Whenever
someone I know learns I’m watching The X Files, that someone
mentions I should stop watching well before the end of the series. Whenever I
peruse the Internet for reviews of specific episodes, the reviewer wrote a
paragraph or two about the decline of the series. The AV Club reviewed the
entire series a couple years ago. Both reviewers shared stories of when their
interest in the series waned. After “Triangle,” one of the two reviewers wrote,
“Rough stuff is ahead.” I enjoyed season six. I began season seven with
trepidation, because the echoes of how bad the series goes resounded in my
head. I’ve watched episodes guardedly, prepared for No Ordinary Family level of
dreck at any one episode. After I watched “Rush,” the strangely Buffy Season 1
esque supernatural metaphor for puberty, I decided to quit watching episodes
with preconceived notions about how bad it’d get, because that’s no way to
watch television. I’m a completionist, but I won’t watch TV shows to completion
if I’m forcing it. I let go, as it were, for “The Goldberg Variation” and the
following episodes.
I
don’t want to dig into why people hate the final seasons of the series with the
vitriol LOST fans hate season six and the series finale. Not yet. I’ll figure
it on my own, I think. I’m an adept watcher of television. (I know that’s not
anything to brag about.) I even know and understand the broad reasons people
lost interest and felt angry. The myth-arc devolved into gibberish. I thought
Chris Carter and the writers hit the peak of the myth-arc between seasons three
and four. Serialized stories risk disappointing the majority the fanbase. Fans
want answers to their questions. Perhaps their demand for answers becomes
intense because fiction can provide answers that life cannot. Some artists
don’t think answering questions is the artist’s job, but that’s beside the
point. Critics of True Detective point to Pizzolatto’s comments after season 1
concluded about the case not mattering as much as how the case mattered to the
characters as a detriment. “Well, if the case doesn’t have more juice, it
doesn’t matter how it affects the characters.” That’s nonsense. I can only
speculate about what angered X Files fans. I’d guess the series ran too long.
Anyway,
I watched the two-parter “Seid und Zeit” and “Closure.” A small part of me
dreaded another 88 minutes of myth-arc story, but my new approach to watching
the series helped me enter the experience openly. After the 88 minute story,
which moved me more than I ever thought, I read The AV Club review of
“Closure.” I learned about the episode’s divisiveness. I skimmed it to avoid
learning that Carter backtracked on the fate of Samantha in seasons eight or
nine, and then I thought about the maligned final seasons of the series again.
The essence of “Closure” captures what best works in genre television,
especially in genre shows that have a huge mythology and a variety of
possibilities for what happened to different characters. Joss Whedon best
utilized the monstrous metaphors for human things. Mulder’s search for his
sister has been a convoluted journey. He found her clones, he learned about his
parents’ duplicitous involvement in her disappearance, he learned about
Cigarette Smoking Man’s involvement, he learned that The Syndicate offered
their children to the aliens that wanted to colonize the planet, and his search
for her motivated his story. What’s the most simple way to tell someone what
The X Files is? It’s Mulder’s search for his missing sister.
The
fourth and final act of The X Files almost leaves the fate of Samantha open,
but Pillar’s little boy takes Mulder to the happy field where the children went
after something terrible happened to them. Mulder sees her, forever fourteen
and dead, and embraces her. “Closure” is gloomy and solemn, tinged by a
bittersweet, though terribly sad, finality. She died because older men took her
away to advance their plans. The most remarkable scene in the episode happens
between Mulder and Scully when Mulder reads aloud from his sister’s journal,
which he found at Cigarette Smoking Man’s house, about the tests done to her,
about her faint memories of a brown-haired brother she’d like to hug, about her
plans to run away, and, later, he learns about the self-inflicted scars on her arms
and legs, all of which coalesces for Mulder into the sad and simple truth,
which he sought from 1989 onwards, that his sister died. Mulder passes the
search onto Pillar at the end when he tells him he saw his son. Pillar refused
to believe and vowed to search until he found him. Cigarette Smoking Man’s line
about hope underscores the fundamental divide between him and Mulder. He didn’t
speak a word about the death of Samantha, because he thought Mulder needed
hope. Mulder only wanted the truth.
Fans
seem to either hate “Closure” or love “Closure.” The episode possibly hits a
lot of things the writers did ‘wrong’ if such a thing is possible in creative
writing in the fans’ perspective. I don’t know what’s next in season seven. The
X Files’ writers didn’t build to exciting finales. The episode before a finale
could be Mulder’s investigations of a bug creature in a call center followed by
a heavy mytholgoy episode. Seasons were dotted with a lot of stand-alone
stories; those episodes were separated by myth-arc business at the beginning of
the season and at winter and spring sweeps.
So,
no, I won’t stop watching the series. Season seven’s not different from
previous seasons. The episodes range from great to very bad. I might check back
in a few weeks when the cast changes and write a sentence that agrees with
those who warned me to stop watching. Right now I don’t want to miss the
unexpected delightful episodes, or an episode like “Field Trip” that’ll leave
me entranced for 45 minutes, or something as gloomy, solemn, and sort of
beautiful as “Closure.”
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