Genre: Thriller/Mystery/Sci-Fi
Director: Chris Carter
Cast: David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson, Xzibit,
Amanda Peet, Billy Connolly, Callum Keith Rennie, Adam Godley
RunTime: 1 hr 44 mins
Released By: 20th Century Fox
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.xfiles.com/
Opening Day: 24 July 2008
Synopsis:
The supernatural thriller is a stand-alone story in the tradition
of some of the show's most acclaimed and beloved episodes,
and takes the always-complicated relationship between Fox
Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson)
in unexpected directions. Mulder continues his unshakable
quest for the truth, and Scully, the passionate, ferociously
intelligent physician, remains inextricably tied to Mulder's
pursuits.
Movie Review:
It has been 6 years since we last saw Fox Mulder and Dana
Scully in the final season
of the X-Files TV series. For many loyal fans of the series,
myself included, the
final season was considered to be a bittersweet finale for
a TV show that has
fascinated many self-proclaimed X-Philes (the same way Star
Trek fans call
themselves Trekkies) around the world. Imagine the euphoria
I felt when news broke
out that a new X-Files movie will be shown 10 years since
its previous outing on the
silver screen. The truth is out there once again, more or
less.
"The
X-Files: I Want to Believe" brings us to Mulder (David
Duchovny) the believer and Scully (Gillian Anderson) the skeptic
some time after they have quit the Federal Bureau of Investigations
(FBI). Scully is now a medical doctor working in a Catholic
hospital while Mulder keeps himself busy isolating himself
from the outside world and looking like Santa Claus. Things
start to revert back to (para)normal when an FBI agent has
gone missing with the only help the FBI can rely on being
a psychic priest, Father Joseph Crissman (Billy Connolly).
Through Scully, FBI agent Mosley Drummy (rapper-turned-actor
Alvin ‘Xzibit’ Joiner) tries to enlist Mulder
to assist with the investigation, having known of his previous
work with The X-Files which are FBI cases involving the paranormal
and the supernatural. Mulder agrees, urging Scully to join
alongside him in the process. Soon, they discover that the
missing FBI agent is just the start of more baffling events
to come.
In order to cater this second X-Files film to a wider audience
who are not< well-versed in the TV show, writer-director Chris
Carter has opted to forgo the main plot surrounding alien
conspiracy and feature a standalone thriller-mystery story
instead. This has proved to be both the film’s strength
and weakness over the previous X-Files film. While it is indeed
a relief to be away from little green men, flying saucers,
abductions and the works, the supposedly thrilling feature
we should be seeing is a mere extended version of a mediocre
episode of the TV series. That’s not to say it is a
bad film, just that it should have been a great film, considering
the years that have gone by since the end of the TV series.
First
of all, the supernatural element which is part of what made
"The X-Files" so captivating is not really that
much of a shocker at all. Without giving too much away, aside
from the psychic ability of Father Crissman, the film offers
only a medical breakthrough that gives new meaning to the
term 'new lease of life'. Compared to the more bizarre cases
Mulder and Scully have encountered in the past, this seems
more like an FBI trainee's assignment. Then, there is the
slow pace which results in my earlier comment of the film
being an extended TV show episode, providing non-fans with
some challenge to remain interested.
What
"I Want to Believe" has going for it is the nostalgia
factor. To see Mulder and Scully in action again, as well
as a cameo appearance of their ex-superior Walter Skinner
(Mitch Pileggi), is not unlike being reunited with old friends,
although the intimacy between Mulder and Scully may turn off
some fans who are against the idea of the two leads having
a romantic relationship. Too bad the Lone Gunmen can’t
be here to provide more comic relief other than the scene
with photos of US president George W. Bush and FBI founder
J. Edgar Hoover. The film also includes an interesting debate
on faith in God as highlighted in the subplot of Scully having
a dilemma over the experimental treatment of a terminally
ill boy. It adds some degree of humanity amid the eerie setting
resulting from the main plot of the missing agent.
It
really is a pity that this is the best that X-Files creator
Chris Carter can come
up with, considering that this is a golden opportunity to
resurrect the franchise
and win over new fans. There is still a possibility for another
sequel though, but
it will take more than just nostalgia to bring The X-Files
to its glory days once
again.
Movie Rating:
(Fans wanting to continue believing in the X-Files may find
it hard to do so since this latest installment has brought
the mythology down to mediocrity of earthly level rather than
the far reaches of outer space)
Review by Tan Heng Hau
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