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- Bloody Good Show
- by Sarah Stegall
- munchkyn@netcom.com
-
- Well, Friday night's episode of "The X-Files" brought
- us back to the high standards set by the opening episode:
- creepy camera angles, good writing, tight pacing, and eerie
- music. Through this whole episode I felt that I was being
- forced to the edge of a cliff. By the last scene, where
- Mulder's phone is sending him messages, I was standing with
- my toes hanging over the edge.
-
- The pacing of this episode was excellent. Having
- pulled the pin out of the grenade in the teaser, writers
- Morgan and Wong make us wait and wait for it to go off.
- William Sanderson ("Ed Funch") is one of my favorite
- oddballs; like Tracey Walters, he can sweat on cue. His
- excellent "mad scene" in the tower reminded me of Brad
- Dourif's master turn in last season's "Beyond the Sea"--it's
- hard to laugh and cry at the same time. And the irony was
- delicious: unlike the other killers, the "messages" are
- telling Funch to commit an act--bloodshed--which will bring
- forth his deepest fears, not allay them.
-
- The Lone Gunmen are back! [Though now I am really
- worried: does Frohike really have Scully's phone number?
- Because I think she's gonna need more firepower...] The
- muscle shirt is back! The TIES are back! Unfortunately, so
- is Mulder's lousy buzz cut. Yet all is forgiven for lines
- like "Pardon my rubber", "It's men like you who give
- perversion a bad name", and "He's probably one of those
- people who thinks Elvis is dead". I loved it when Mulder
- got angry over yet another bonehead calling him "Spooky". I
- loved it that Mulder had an ally to help him (Sheriff
- Spencer, a very good performance) instead of continually
- fighting the bureaucrats. We finally get to see Mulder
- acting like a behavioral scientist; it's been a long wait to
- see his famous reputation justified.
-
- The absolute best scene, for me, was the one where Mrs.
- McRoberts (Ashlyn Gere) was in the garage. The lighting,
- the angles, the pacing, and the acting had me on the edge of
- my seat. I was right there with her, afraid to be alone in
- the dark with a stranger, trying to tell herself that it was
- all right, and not believing it.
-
- The show played into the paranoia generated by
- government blunders like Thalidomide and DDT very well,
- while linking David Koresh, Charles Manson, and OJ Simpson
- into an up-to-the-second mix. I didn't know if I was
- watching "The X-Files" or the ten o'clock news. I was
- afraid, right up to the last scene, that the writers were
- not going to be able to make the tenuous connection between
- pesticide poisoning and subliminal messages work. And of
- course, Morgan and Wong managed to wrap up all the loose
- ends in the final seconds and STILL leave us hanging!!
- Scully gets her rational explanation--a neurotoxin, and
- Mulder gets his--a conspiracy. Maybe Scully doesn't have
- all the facts, or maybe Mulder is still suffering
- neurological effects from pesticide poisoning. Who's right?
- Either, neither--or both. Great stuff. This is why I watch
- this show.
-
- This one gets five sunflower seeds.
-