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- Shapes
-
- by Sarah Stegall
-
- copyright 1994 Sarah Stegall
-
- munchkyn@netcom.com
-
- We needed this. After the intensity of "Duane Barry" and
- "Ascension", kicking back with a rerun is not such a bad idea,
- even if it was prompted by Gillian Anderson's maternity leave
- rather than any aesthetic considerations. As "X-Files" go, this
- one is not too bad. Once we get past the absurb premise of
- lycanthropy it is an enjoyable, weird trip with the Spooky
- Patrol.
- It was particularly nice to see a fully functioning Dana
- Scully again. Recently her role has been severely limited, and
- to return to her more active days was refreshing. Gillian
- Anderson has a wonderful way of conveying what I can only call
- detached compassion. During the interview with young Miller in
- the hospital room, where she tells him of his father's death,
- Scully's empathy and professional concern are equally well
- brought forth. Anderson strikes just the right balance between a
- warm and caring woman, and a hard-edged professional
- interrogator. I can't wait for Anderson to return full-time to
- "The X-Files".
- Mulder didn't have much to do beyond being politically
- correct in the first half of this episode. Although he found
- most of the clues (the discarded skin, the odd incisors, the
- tracks), he was strangely passionless about the whole matter.
- Scully showed more emotion than Mulder when Sheriff Tskany
- (Michael Horse) refused permission for an autopsy.
- I was glad to see Michael Horse again. He managed to convey
- stoicism, pride, and stubbornness all within a few minutes in the
- first scene in his office rather well. I was also glad to see
- that the writers managed to work in the FBI incident at Wounded
- Knee: frankly, I was surprised that Mulder and Scully didn't
- meet with more open hostility than they did on the reservation,
- given the lingering anger in the First Nations over that
- situation. Gwen Goodensnake was well presented as a possible
- candidate for lycanthropy: I applaud the skilful handling of
- this red herring.
- The locale added a great deal to the episode. I am
- gratified Ten Thirteen Productions got a chance to make the most
- out of the spectacular scenery of British Columbia. The fog, the
- overcast, the dark forest, the loneliness of the rural highways
- added a creepy sense of isolation and otherworldliness to the
- story. The lighting in the scene during Scully and Mulder's
- confrontation with the werewolf were excellent--light and shadow
- combined to send chills up and down my spine.
- The negatives in this story are largely conceptual: the
- idea that a human can turn into an animal with so different a
- physical structure as a wolf is absurd. While the ground has
- been somewhat prepared for us with "An American Werewolf in
- London" and "Wolf", it is still a very difficult concept to get
- around.
- Altogether, I will give this one three unshelled sunflower
- seeds out of five.
-