The X-Files 11.02: This
Glen Morgan
Glen Morgan
With so much mythology covered in the premiere,
it’s time for the new season of The
X-Files to put its best foot forward.
Meaning, of course, any kind of episode that involves someone other than
Chris Carter. Glen Morgan comes onto the
stage to deliver what feels like a much better representation of what a modern X-Files episode can offer than, say,
retroactively stating that Scully was medically raped. Again.
If these new seasons are essentially all about
delivering a mixture of nostalgia and aligning with modern sensibilities in the
same instant, then this episode works to achieve that goal rather well. Putting Mulder and Scully on the run after
the events of the premiere is a solid choice, as it is a lot more believable
than trying to shoehorn them back into the familiar confines of the basement
office. Having the mystery center around
Langley is the nostalgic icing on the cake.
Perhaps it is just the difference between the
global state of play since the tenth season; things seem a lot more unstable
and anxiety-inducing in the world now. And
so having Mulder and Scully in a more tenuous situation seems appropriate, even
as the episode makes the statement that the pair are more than capable of
handling themselves and threats with characteristic banter.
The return of Langley is an interesting turn of
events, to say the least. He’s not back
from the dead in the conventional sense; instead, his consciousness was copied
and uploaded into a private server.
Setting aside the lost opportunity for a bit of a callback to “Kill
Switch”, one of the more interesting standalone episodes of the original run,
this is a nice way to tie current concerns about the advancement of technology
into the current material. The current
Syndicate, or at least the faction working against Cancer Man, is using a
virtual “think tank”, and Langley is staging a bit of a revolt.
It’s not so much that this is something bold or
new in an era when this sort of story concept shows up on dystopian shows all
the time (I’m looking at you, Black
Mirror). It’s that it places one of
the better supporting characters from the original run in a context that would
absolutely disgust and horrify him.
Langley, along with any of the Lone Gunmen, would never want to have his
mind slaved to the demands of the kinds of evil conspirators they endlessly
fought to undermine.
Morgan has a solid history of delivering
episodes with standalone plots that factor into the larger mythological scheme,
and this is another example of that deftness.
It’s proof, to an extent, that the concepts of the mythology don’t have
to be nearly so overwrought and poorly conceived as the Carter-driven
entries. Handing over the reins to
someone with experience with the franchise but a less clunky delivery would be
ideal.
More importantly, these are the kinds of
episodes that fans would happily see populate an entire revival season. The mythology didn’t really need to come back
once Colonization was avoided. A single
episode to set the stage that the remnants of the Syndicate were constantly
trying to take control of government and corporate power would have been more
than enough to frame dozens of entries of this caliber. It’s sad that Carter couldn’t set aside his
ego enough to let that happen.
- The old Mulder and Scully banter is back in full force
- This episode plays on current fears and anxieties very well
- It feels like there was a missed opportunity to reference “Kill Switch” from the original run