued for weak bookends like "" and unresolved arcs, reflecting broader fatigue in the aging mythology and inconsistent standalone efforts. Overall, the mythology's evolution from tightly woven early conspiracies to increasingly opaque and repetitive elements in later seasons was a recurring point of contention, attributed by analysts to creative exhaustion after nearly a of expansion.

Awards and Recognitions

The X-Files earned 16 out of 62 nominations across its original nine-season run from 1993 to 2002, with additional recognition in the revival seasons. received the Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series award in 1997 for her portrayal of . Other Emmy wins included categories such as Outstanding Art Direction for a Series (1997, for the episode ""), Outstanding for a Single-Camera Series (2001), and Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (2002). The series secured five Golden Globe Awards from 12 nominations, including wins for Best Television Series – Drama in 1996, Best Actor in a Television Series – Drama for in 1997, and Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama for in 1997. Duchovny and Anderson each received multiple acting nominations across years, reflecting acclaim for their chemistry and performances in probing investigations. Beyond these, The X-Files garnered two for excellence in electronic media, recognizing its innovative storytelling and cultural impact on television. It also won from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films, including Best Network Series in multiple years, underscoring its dominance in programming. These honors highlight the show's technical achievements, writing, and acting, though nominations tapered in later seasons amid shifting critical tastes.

Cultural and Societal Impact

Influence on Television Formats

The X-Files introduced a hybrid television format that combined self-contained "monster-of-the-week" episodes with an overarching serialized mythology arc, allowing standalone stories to contribute to larger narrative threads involving conspiracies and extraterrestrial phenomena. This structure departed from the predominantly episodic procedurals or fully serialized soaps dominant in primetime during the early , enabling genre storytelling to sustain viewer engagement across seasons while accommodating syndication viability through rewatchable individual installments. Premiering on September 10, 1993, on , the series averaged around 10-12 million viewers per episode in its early seasons, demonstrating the commercial potential of this blend in elevating from niche syndication to network success. This format influenced subsequent genre series by popularizing serialized elements within procedural frameworks, where episodic cases advanced broader mysteries. For instance, (2005-2020) adopted a similar "freak-of-the-week" model intertwined with seasonal arcs on demonic and apocalyptic threats, crediting The X-Files for reshaping dynamics. Similarly, Fringe (2008-2013) mirrored the FBI-agent protagonists investigating fringe science anomalies, with creators , , and explicitly positioning it as a successor that expanded the X-Files' investigative sci-fi procedural template into multiverse-spanning serialization. The X-Files also paved the way for mystery-driven ensemble shows like Lost (2004-2010), which layered episodic enigmas atop interconnected island lore, amplifying serialization's appeal amid shifting viewer habits toward DVD box sets and on-demand viewing in the mid-2000s. This evolution contributed to a broader trend in television toward "event" genre dramas, where tonal variety—from horror to humor—coexisted with long-form plotting, as seen in Buffy the Vampire Slayer's supernatural procedural roots evolving under Joss Whedon's team, who drew from X-Files precedents in blending standalone threats with character-driven arcs. By its conclusion in 2002 after nine seasons, the series had inspired networks to greenlight comparable hybrids, fostering a procedural renaissance that prioritized causal continuity over isolated episodes.

Fandom Engagement and Merchandising

The X-Files cultivated a dedicated fandom that pioneered key elements of modern fan culture, particularly through early internet communities and the popularization of "shipping" for romantic character pairings, a term derived from fans' advocacy for Fox Mulder and Dana Scully's relationship. These online spaces, including forums and archives like Gossamer for fanfiction, fostered extensive fan-created content such as stories, art, and theories, with the series' narrative ambiguity encouraging speculative engagement. Fanfiction repositories preserved thousands of works, while communities on platforms like Reddit's r/XFiles continue discussions on episodes and lore, reflecting sustained interest decades after the original run. Conventions organized by fan associations have provided opportunities for direct interaction, including Q&A sessions with cast members, autograph signings, and photo ops, with events such as the Salt Lake Pop Culture & Comic Convention featuring X-Files panels as recently as planned for 2025. Fandom activities extended to , where enthusiasts replicate Mulder's suits or Scully's professional attire, and preservation efforts, including audio adaptations of fanfiction to enhance accessibility. Some fans channeled engagement into social causes, linking the series' themes of and justice to charity drives and inspired by character archetypes. Merchandising encompassed a wide array of licensed products, including comic books from publishers like in 1995 and , which expanded the franchise's with original stories. and collectibles featured action figures from starting in 1998, Pop vinyls of Mulder and Scully, and bobble heads, alongside apparel such as t-shirts with iconic motifs like "I Want to Believe." Rare items, including promotional posters and machine translites, circulate among collectors via marketplaces, while everyday merchandise like air fresheners and posters remains available through retailers. Tie-in novels and props further supported fan immersion, with secondary markets on platforms like facilitating trades of custom and official goods.

Role in Shaping Public Skepticism

The X-Files depicted FBI agents uncovering conspiracies and events, fostering viewer distrust of official institutions and narratives. This portrayal, centered on themes of and hidden truths, amplified post-Cold War skepticism toward authority, as analyzed by critical theorist in 1994, who observed the series generated "distrust toward established authority, representing institutions of and science as corrupt and untrustworthy." The recurring motif of "trust no one" and the tagline "The Truth Is Out There" encouraged audiences to scrutinize mainstream explanations, particularly regarding unidentified flying objects and . Empirical examination reveals nuanced effects on public beliefs. A 2018 experimental study exposed participants to an X-Files involving mind control and found increased endorsement of that specific plot-related belief (Cohen's d = 0.81, p < 0.001), but no significant rise in general conspiracy mentality (p = 0.33, Bayes factor favoring ). This suggests the show's influence may prime acceptance of depicted scenarios without broadly elevating conspiratorial thinking, contrasting with stronger impacts from non-fiction media like reality TV. Agent Dana Scully's empirical, science-based provided a counterbalance to Fox Mulder's intuition-driven pursuits, modeling critical inquiry amid extraordinary claims. The series' cultural resonance extended to real-world discourse on unexplained phenomena. Its 1993 premiere coincided with renewed interest in UFO disclosures, and by the 2016 revival, it mirrored an era of eroded trust following events like 9/11 intelligence failures and surveillance revelations. Creator Chris Carter, reflecting in a 2021 New York Times op-ed amid U.S. government UFO reports, advocated evidentiary rigor over unchecked speculation, aligning with Scully's methodology and cautioning that absence of proof does not equate to cover-up. Overall, while promoting vigilance against potential institutional deception, the program underscored the importance of verifiable evidence in navigating skepticism.

Controversies and Criticisms

Content and Episode-Specific Issues

The episode "Home" (season 4, episode 2, originally aired October 11, 1996) drew widespread viewer complaints for its graphic portrayal of a reclusive, inbred family committing murders to protect their severely deformed relatives, including scenes implying incest, infanticide, and extreme physical violence such as a sheriff being beaten to death with a baseball bat and dragged under a bed. It marked the first episode of the series to receive a TV-MA rating and carried a viewer discretion advisory for disturbing content, leading Fox to air it only once initially and ban it from network reruns for three years until a single Halloween 1999 broadcast, after which it was excluded from syndication until the 2005 DVD release. Series writers Glen Morgan and James Wong later described it as the show's most disturbing installment, noting that the intent was to evoke horror through isolation and familial depravity rather than supernatural elements, but audience backlash focused on its unrelenting grimness and taboo subjects. Other episodes faced retrospective criticism for handling sensitive themes insensitively. "" (season 5, episode 5, aired November 30, 1997) involved a disfigured creature abducting and impregnating a woman without , prompting modern analyses to highlight it as problematic for glorifying non-consensual acts under a veneer of tragic romance and Frankenstein-inspired . Similarly, "" (season 1, episode 14, aired January 21, 1994) depicted a Quaker-like with members capable of switching biological sexes, leading to accusations of reinforcing stereotypes about and sexual ambiguity through a plot centered on murders tied to arousal. These critiques, often from post-airing cultural reviews, argue the episodes prioritized procedural mystery over nuanced treatment of , identity, or social outcasts, though contemporaneous reception emphasized the show's horror elements over such concerns. Episodes like "Shapes" (season 1, episode 19, aired February 18, 1994) also attracted for stereotypical portrayals, including a Native American character transforming into a amid reservation tensions, which some viewed as exoticizing indigenous lore without depth. Despite these issues, the series maintained its focus on investigations, with content controversies remaining isolated rather than systemic, as evidenced by the lack of broader network interventions beyond "."

Production and Creative Decisions

Chris Carter developed The X-Files in the early 1990s, drawing from influences like Kolchak: The Night Stalker and the cultural fascination with UFOs and government secrecy during that era. He wrote the pilot script in 1992, initially pitching a series about two FBI agents investigating unsolved cases, but Fox executives rejected it for lacking sufficient action and resolution. Carter revised the concept to emphasize the dynamic between the believer () and skeptic (), securing a for production with a premiere on September 10, 1993. Casting prioritized chemistry over conventional appeal; was selected for Mulder due to his dry wit demonstrated in roles like The Rapture, while landed Scully despite Fox executives deeming her insufficiently "sexy" by network standards, with Carter defending her intellectual presence as essential to the character's rational foil role. Production filmed the first five seasons in , , selected for its dense forests and perpetual rain that enhanced the eerie atmosphere without relying on expensive sets, though this remote location strained logistics and increased costs from travel and weather delays. In 1998, after season five, filming shifted to primarily to accommodate Duchovny's family commitments and leverage tax incentives, altering the visual tone to brighter, urban settings that some critics argued diluted the original moody aesthetic. Creatively, Carter structured the series around a hybrid format: approximately 60-70% "monster-of-the-week" episodes featuring self-contained supernatural anomalies to ensure episodic accessibility and syndication viability, interspersed with a mythology arc exploring alien colonization and syndicate conspiracies for serialized depth. This decision stemmed from budget constraints—early episodes operated on around $1-2 million per installment, favoring practical effects and location shooting over CGI—and network demands for standalone resolvability, prompting additions like Scully's closing voiceovers to provide artificial closure absent in pure mythology plots. Challenges included censor interventions on violent or suggestive content, resolved through subtle implication rather than explicit depiction, and evolving actor input, such as Duchovny's push for more humor to counterbalance the darkening mythos.

Debates on Conspiracy Promotion

Critics have argued that The X-Files contributed to the normalization of conspiratorial thinking by portraying government cover-ups and paranormal phenomena as plausible, thereby eroding public trust in institutions during a post-Cold War era marked by events like Watergate and Iran-Contra. The series' protagonist, Fox Mulder, embodies a "romantic conspiracy theorist" archetype, whose relentless pursuit of hidden truths romanticizes skepticism toward official narratives, potentially influencing viewers to adopt similar patterns of doubt without sufficient evidence. A 2018 experimental study exposed participants to an X-Files episode featuring conspiracist elements, finding that it led to significantly higher endorsement of related conspiracy beliefs compared to a control group watching neutral content, suggesting short-term priming effects on worldview. Defenders counter that the show's structure, centered on Dana Scully's scientific demanding verifiable proof, ultimately promotes critical inquiry over blind faith, with many episodes resolving mysteries through rational debunking rather than affirming every theory. Creator Chris Carter, in a 2021 New York Times , explicitly cautioned against overinterpreting the series as endorsement of real-world conspiracies, emphasizing its fictional nature and warning that unchecked , as seen in post-9/11 UFO reports, risks distorting evidence-based discourse. Empirical assessments of long-term cultural impact remain inconclusive, with no large-scale longitudinal data linking viewership directly to increased conspiracy adherence, though the series is credited with mainstreaming themes of institutional that preexisted in public sentiment. These debates intensified with the 2016 revival, amid rising online conspiracism, where episodes explicitly referenced 9/11-era , prompting accusations that the show exploited rather than critiqued prevailing . Analyses from media scholars highlight how the narrative's "paradoxical structure"—teasing vast cabals while often undercutting them—mirrors real logic, training audiences in pattern-seeking without resolution, yet this may foster adaptive questioning of authority rather than delusion. Carter's own reservations underscore a self-aware pivot, positioning the series as a cautionary artifact amid evolving media landscapes that amplify unverified claims.

References

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