Review: The X-Files: I Want to Believe - Jeffrey's Take
Filed under: Sci-Fi & Fantasy, New Releases, Theatrical Reviews, 20th Century Fox

Six years have passed since "The X-Files" went off the air after nine seasons; fans agree that it left with a whimper rather than a bang, and ten years have passed since the first and only feature film. So the question of the day is: why a sequel? Why now? But perhaps a better question is "why not?" The fact is that FBI special agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) always had vats of chemistry; they arguably outstripped and outranked any other male-female couple in the history of television. Their pairing was perfect: Mulder believed -- or wanted to believe -- in the supernatural while Scully was a scientist, a doctor and a Catholic who believed in God but looked for reasonable, logical explanations in everything. In each episode, the team was called in to investigate some kind of paranormal activity, and they debated and discussed the various possibilities behind each. In the end, hardly anything was ever proved or disproved.
The show kept viewers hooked via Mulder and Scully's underlying sexual tension -- would they ever kiss? -- and through increasingly complicated, twisty, cliffhanging storylines. Every so often, viewers would get a break with self-contained, often funny episodes interspersed between the "mythology" episodes. When the first movie, The X-Files (1998), opened, fans expected it to help solve some of the long-standing puzzles. It kinda did and kinda didn't, but it at least succeeded in leaving fans wanting more. The new movie, entitled The X-Files: I Want to Believe, comes with no such expectations. Mulder and Scully are already together, and the show already explored Scully's acceptance (more or less) of the possibility of supernatural occurrences. So, like The Thin Man series from the 1930s and 1940s, which also had a remarkable male-female crime-fighting team (sort of), the series just keeps going, because it can. And even if it runs out of steam and each progressive entry gets weaker and weaker, at least you still have that great chemistry to play with.
The X-Files: I Want to Believe begins with a mysterious prologue, showing two scenes intercut from two different time periods. A woman is abducted from her garage, while a psychic with long, shaggy gray hair leads a team of FBI agents to a severed arm buried in the snow. Scully is retired from the FBI and now works full-time as a doctor. Her current patient is a young boy (Marco Niccoli) with a supposedly incurable brain disease. Mulder, meanwhile, whiles away the hours squirreled away in a back room of Scully's house, clipping interesting newspaper articles and eating sunflower seeds. (He has also grown a beard and now sleeps with Scully, although they're not married.) Agent Dakota Whitney (Amanda Peet) interrupts this routine by recruiting Mulder for her case. If he can determine the reliability of the psychic, she can clear him of all his outstanding charges. Her partner, Mosley Drummy (Alvin 'Xzibit' Joiner) disagrees with her judgment.
Mulder has worked with psychics before, and tends not to believe them; this week Fox Video released a two-disc DVD set of "X-Files" episodes (entitled The X-Files: Revelations), designed as a kind of primer for this new movie. Two of the episodes focus on psychics, Luther Lee Boggs (Brad Dourif) and Clyde Bruckman (Peter Boyle). Whitney has read about these "cases" and wants Mulder to check out her new psychic, "Father Joe" (Billy Connolly), a former priest and convicted pedophile. Scully wants nothing to do with him, given her religious status and also because of her long gone son with Mulder (mentioned here only in passing), but mainly because of her preoccupation with her young patient. This time Mulder and Scully bicker about things like "going back into the dark places" and ask each other about whether or not they should "give up." The questions aren't as interesting, or as clear as they used to be, but at least they're more entertaining than discussions about mortgages or taking out the trash.
Moreover, as the plot goes on and we discover that the kidnapper is a kind of bizarre Frankenstein-like doctor doing weird experiments, the mystery dissipates; the result isn't nearly as good as the anticipation. The entire story is so low-key that it might have worked as a pretty good late night, mad scientist/kidnapping movie, without the whole stigma of 15 years of mythology and history attached. Director (and creator) Chris Carter, working with TV veterans like co-writer Frank Spotnitz, cinematographer Bill Roe and composer Mark Snow, turn in a big, widescreen picture -- filled with atmospheric snow and creepy crows -- but otherwise the film doesn't differ much from their groundbreaking small-screen work. (Indeed, Snow's music cues come up in nearly every scene, which is fine for TV, but too often for a feature-length film.) But disregarding all this Hollywood thinking (as well as any thought of a continuing franchise), it's possible to consider The X-Files: I Want to Believe as a kind of epilogue or coda. Mulder and Scully are still together as they ride off into the sunset, perhaps leaving their legacy in other hands.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
7-25-2008 @ 9:46AM
eugene said...
Thanks for the review, definitely sounds like a rental to me.
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7-25-2008 @ 9:53AM
Mattman said...
The movie was a bunch of nothing. It was the worst movie I have ever seen in a long time. My friend talked me into going to a midnight show and it was a waste of my time. I would have had a better time asleep than sitting through whatever it was I was watching. The only "paranormal" in the show was a psychic who kept saying "It's here" over and over and couldn't really make anything out. it was pointless. I want everyone who is listed in the credits of that movie to write me an apology for taking part in creating a God awful movie. This is the end of Mulder and Scully
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7-25-2008 @ 10:19AM
twilightsflirtation said...
I too went to the midnight showing. I love the x-files but this was nothing but a long episode, and I have actually seen episodes better than this one! It certainly wasn't worth the money I paid and I guess it was really really bad, it just wasn't what it could have been had someone actually written a script not used an episode that didn't get aired.
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7-25-2008 @ 11:10AM
drew said...
the first movie came out 4 years before the series went off the air?
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7-25-2008 @ 11:12AM
YellowHat said...
Thanks for the review - I'm no longer in any rush to see this.
Here's a comic I enjoyed about the X-Files: http://2dglasses.com/comics/2008/07/25/i_want_to_believe_in_love/
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7-25-2008 @ 11:41AM
chris said...
As a fan of the series, I knew what to expect going into the theater, and therefore wasn't disappointed. It had been made very clear from the beginning that it would be too difficult to delve into the left-behind "storyline of questions", and Carter instead decided to stick to the original concept of the show... explore the paranormal, uncover the truth. True, the movie was essentially a long episode, but the quality of the movie was on-par with the quality of the show, and you leave the theater feeling good. Because of the attempt to appeal to the masses and gung-ho X-philes alike, a happy medium was reached.
I liked it. I think saying it was a "coda" or "epilogue" to the show is a great explanation. Rush to see the next showing?? Probably not...but its worth seeing in the theater at some point.
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7-25-2008 @ 11:54AM
Michele said...
I don' care if the "story " is not up to par. I have just been looking forward to seeing them together again.They are my favorite actors of all times. Them, and Kelsey Krammer, and Elvis !
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7-25-2008 @ 12:26PM
Mary Powell said...
To Mattman: If you expected a movie about the paranormal, perhaps you should have rented "Ghostbusters." Mulder and Scully are who they are and who they always will be, and if you enjoy their opposites-attract relationship (as I do) and the way each of them seeks the Truth in their own unique ways, then this movie holds true and is well worth watching. If you aren't an X-Files fan, you probably won't understand or like the movie, in which case I suggest you watch "Step Brothers" -- you don't have to understand anything to enjoy childish silliness.
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7-25-2008 @ 6:02PM
Mattman said...
Mary, Mary, Mary. I wish I did stay home and watch Ghostbusters. Lets see, an FBI agent goes missing so the FBI decides to let a guy claiming to be a psychic help out. Hm, he stumbles upon an arm and now lets bring in Mulder to see if he is the real deal. That scenario alone is lame because you always hear how psychics get involved with things but for this one case lets track down a man wanted by the FBI to see if the man is telling the truth. Can't they do that by themselves? They are the FBI after all. Scully decides to believe by constantly being pissed at the priest because he has a thing for kids. That got old fast. But wait he told her "Not to give up." Heck anyone could have done that. And he doesn't know why he said it. Who cares. But hey lets make the movie pretend to be freaky by having a guys head transplanted onto a womans body. Couldn't they find a guy? Maybe Mulder. That would have created more suspense. I'd rather see my hero in peril than some random character no one cares about. Also I love how the whole movie was also about how Stem Cell research is amazing. I don't really care if stem cells are used are not in real life but it seems someone wanted to show the upside of it. That kid with the brain disease actually made me laugh (I feel bad about that) but it really had nothing to do with anything. Oh she needs faith to know the kid will be alright and blah blah blah whatever shes a doctor, stuff happens. I also loved the joke about George Bush and how they cued the music. Like Bush jokes aren't old and I bet in 5 years if someone decides to watch this movie agian they won't even get it. We know he's an idiot give us new material. Oh and Scully is tired of Mulder because she is losing faith in him, really? Now she is deciding her faith in him is being lost? Whatever this movie blows and I know a good movie when I see one. I know when a plot is just a bunch of useless nothing and that movie was purely that. Nothing. Oh and I love how they decided to kill off Amanda Peets character. Was that supposed to make the audience feel bad? It happend and no one cared not even the characters. And Xhibit? His character was pointless. All pointless. Mulder should have just stayed home and did some crossword puzzels while Scully brings home the bacon. oh and I was a fan of the show and I think the movie didnt do them justice. If they wanted to base a movie on their monster of the week formula they could have done better with what they had. Oh and by the way I think Step Brothers is going to suck too. I bet you don't even know a good movie even if it were playing on your TV right now. Have a nice day.
7-25-2008 @ 12:28PM
rocczilla said...
I really wanted this movie to be good, but everyone seems to think the TV show was higher-budget than this last effort. Woe is me.
http://oddsight.blogspot.com
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7-25-2008 @ 4:41PM
Bob said...
To Mattman; "the worst movie I have ever seen in a long time!!!! Dude, at least try to sound intelligent.
This movie is going to generate negative reviews and be a disappointment at the box office. One review I read said it would have been a good season opener two hour episode and the comment was meant as a criticism. The comment for me was an endorsement.
The first movie went big...bigger in scope and production values and was a success on all levels. This movie stays truer to the scope of the series, smaller and more concentrated on the principal characters. I enjoyed it immensely. Having Mulder and Scully back with their emotional, intelligent, sometimes thought provoking, sometimes amusing bantering was refreshing. You leave hoping for more. I don't expect people who weren't invested in these characters before to get the same satistaction as I did but the authenticity of the dynamics between these two characters ( so wonderfully rendered by these two underappreciated actors) in a paranormal backdrop is far more believable than most relationships protrayed in movies ostensibly occurring in a real life scenario.
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7-25-2008 @ 5:27PM
Jaycie said...
Chris Cater has completely lost sight of what The X-Files is truly about at it's heart of hearts: alien conspiracy. The shows villains were of three types, extraterrestrials, monsters and madmen. This movie was of the third tier, but it wasn't even as creepy or suspenseful as some of the t.v. drama's villains, like Eugene Victor Toombs! I went into the movie expecting it to be something more along the lines of alien abduction, the black oil and the syndicate... anything besides another serial killer mystery. What happened to the passion, the drive, the obsession? Where's the suspense? And the fiery romance we were all waiting for? Forget it! And what a heck is Scully's problem anyways? She doesn't want to revisit her past in the FBI? HAS EVERYONE FORGOTTEN THAT THE DATE FOR ALIEN INVASION IS SET?!? I am a die-hard X-Files super geeky freak and this movie was a letdown in every way. I think the creators and writers focused too much on the average Joe being able to walk off the street, see the movie and understand it. They completely ignored the wants and needs of X-Files true fans, the ones who have poured over every episode for the last six years waiting in agony for the release of this film, only to leave empty handed. I sincerely "want to believe" that others thought better of this performance than me so that there can still be a chance at another sequel. Maybe the plot line will be picked up back where it left off in the final episode of the series and we can get some real questions answered. The last line of the entire show still lingers my memory... "Maybe there's hope." - Mulder
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7-25-2008 @ 10:17PM
shouldasleptinstead said...
totally right!
i cannot believe that i stayed up and watched the last few episodes again just before the midnight showing - just so i would be sure i wouldnt miss any hints or clues or just that sweet ole nastolgic feeling... yea i now i see that was a bad idea. that trailer is completely misleading, even as i watch them now after having seen it. the trailer still looks better!
yea so i guess im going to just boat over to an island on december 22 2012 and completely forget about my prodigal son and all that... so totally awkward. this movie was such a disappointment. it wasnt even as if audience members were looking for complete answers, but why, why, why would scully look up stem cell research on google then the next morning perform surgery? was this movie meant to be an episode in 1992? and really at the end... come on. couldnt be boating over a gigantic ship? couldnt even give us that? i think "i wanted to believe" so badly that i coulda sworn i saw black oil going into the female victim's neck who was in the icetub.
all we got were sunflower seeds and pencils in a ceiling...
7-26-2008 @ 12:50AM
JO said...
THOMAS WOLF WROTE THE IMMORTAL WORDS YOU CAN’T GO HOME AGAIN. UNFORTUNATELY FOR X FILES FANS, THAT PROPHECY IS PAINFULLY CERTAIN. AS A DIE HARD FAN OF THE SERIES, I’VE WATCHED EACH EPISODE DOZENS OF TIMES. I REJOICED THIS YEAR WHEN I COMPLETED MY COLLECTION OFALL 9 SEASONS ON DVD. I WAS CAPTURED BY THE MAGIC OF THIS GROUNDBREAKING SHOW FROM THE PILOT. ALTHOUGH NOT EVERY EPISODE IN THE SERIES WAS PHENOMINAL, THE SHOW, AS A WHOLE, WAS. I, LIKE MILLIONS OF FANS, WAITED PATIENTLY FOR SIX YEARS FOR SOME RESOLUTION OF WHAT WE LAST SAW. I DIDN’T HOLD THIS NEW FILM UP TO VERY HIGH STANDARDS BECAUSE I REALIZE THAT TIME HAS PASSED AND CERTAIN ALLOWANCES MUST BE MADE. BUT SADLY, I DIDN’T FEEL ANY OF THE OLD MAGIC THAT REELED ME IN. FOR ONE THING, EVEN AS A “STAND ALONE” EPISODE, THE STORY HAD NO REAL CREDIBILITY. WHERE WAS THE X FILE? AT THE HEART, X FILES WERE UNEXPLAINED. MISSING AGENT? SURE. BLACK MARKET ORGAN TRAFFICKING. FINE. MULDER AND SCULLY STILL TOGETHER BUT NOT MARRIED? WHATEVER…(.I’M BEING FACITIOUS HERE, FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO GET THE JOKE) FOR A PAIR WHO HAD UNBELIEVABLE ENERGY AND CHEMISTRY TOGETHER, IT WAS PITIFUL TO WATCH MULDER AND SCULLY STUMBLE THROUGH THEIR LINES ACTING INDIFFERENT TO ONE ANOTHER. WHEN SCULLY MUTTERED THAT SHE DOESN’T DO THIS ANYMORE, SHE WASN’T KIDDING. AND WHAT OF MULDER? WE ALL KNOW HE IS PROBABLY A MILLIONARE WITH WHAT HIS PARENTS LEFT HIM, BUT SEEING HIM PUTTER AROUND IN A BACK ROOM CLIPPING NEWSPAPER ARTICLES WAS A BIT EUGENE TOMBS LIKE. I WAS EXPECTING HIM TO LICK THE PAPER FIRST BEFORE HE STUCK IT ON THE WALL. DOES HE WORK? DOES HE SHOWER? THEIR RELATIONSHIP LACKED THAT CERTAIN MAGIC THAT MADE THEM THE DYNAMIC DUO. EVEN FIGHT THE FUTURE, ALTHOUGH NOT APPRECIATED BY CRITICS, WAS A FANTASTIC MOVIE. IT SEGUED INTO SEASON SIX FROM SEASON FIVE, WHEN THE SHOW WAS AT THE TOP OF THE RATINGS AND THE ACTORS THE TOP OF THEIR GAME. THIS MOVIE SEEMED LIKE AN AFTERTHOUGHT ON EVERYONES PART, NOT THE LONG AWAITED CHAPTER IN ONE OF THE BEST SHOWS ON TELEVISION. AND YES, I AGREE, THE ALIEN INVASION DATE WAS SET. WHY IS SCULLY EVEN TRYING TO HELP THIS CHILD IF IN WHAT, 4 YEARS, HE WILL BE TURNED INTO AN ALIEN HYBRID? GEEZ, I REALIZE THEY WANTED TO STAY AWAY FROM THE WHOLE MYTHOLOGY, BUT THIS MOVIE TAKES AWAY EVERYTHING THAT MADE THE X FILES FANTASTIC. MONSTER OF THE WEEK EPISODES WERE JUST THAT…FILLERS WHILE WE WAITED FOR THE REAL MEAT AND POTATOE EPISODES. EVEN THE MONSTER EPS WERE BETTER THAN THIS. I AM HUGHLY DISAPPOINTED BY THE ANTICLIMAX. I WILL WATCH MY DVD’S AND PRETEND THIS MOVIE NEVER HAPPENED. SORRY
7-25-2008 @ 9:47PM
Asiale said...
For being an x-files fan for so long the movie is a disappointment, but as a stand alone movie it was decent. I think Carter was trying to attract the younger audiences to being fans of the show by not going into the whole conspiracy thing, but it's still a let down to us true fans. I read that he does plan to make another in the next 3 years relating to the alien invasion of 2012 with all the conspiracy, but is banking on this one to do well, which I don't see happening =(
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7-26-2008 @ 3:16AM
Katie said...
I rewatched the entire series this summer before seeing the movie. I am a long time x-phile. We were given fair warning that this was going to be in the style of the monster of the week eps, and that the only real mytharc continuity would be in following up on what has now been a 15 year partnership between our heroes. And I was ok with that. Was I alone?
We all know that the kind of exposition required for a true alien invasion story in the style of the series would take far more resources (time and budget) than are available for this film's production 10 years after the show's heyday.
So far as the themes of the series go, I thought it was a split between the supernatural/paranormal, the freaky medical science research, and the emotional tension between the characters. All of these bases were covered in this movie.
And in a truly fulfilling way. The credibility (or lack) of the psychic. Remember that in both Beyond the Sea and Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose, Mulder and Scully argue about when to believe and why. The thing with the head transplants reminds me of an old (70s) experiment with monkeys that was filmed and recently went pretty viral. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HwPBE7fXj4k) I hope the chemistry between our heroes is palpable to moviegoers without a knowledge of the 9 years of history. But I certainly think that the discussions that Mulder and Scully are having at this point are totally appropriate and satisfying to long-time fans. I love their interactions. The whole show was about how Scully (from within her scientific paradigm) was changed by her exposure to the spooky Fox Mulder. By the end of the series she would have followed him anywhere- and indeed, did. She had changed, become more open minded. He hadn't, really- her beliefs were matching up with his dogmatic intuition. Going into hiding for 6 years surely doesn't facilitate his growth, while returning to a medical career would draw her back into the skeptic's mindset. Perhaps this is an appropriate coda for the characters, but now that Mulder's name is cleared, it may open up the possibility of him actually moving forward.
Besides, with proper support maybe we can get a 2012 film where Mulder uses his newfound freedom to expose or prevent the alien colonization conspiracy after all. In a single year of hiding in the New Mexico desert he learned enough to sneak into the most secret of military bases and gain access to The Truth. I refuse to believe that Mulder has just been sitting in that newspapered little office, puttering around with tabloid stories. He's always had a goal, and always worked toward its resolution.
Supposed die-hard fans who neither allow our characters to evolve as people nor support the series in exploring different avenues of inquiry into unexplainable phenomena aren't doing the X files any favors. If we give them a chance, Carter and the gang will show us how to really fight the future.
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7-27-2008 @ 10:02PM
BEV said...
DAMN RIGHT!!!
7-26-2008 @ 3:41PM
Ryan said...
As others have said, this WAS just a long episode.
As a fan of the X-files, it's been a few years since I've seen a new episode. I don't like having to pay for them now, but the fact is that this episode was very true to the spirit of the show. It lacked the excitement of the little green men stories from the main plot line, but it fully embraced the (rare in science fiction) human aspect of the show. And in the process, it gave us a horribly creepy, wicked evil doctor (who, quite unfortunately, was not explored more).
It was a good episode. It was not a great movie, but I'm quite happy with it. I think if they'd done a "main plot" story without Smoking Man in it (and he's almost certainly dead at this point), it would have sucked. They killed all their villains, so all that's left is mysteries.
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7-27-2008 @ 9:32PM
Jeff said...
I thought this was a very well made thrill ride from beginning to end and I think it is one of the best movies of the year. Non-fans do not necessarily have to have watched the series, but it would help, but I found it very fulfilling.
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7-28-2008 @ 2:35PM
cyclikyl said...
this movie has made me lose hope for all other movies. let's face it, movies suck these days, and this was a harsh reminder. i have been an x-files fan since the show aired. what younger audience is carter trying to reach? do you really think that kids that have never seen the show are going to see this movie? if they do, do you really think they will like it? what person is going to want to know what the show is about, from watching that movie? "oh, so x-files is like csi, or criminal minds." that is what they would think. ( i hate both of those shows) this is probably the biggest dissapointment in movies ever. it also makes me sick that some fans are trying to justify this monstrosity. the only way this movie makes sense is this: a hollywood scam set up by some huge players. like the syndicate, and the conspiracy in the show, we now have hollywood political bs. i also really agreed with shouldasleptinstead. i think the movie was called i want to believe because of how many of us wanted to believe this would have anything to do with the show, or at least be a worthwhile movie......if this was supposed to not be a mythology episode, why even bring up mulder's sister? nobody that hasn't seen x-files gives a crap about that, and it only kept me in the theatre thinking "maybe this won't suck" i know that people reading this may think that i am only upset because it wasn't a mythology based movie, but it's just a bad movie. what was interesting about it? the monster of the week episodes were interesting. this movie pales in comparison to those. this is a great showing of how horrible the entertainment industry is today. i am depressed.
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