- Season 4 [1996-1997] -
4X01: Herrenvolk
-
Village of the Damned
(John Carpenter, 1995)
This John Carpenter movie is a remake of the 1960 movie with the same
title by Wolf Rilla, itself an adaptation of the 1957 novel “The
Midwich Cuckoos” by John Wyndham. It portrays a number of children of
mysterious origin who behave coldly, professionally, have white hair
and pale eyes, and so appear all very similar to one another, and who
exhibit psychic abilities such as a telepathic bond with each other and
mind control. The eerie behaviour of these children is similar to how
the young boy clones (also blond and blue-eyed) and young Samantha
clones behave in this episode.
-
Candyman (Bernard
Rose, 1992)
-
Candyman: Farewell to
the Flesh (Bill Condon, 1995)
These horror films speak about the legend of the Candyman (and his
comeback when he is summoned), a killer beyond the grave. The origins
of the Candyman were that of a 19th-century artist and son of a black
slave who was beaten up, mutilated, and covered with honey, after which
bees stung him to death. In his modern day apparitions, the Candyman
(Tony Todd, who appeared in the X-Files in
2X04: Sleepless) is accompanied by
a swarm of bees. The manner of his death, involving bees, is referenced
in the first film and shown in the sequel; the music is by master
Philip Glass. It is rather similar to the way the Alien Bounty Hunter
is stung in this episode; he is ultimately not killed, merely stalled,
and he reappears to continue on his lethal task covered with bee
stings. Other killings by bee stings occur in
4X21: Zero Sum.
4X02: Home
There are several possible inspirations for the Peacock brothers: the
"travelling band of friends' car breaks down and they are attacked by a
crazy band of savages" trope is frequent in horror movies.
-
The Texas Chainsaw
Massacre
(Tobe Hooper, 1974)
A group of friends travels to a homestead where they are attacked by a
group of cannibals, a family of inbreds -- notably by Leatherface, who
wears a mask made of human skin.
-
The Hills Have Eyes
(Wes Craven, 1977)
A family on a road trip is hunted by a family of deformed cannibals,
who live in the wilderness.
4X06: Sanguinarium
-
Les Yeux Sans Visage
(Georges Franju, 1960)
The story of the episode is quite similar to that of the film, where a
surgeon kidnaps young women in order to graft their faces on the face
of his daughter, who has been disfigured in a car accident. In the
episode, the plastic surgeon does that operation on his own face,
substituting his old face with a new one.
-
The Craft
(Andrew Fleming, 1996)
Levitation is a phenomenon often associated with magic and witchcraft.
It was feautred in "The Craft", which came less than a year before
Sanguinarium was made. It deals
with four teenager girls that are a bit outsiders and practice
witchcraft to curse people who anger them (a bit like
3X13: Syzygy, however "The Craft"
came out after that episode).
4X07: Musings of a Cigarette-Smoking Man
-
Apocalypse Now
(Francis Ford Coppola, 1979)
The scene where the young CSM is assigned the murder of president
Kennedy is directly inspired by a similar scene in the beginning of
“Apocalypse Now”, where the protagonist (Martin Sheen) is assigned the
mission to kill Colonel Kurtz (Marlon Brando). The office setting, some
of the
camera angles, the presence of two officers who alternate
dialogue and others who remain silent, the wording even of the
conversation especially when the assignment is given are all very
similar.
-
JFK
(Oliver Stone, 1991)
The Kennedy murder scene is of course based on the real thing. The
over-saturated photography and slightly blurry image are done so
purposefully to reflect archival images from that era (early colour
videos, 1963) and to mimic in colors the famous
Zapruder footage,
a
video
of
the shooting captured by one of the citizens present that day
(one Abraham Zapruder). Since “JFK” is a proven influence on the
X-Files (see
1X01: Deep Throat,
1X16: E.B.E.), it is possible that the look of how “JFK” also
re-created these events was an influence on the making of this episode.
“JFK” also mimicked the Zapruder film color palette and in some
sequences mimicked the jagged movement of the footage due to it being
18 frames per second (as opposed to 24 frames per second for “normal”
film).
-
Forrest Gump
(Robert Zemeckis, 1994)
Close to the end of the episode, the CSM sits on a bench and reflects
on life while a homeless guy nonchalantly rummages through the trash
for food. The bench setting and philosophizing on life’s meaning is
directly taken from “Forrest Gump”. CSM’s line:
“Life...
is
like
a
box
of
chocolates. A cheap, thoughtless, perfunctory gift
that nobody ever asks for. Unreturnable, because all you get back is
another box of chocolates. You're stuck with this undefinable
whipped-mint crap that you mindlessly wolf down when there's nothing
else left to eat. Sure, once in a while, there's a peanut butter cup,
or an English toffee. But they're gone too fast, the taste is fleeting.
So you end up with nothing but broken bits, filled with hardened jelly
and teeth-crunching nuts, and if you're desperate enough to eat those,
all you've got left is a... is an empty box... filled with useless,
brown paper wrappers.”
is a dark ironic twist on the famous line in that film, where Forrest
Gump (Tom Hanks) says:
“My
momma always said, ‘Life was like a box of chocolates. You never know
what you're gonna get.’”
offering chocolates to those who sit on the bench with him. The
chocolates in the episode are found in the trash by the bum, and the
CSM ignores them.
4X08: Paper Hearts
-
A Nightmare on Elm
Street (Wes Craven, 1984)
In the film, the now famous Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund, an X-phile)
is a serial killer who stalks and kills his victims by invades their
nightmares. In the episode, John Lee Roche (Tom Noonan) does not quite
manage to kill through nightmares but he does seem to be able to
control other people’s dreams. The tone of the film, slasher horror, is
also different from the episode. Freddy Krueger was referenced in
another episode that deals with fear and dreams,
7X12: X-Cops.
4X09: Tunguska
-
Outbreak
(Wolfgang Petersen, 1995)
More of a case of budget optimization than a cinema reference, the
Level 4 hazmat suits that Scully, Pendrell and Dr Sack use in this
episode and the next are the same suits featured in “Outbreak”, used by
Dustin Hoffman, Rene Russo and Cuba Gooding Jr. Released in March 1995,
i.e. about a year and a half before Tunguska was shot, “Outbreak” used
suits designed by Erica Phillips from Global Effects Inc.; the X-Files
crew must have re-used them to minimize expenses. The film itself has a
very X-Files-like story: the military and civilian response to the
outbreak of a highly contagious and deadly virus (the fictional virus
Motaba), featuring USAMRIID and CDC doctors as protagonists.
4X11: El Mundo Gira
-
Close Encounters of
the Third Kind
(Steven Spielberg, 1977)
Another potential reference to this film regarding the photography
used, with dark alien silhouettes against a glaring white background.
4X17: Tempus Fugit
-
Close Encounters of
the Third Kind
(Steven Spielberg, 1977)
Like in 1X03: Conduit, the motel abduction scene is potentially
inspired by the abduction scene in "Close Encounters": an abductee
inside a room, bright blinding lights from the outside, humming noise,
door opened by telekinesis, horrified or mesmerized faces saturated in
white light.
4X21: Zero Sum
-
The Birds
(Alfred Hitchcock, 1963)
The scene where bees attack a playground and children flee in panic,
resulting in the death of a teacher, is a direct reference to
Hitchcock’s well-known film. In “The Birds”, a bird attack in a school
has a similar slow build-up until children and teachers run in panic.
Like in the episode, a child loses her/his glasses, which get stepped
on and broken in the stampede.