The X-Files: I Want to Believe: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Continuity Nod]]: Several little ones.
* [[Continuity Nod]]: Several little ones.
* [[Did Not Do the Research]]: Scully immediately jumps to the conclusion that the women have been kidnapped for their organs after Mulder tells her both victims had [[AB Negative|AB-]] blood.
* [[Did Not Do the Research]]: Scully immediately jumps to the conclusion that the women have been kidnapped for their organs after Mulder tells her both victims had [[AB Negative|AB-]] blood.
* [[Distressed Dude]]: Scully had the [[Distress Ball]] in the first movie, so it's Mulder's turn now.
* [[Dude in Distress]]: Scully had the [[Distress Ball]] in the first movie, so it's Mulder's turn now.
* [[Foiler Footage]]: During production, several fake screenshots of the movie were released (including a picture of a werewolf) to throw people off.
* [[Foiler Footage]]: During production, several fake screenshots of the movie were released (including a picture of a werewolf) to throw people off.
* [[Franchise Killer]]: Suspected of being one, although after a ten year gap could be considered more of a failed attempt at resurrection.
* [[Franchise Killer]]: Suspected of being one, although after a ten year gap could be considered more of a failed attempt at resurrection.

Revision as of 06:20, 11 August 2014

The X-Files: I Want to Believe is the second feature film based on The X-Files, released in 2008 (a full ten years after the first).

It features series protagonists Fox Mulder and Dana Scully long after they abandoned the FBI and the X-Files; Scully is a doctor at a Catholic hospital concerned about the treatment options offered to a dying boy, and Mulder, still on the lam, lives as a hermit under Scully's protection, doing little more than collecting paper clippings. They are offered a chance at redemption, however, when the FBI requests their help in finding an old comrade, who has herself gone missing while investigating a series of mysterious disappearances. They are aided by an ex-priest and convicted pedophile named Father Joe, who claims to receive psychic visions of the victims directly from God, and about whom the agents have conflicting feelings.

The film is a stand-alone work in the tradition of the show's Monster of the Week episodes, and does not revisit the series' famous -- and still unresolved -- Myth Arc. At the box office, it was met with a thundering "meh" and received generally mediocre scores from film critics. Franchise creator Chris Carter had stated his intent to wrap up all dangling plotlines in a third film (to coincide with the supposed end of the world in 2012), but since I Want to Believe went out with a whimper, the series' future is uncertain.


This film contains examples of:

  • Aborted Arc: Scully and Mulder both appear to be completely unconcerned about the supposedly inevitable extraterrestrial colonization of Earth coming in four years. It's not even mentioned.
  • Beard of Sorrow: Mulder's grown one.
  • Blatant Lies:

Skinner: It's Mulder. He wouldn't do anything crazy.

Scully: I'm done chasing monsters in the dark.

  • Relationship Reveal: Mulder and Scully. (It was strongly implied that they'd gotten together in the last few years of the show, but it took until this movie for the writers to finally stop trying to be coy about it.)
  • Second Act Breakup: It does seem to be fixed by the end, though.
  • Surgeons Can Do Autopsies If They Want: Scully, a forensic pathologist during the show, is now working in the field of pediatric neurosurgery. Although enough time has passed that she might have returned to school or something, it's not explained or even alluded to.
  • Tears of Blood: Happens to Father Joe during his psychic visions.
  • Violently Protective Girlfriend: Scully knocks a man unconscious with a piece of firewood to stop him from killing Mulder.