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- Oubliette
-
- by Sarah Stegall
-
- copyright 1995 by Sarah Stegall
-
-
- This review very nearly didn't get written. It took me
- several tries to get all the way through "Oubliette". As the
- mother of two small daughters, who received their school
- pictures in the mail this week, who lives in the county where
- Richard Wade Davis will shortly go on trial for kidnapping a
- young girl out of her bedroom two years ago and leaving her
- body in a shallow roadside grave, this episode was nearly
- impossible for me to watch. It struck too close to the fears
- that lie in every parent's heart, that keep us awake and
- listening for sounds in the middle of the night, that make us
- get up at three in the morning to make sure the doors to the
- house are locked--again. What the childless (or the
- oblivious) don't understand is that this bone-deep fear
- translates very, very easily into a rage unequaled in the
- human psyche.
- The world is divided into two groups: those with
- children and those without. Most of the time this division is
- invisible, but on issues that deal with children in peril, the
- gulf is often wide and uncrossable. Last spring's furious
- Internet debate on child endangerment following "The Calusari"
- showed just how deep that chasm is. While I usually am
- uninterested in the personal lives or agendas of the people
- behind "The X-Files", I had to wonder halfway through if
- writer Charles Craig has children. Did he realize how
- powerful were the feelings he was rousing in part of his
- audience? Portrayals of imperiled children are not just one
- more emotional button a screenwriter can push--hooks like this
- short-circuit a parent's entire emotional control board. At
- the end of "Oubliette", I didn't just want justice for both
- kidnap victims, I wanted to feed Carl Wade his own eyeballs.
- When Mulder shot him down in the stream where he killed his
- victim, it was not enough. I wanted "The X-Files", which has
- rubbed my nose in unnecessary gore several times, to show
- Wade's head exploding in a slow-motion, highly satisfactory
- reprisal. Shooting him in the back was not enough.
- Needless to say, my reaction to this episode was not
- terribly objective.
- When 15 year old Amy Jacobs (Jewel Staite) is abducted
- out of her bedroom by a stranger, waitress Lucy Householder
- (Tracey Ellis) across town bleeds the victim's own blood and
- murmurs words spoken by the abductor. Mulder wastes no time
- crossing a continent to join the investigation (arriving ahead
- of Scully while Scene of Crime men are still at work) in
- Seattle, drawn to the case by this strange behavior. Scully,
- along with the rest of the FBI agents involved in this case,
- assume that Lucy is an accomplice of kidnaper Carl Wade
- (Michael Chieffo), even after they discover that Lucy is
- herself the survivor of a five-year kidnapping ordeal. Mulder
- becomes her sole champion as her growing empathic bond with
- Amy forces her to relive the nightmare.
- Writer Charles Grant Craig and director Kim Manners keep
- the anxiety level high throughout the episode, as we who
- remember the desperate hunt for young Polly Klaas are forced
- to see reenactments of various incidents from that case.
- Those of us who saw "Silence of the Lambs" cannot help but be
- reminded by Wade's 'oubliette' (a dungeon whose access is only
- through a trapdoor in the roof) of the similar homemade prison
- in that movie. Jewel Strait did a wonderful job of shredding
- my heart with her depiction of a terrified yet resourceful
- Amy, who very nearly escapes her tormentor. Her solo effort,
- when Davis stalks her during a bone-chilling scene in the dark
- basement with a red viewfinder light, is a tour de force of
- panic and bewilderment of which any actress can be proud.
- But top acting kudos go to David Duchovny and Tracey
- Ellis for two unforgettable performances. Ellis infuses the
- wretched Lucy with enough anger, bitterness and self-pity to
- make her believably hostile and defensive, yet gives her
- enough courage and fighting spirit to win our sympathy. Her
- unhappy, unlucky life has left Lucy with little in the way of
- inner resources, a victim trapped forever in her misery by
- internal scars that neither time nor therapy nor drugs can
- erase. The title of the episode, "Oubliette", derives from
- the French "to forget", and reminds us that for Lucy, death is
- the only sleep that will not give her nightmares. Mulder
- alone understands that her stubborn wall of refusal is really
- a fragile eggshell hiding the tortured soul within. Ellis let
- us see both the wall and the shattered self it protected.
- Lucy's final self-sacrifice to save Amy recalls the
- sacrificial theme introduced in "Paper Clip", where Melissa
- Scully dies in her sister's place.
- Whole new dimensions of Fox Mulder are revealed in this
- short hour, as we see his tender and protective side, a truly
- gentle man who can show compassion without being maudlin about
- it, whose kind and persistent sympathy finally wins past the
- scars and pain that seal off Lucy Householder from the world.
- David Duchovny unlocks this character more than in any other
- episode but "End Game", showing us solicitude and warmth in a
- character who was in danger of going cold this season. When I
- first finished "Oubliette", I came away marveling at the range
- of facial expression Duchovny showed in this episode. But
- when I ran it a second time, I saw that I was mistaken:
- Duchovny plays Mulder as deadpan as ever. But his voice, his
- intonation, and most importantly, his body language convey the
- emotion seeping past Mulder's defenses, revealing Mulder's
- emotions more convincingly than a mere grimace would have.
- Duchovny will never win an Emmy for this sort of thing as long
- as Academy judges are more impressed with ranting and raving,
- but it is a fine, highly controlled performance and deserves
- high praise.
- And finally, FINALLY, I hear the words I have been
- wanting to hear from Mulder for more than two years: "Not
- everything I say and think and feel goes back to my sister."
- It is way, way past time to acknowledge that even the most
- defining moment of a man's life is only one moment among many,
- and that for a complex man like Mulder one motivation does not
- fit all situations.
- Two glaring flaws stood out in the otherwise seamless
- flow of this story: Scully and the CPR incident. I don't
- know what Craig was trying to do with Scully in this episode:
- she was almost antagonistic towards her partner. If my
- partner turned out to be right in 100% of the cases I
- investigated with him, I would have considerably more patience
- with his theories and his hunches. I cannot quite understand
- the clumsiness of the scene with Amy beside the river, where
- Dr. Scully makes a half-hearted attempt to resuscitate her
- before giving up. A young healthy child suddenly drowned in
- cold water stands an excellent chance of revival, enough to
- justify several hours of uninterrupted CPR. I can think of
- any number of cinematic techniques that could have telescoped
- that time for us, giving us a clear understanding of the
- effort real agents would have put into her revival. If time
- was a constraint, there were several other sequences that
- could have been cut from this episode: notably one showing
- Mulder arriving at the halfway house, getting out of the car,
- climbing stairs, walking across a porch, climbing more stairs,
- knocking on a door, being admitted...etc. The pacing of the
- entire episode seemed off more than once, with some scenes so
- rushed I could barely understand the dialogue being rattled
- off at breakneck pace, and some scenes so drawn out I kept
- thinking some revelation was at hand that never developed.
- As always, however, blemishes like this stand out only
- because the rest of the story draws us in so thoroughly. A
- strong story and first rate performances lift this episode
- above the ordinary. I award it five sunflower seeds out of
- five.
- Now excuse me while I go check the doors and alarms
- again...
-