- Season 3 [1995-1996] -
3X01: The Blessing Way
-
The Godfather
(Francis Ford Coppola, 1972)
The Syndicate is introduced in this episode, a group of elderly
well-dressed men meeting in a darkly lit room in New York. Just like
the heads of the Five Families in the first "Godfather". The
"Godfather" films have been mentioned by Chris Carter and Frank
Spotnitz as a significant narrative and cinematographical influence
(and for who aren't they?).
-
The Boys from Brazil
(Franklin J. Schaffner, 1978)
The Syndicate also brings to mind the team of Nazis that is responsible
for the experiments and the executions in this film (film mentioned
also in
1X10: Eve, 1X15: Young at
Heart, ...). Interestingly enough, one of the Nazis here is
Walter Gottel, the actor who played Nazi doctor Victor Klemper in the
next episode
3X02: Paper Clip.
-
Three Days of the
Condor (Sydney Pollack, 1975)
One of the great conspiracy thrillers of the 1970s, with “All the
President’s Men” it was certainly a big influence on Carter’s
upbringing and political maturity and on the X-Files theme and tone
specifically. The film deals with a CIA analyst who in his work
discovers a plot involving his own organization; intrigue, betrayals
and suspicion ensues.
More precisely, at one point the protagonist code-named “Condor”
(Robert Redford) is warned by a hired assassin (Max Von Sydow) that he
would better move because he risks being assassinated. The warning,
coming from an aged apparently respectful man, is worded similarly to
the warning the Well-Manicured Man (John Neville) gives to Scully in
the episode.
In the film: “
It will happen this
way. You may be walking. Maybe the first sunny day of the spring. And a
car will slow beside you, and a door will open, and someone you know,
maybe even trust, will get out of the car. And he will smile, a
becoming smile. But he will leave open the door of the car and offer to
give you a lift.”
In the episode: “
They'll kill you one
of two ways. They'll send someone, possibly two men. They'll kill you
in your home or in the garage with an unregistered weapon which will be
left at the scene. Using false documents supplied by associates of
mine, they'll be out of the country in less than two hours. [...] He or
she will be someone close to you. Someone you trust. They'll arrange a
meeting or come to your house unexpectedly.”
Additionally, the way Joubert describes the assassination in the film
is the exact same way that Scully ends up suspecting will happen to her
when at the end of the episode Skinner pulls over in front of her
house, opens the door and invites her to get on.
-
Quatermass II
(Nigel Kneale, 1955)
The “Quatermass II” BBC mini-series tells of an alien invasion (via
small meteorites) that turns humans into aliens, without changing their
appearance; the aliens then infiltrate the British Government, extend
their influence to the Army, establish a plan of using industrial
installations to grow their food and change the Earth’s atmosphere, and
try to silence anyone opposing their plans. The Syndicate’s ties with
Earth governments and its deal to “create the future” with an alien
race was possibly inspired by “Quatermass” -- the main difference being
that the Syndicate’s members were always human. It was re-made by
Hammer Films (in color) a few years later. See
1X08: Space, 7X03: The Sixth Extinction
and
8X08: Per Manum for more
“Quatermass” influences. “Quatermass” creator Nigel Kneale was asked to
contribute to the X-Files in the 1990s but, as he also did with “Dr
Who”, he declined.
3X02: Paper Clip
With the “Anasazi” three-parter, David Duchovny described the direction
the mythology was taking, story-wise, as a mix of “Sophie’s Choice” and
“Star Wars”.
-
Sophie’s Choice
(Alan J. Pakula, 1982)
Based on William Styron’s 1979 novel, this film presents survivors of
Nazi concentration camps. It is revealed that one character, Sophie,
had to make a choice between two unbearable options upon entering the
concentration camp: choosing life or death for either of her two
children. The term “Sophie’s choice” has now become a commonly used
expression. This relates perfectly in the choice that it is revealed
that Mulder’s mother had to make: choosing who would be abducted
between her two children, Samantha or Fox.
-
Star Wars Episode V:
The Empire Strikes Back (Irvin Kershner, 1980)
In this trilogy, the X-Files move progressively away from a pure
investigative show to a show that mixes elements of the protagonists’
lives in the fabric of the storytelling: scenes with their families,
drama between protagonists and antagonists, personal alliances and
betrayals, tensions and innuendos between family members. All these are
part of a storytelling that belong more to the drama or soap opera
genre, that the X-Files meticulously avoided in its first years in the
way Mulder and Scully’s personal lives was limited to a strict minimum
in order to focus on the case only. This dramatic storytelling would
reinforce and become more important in the mythology, notably with
3X24: Talitha Cumi, culminating
with the familial dynamics of Jeffrey/Mulder/CSM in season 5.
Duchovny’s comment must refer to the character drama in “The Empire
Strikes Back” rather than to the straightforward adventure of “Episode
IV: A New Hope”. The antagonist, Darth Vader, is revealed to be the
father of the hero, putting the hero’s family in a central place in the
story’s universe, similar to how Mulder’s father is revealed to be a
central piece of the Syndicate mythos. Unresolved sexual tension
between Han Solo and Leia and between Luke and Leia (revealed to be
incestuous) make part of the drama, similar to the growing tension
between Mulder and Scully.
-
Close Encounters of
the Third Kind (Steven Spielberg, 1977)
The cinematography used when Mulder witnesses the UFO emerging from
behind the building and passing overhead is reminiscent, again, of
“Close Encounters”: the darkness at first, the blinding emergence of
the ship’s lights, the light/dark contrasts, the overexposure. Producer
Paul Rabwin
describes his thinking behind realizing the special effects for the
episode in the making of featurette in the "Threads of Mythology" DVDs:
"
The first time you ever really saw a
spaceship on the show, how do you do it? Do you want to do it in your
face or do you want to be a little more coy about it? And this dark
mass starts appearing behind the building and Mulder looks up and sees
this dark mass, and suddenly the brightness of it is so overwhelming
that you can't distinguish it that way - it's like, it was so dark you
can't see it, and then suddenly it's so bright that you can't see it.
And I thought that was absolutely brilliant, it was really the first
time our mythology started to take on that kind of a science-fiction
feel."
3X05: The List
-
Shocker
(Wes Craven, 1989)
Movie and episode share the plot of a serial killer who is executed on
the electric chair and returns after death to carry out his vengeance.
In the movie, he returns in the form of electricity or via
electric-powered devices, unlike the apparition-themed episode. Funny
trivia: the killer in the movie is portrayed by none other than Mitch
Pileggi (Skinner).
3X09: Nisei
-
D.A.R.Y.L.
(Simon Wincer, 1985)
The point-of-view angles, the medical equipment and the doctors in the
examination scenes are very similar.
3X13: Syzygy
-
Robocop
(Paul Verhoeven, 1987)
In "Robocop", a film that's supposed to be entertainment and soothe the
public is on every screen, all the time, its frantic laughs becoming a
kind of background noise. In the episode, as part of the paranormal
events that occur, the same film with a frantic comedy music keeps
playing on every channel. Both in film and episode, the comedic films
play as all hell breaks loose in the city.
The black-and-white clip that plays in Syzygy is from
Keystone Cops
(1912-1917), a series of short silent films featuring incompetent
policemen in wild chases.
3X14: Grotesque
-
House of Wax
(André De Toth, 1953)
In the episode, the killer and apprentice artist hides the bodies of
his victims in his statues, hidden by a layer of clay. This is similar
to the horror film "House of Wax", where it is revealed that an artist
whose wax sculptures are appreciated as life-like actually uses dead
bodies to create his figures. The movie was one of the first to be shot
in 3D, which was hilghly popular in the 1950s-early 1960s.
3X17: Pusher
-
The Deer Hunter
(Michael Cimino, 1978)
The episode culminates in a Russian roulette between Mulder and Modell
(Robert Wisden). Perhaps cinema’s most famous Russian roulette scenes
are found in “The Deer Hunter”, which deals with the psychological
trauma of two Vitenam War vets (Christopher Walken, Robert De Niro).
When they were prisoners of war, the soldiers were forced to play
Russian roulette with each other; this will mark them for life, leading
one of them to a suicidal fascination of roulette after the war.
3X18: Teso dos Bichos
-
The Mummy
(Terence Fischer, 1959)
The episode is an X-Files take on the myth of the curse that strikes
people that desecrate graves, in particular archeologists that
desecrate ancestral burial grounds and do not respect the local culture
that still considers these relics as holy, unleashing on them a revenge
spell or curse as soon as they break open the tomb or vial in question.
A well-known film version of this trope is Hammer Films' "The Mummy",
which spawned several remakes.
3X20: José Chung's From Outer Space
Lots of homages in this episode that is parodic of many science fiction
/ UFO tropes.
-
20 Million Miles to
Earth
(Nathan Juran, 1957)
In the episode, the “inner Earth alien” Lord Kinbote was realized with
stop-motion special effects, as opposed to “rubber suits” effects (like
the white aliens) or more modern computer-generated (CGI) effects. The
jagged, phony movements of Lord Kinbote are voluntary: this is a
reference to old science fiction/fantasy films using the stop motion
technique, which was one of the main special effects techniques from
the birth of cinema to around the 1980s when CGI started replacing it.
Stop-motion was made famous by special effects wizard Ray Harryhausen;
several films were made as pure showcases of his monster and creature
models. One typical example is the monster in “20 Million Miles to
Earth”, but there are several: “The 7th Voyage of Sinbad” (1958),
“Mysterious Island” (1961), “Jason and the Argonauts” (1963), “Clash of
the Titans” (1981)... (see also
7X19:
Hollywood
A.D.).
-
Star Wars Episode
Episode IV: A New Hope
(George Lucas, 1977)
The opening shot of the episode is a reference to the opening shot of
the first “Star Wars”: a low angle shot of a spaceship entering the
frame from above, slowly gliding forward, the shot making evident the
important size of the craft. The exact same setup is used in the
episode, complete with what appears to be a triangular form of the
craft, until it is revealed that this is not a craft at all but the
below side of an electric crane lift.
-
Close Encounters of
the Third Kind
(Steven Spielberg, 1977)
The military pilot Mulder collects from the street is seen toying with
his mashed potatoes in the diner: he forms a mound that he shapes with
his fork. This is lifted from “Close Encounters”, where the main
character is obsessed with a UFO encounter he’s had and has images of a
shape of a mountain in his head; in a family dinner, he shapes his
mashed potatoes like a mountain. The mountain turns out to be Devils
Tower, with its characteristic shape, where the climactic close
encounter occurs.
-
Twin Peaks
(David Lynch & Mark Frost, 1990-1991)
Mulder repeatedly enters the diner and orders a cherry pie. The setting
(diner) and the pie (cherry) is the same as in “Twin Peaks”, where
characters are repeatedly seen to eat coffee (black) with a slice of
cherry pie.
3X24: Talitha Cumi
-
The Brothers Karamazov
(Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 1880)
One of David Duchovny’s contributions in the Talitha Cumi script were
explicit references to the long novel by Dostoyevsky, and more
precisely to its best-known chapter in one of its twelve books (!):
“The Grand Inquisitor”. It is a story-within-a-story of a debate
between an Inquisitor of the Spanish Inquisition and an imprisoned
Jesus on the question of free will that was given to Man; the
Inquisitor considers it as a burden; Jesus is forgiving to the
Inquisitor and the Inquisitor lets him leave the prison. The
similarities with the two prison scenes between the Cigarette-Smoking
Man/Inquisitor and Jeremiah Smith/Jesus are great, both in theme (free
will, dominion of certain men over others, the value of religion and
science in people’s lives), vocabulary (several old English terms are
used, harkening back to the Bible) and tone.
Throughout the episode, the religious undertones surrounding Jeremiah
are many: the healing hand, his well-meaning demeanor, his wording, his
rebellion against oppressive forces, his Christian name and initials
even (“JS” is often found in hero’s names, and could refer to
“Jehovah-sammah”, i.e. “The Lord is here”, from Ezekiel 48:35).
The title of the episode itself, Talitha Cumi, is mentioned in the
novel. It means “daughter, arise” in Aramaic, a phrase uttered by Jesus
in a miracle when raising a girl from the dead (Mark 5:14); Jesus in
the novel performs a similar miracle.
-
The Invaders
(Larry Cohen, 1967-1968)
The most obvious reference to the series is of course Roy Thinnes (the
show’s only protagonist) guest starring in the episode. However, it’s
also interesting that this occurs in the same episode when the
mythology of the X-Files turns towards the colonization by aliens (not
counting
2X16: Colony, which
was really about a group of hybrids and could hardly be put on the same
level as the Project introduced here), the same driving theme behind
“The Invaders”.
-
V (Kenneth
Johnson, 1983) and
V:
The Final Battle (Richard T. Heffron, 1984)
In
Talitha Cumi, the
colonization theme for the mythology of the X-Files becomes evident.
Alien colonization of Earth is a science fiction trope, however one of
the hallmark uses of this theme immediately preceding the X-Files was
“V”, the 1983 two-part mini-series, which was followed by a three-part
mini-series wrapping up the story in 1984 and a full 19-episode TV
series in 1984-1985. “V” features an alien invasion of Earth that at
the beginning passes as a friendly cooperation initiative, but it is
later revealed that the aliens’ real face is hidden behind a human-like
mask (reminiscent of the shapeshifting Bounty Hunter here or the Rebels
in
6X11: Two Fathers) and
that the real plan is the extermination of the human species. Several
parallels and references are made to real historical events mainly
surrounding the Second World War, like in the X-Files: the Vichy
government, collaborationists, an underground resistance, a Fifth
Column, racial discrimination and extermination, racial purity...
-
The Silence of the
Lambs
(Jonathan Demme, 1991)
The way Jeremiah Smith (Roy Thinnes) is tied up and carried to his cell
is similar to the scene where Hannibal Lecter (Anthony Hopkins) is
displayed in this movie, a recurring inspiration for the X-Files.