X-Files mythology, TenThirteen Interviews Database, and more

Posts Tagged ‘xf2’

[Unknown]: Find out all you need to know about 'The X-Files' on Sunday night

May-??-2002
[Unknown]
Find out all you need to know about ‘The X-Files’ on Sunday night
Rob Lowman

What: David Duchovny returns for the final two episodes of the series.
Where: Fox.
When: 8 to 10 Sunday night.

Chris Carter was trying to do his last bit of juggling for “The X-Files,” which ends its nine-year run on Fox tonight with episodes 200 and 201. He had already been interrupted once because of a call from the set as they were finishing up the final filming. Did David Duchovny leave again? One of the show’s original stars, Duchovny had tired of the grind of a long TV-season shooting schedule and left two years ago but is returning for the finale tonight.

“Nothing that dire,” the 45-year-old creator of the series said with a chuckle, “but there’s always something.”

The something includes monsters, aliens, the paranormal, government conspiracy, more aliens and an elaborate mythology, which for “X-Files” fans has always been the heart of the show, along with the complicated (sexually repressed) relationship of FBI partners Fox Mulder (Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), who have been looking for the truth out there since the series went on the air Sept. 10, 1993.

On a gradual descent

At its height, during its fifth and sixth seasons, “The X-Files” averaged more than 18 million viewers each week. This season, the numbers are down to around 8.5 million.

“I feel this year we’re doing great work, but the ratings have gone down,” says Carter, adding, “I feel like it’s almost a new show and needed to build an audience. I don’t know how interested Fox was in doing that, and I wasn’t interested in watching the show suffer the indignity of what I felt was the mood out there to start taking potshots at it.”

What Carter was referring to was how, after Duchovny left after the seventh season, the show was retooled with the addition of Robert Patrick as FBI agent John Doggett as a new partner for Scully and then Annabeth Gish as agent Monica Reyes.

But nine years for a show is a long time, and it takes its toll. Even Anderson, who on one hand has stated she was sad about the show ending, told the Hollywood Reporter recently that she’d like to find a film role with a character who doesn’t give a “rat’s ass” about the truth.”

With Mulder gone — though, as Carter points out, his character always has had a presence — and Scully carrying a lesser load, the series has tried to generate sparks between Doggett and Reyes this season. But their pairing never had the low-burning intensity of the original pair’s relationship.

When discussing what made “The X-Files” successful, Carter simply says, “I think that what I had that no one else had was Gillian Anderson and Dave Duchovny. I think what we had was something fresh and new on television that was hard to clone. It was, in a weird way, a perfect little television idea with a believer and a skeptic.”

Out there … on DVD

Out this week on DVD is the complete fifth season of the series, which led to the 1998 movie “The X-Files: Fight the Future,” the height of “X-Files” mania. “You can look at the show before the movie and after the movie,” says Carter. So the fifth season, while it was filmed after the movie, was the season that led to the movie.”

That’s right: The movie was shot first.

“It was very tricky. If we would have failed with the movie or failed with the season leading up to the movie, we would have failed going forward. Everything had to be done right,” says Carter. “If season five had not been good, we would have headed into the movie with less than a head of steam. It was a miracle to me that we hit all our marks.”

Certainly, the success of “The X-Files” changed the landscape of television. The series has been hailed since the beginning. TV Guide critic Matt Roush recently noted that it helped TV grow up. No better proof of that is the television landscape over the past several years, which seems to be littered with shows dealing with the paranormal, and it was Carter’s smart writing that helped give legitimacy to the sci-fi genre. Until “The X-Files,” that genre had mostly been relegated to television’s back benches.

However, “The X-Files” also generated many failed attempts to clone its success. Even Carter’s two tries — the ominous “Millennium” and the loopy “Lone Gunmen” — ultimately ended up on the scrap heap. But the faithful are still out there. “X-Files” fan Web sites are speculating that “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”/”Angel” creator Joss Whedon is turning into “the new Chris Carter.” Whedon has a new sci-fi series coming next year called “Firefly,” which will be on Fox.

And they are also guessing as to how “The X-Files” will end up tonight.

True to the series’ motto — “Trust no one” — Carter wouldn’t reveal any specifics on how he was going to wrap up the show, except to say there will be an explosion and some familiar faces would return.

They’re baaaack

Web sites speculate that the finale, written by Carter, will bring back Nick Lea as the eerie Crick and Laurie Holder as Marietta Covarrubias, who, when we last saw her, was infected with weird alien oil. And there may be “at least one kiss and some affection” between Scully and Mulder, who will be on trial for murder.

But, as they say, trust no one.

Carter would add this, though: “We are not so much answering all the questions as we are going to make it all make sense, if we can.”

Still under contract to Fox for another year, Carter says he has another idea for a show and is in talks about a second “X-Files” movie.

“I think it will happen because I know that David and Gillian want to do it, and if they want to do it, it will happen,” he says.

The pair have both publicly declared that they would like to do another film, but getting any movie off the ground is tricky business.

“I have kind of an idea (for it), but I don’t know how much it will cost,” says Carter. “It would be better if it cost less rather than more, because movie budgets have grown so big that the expectations of what the movie is going to do at the box office is sometimes too great.”

He added that the movie would be like a stand-alone episode and not part of the mythology, which should wrap up tonight.

“I keep saying to people, ‘I’m not sad, I’m not sad,’ but … maybe I’m not admitting I’m sad,” says the series creator. “I feel this year we’re doing great work, but the ratings have gone down. I decided to call it a day … and end on a strong note. ”

To paraphrase another series motto, the fans want to believe.

Cinescape: Interview with Chris Carter

Mar-??-2002
Cinescape
Interview with Chris Carter

The X-Files Creator Reflects On His Nine Years Tenure With Genre TV’s Most Ambitious Mythology-Driven Series

The studio may officially have the day off, but not Chris Carter. With his creation The X-Files coming down the home stretch of a successful nine-year run, the executive producer finds himself toiling away at the office during the Presidents’ Day holiday. The past few weeks have been above and beyond the normal level of hectic, seeing how Carter handled both the writing and directing chores for the forthcoming episode “Improbable.” Fresh off the episode’s second-unit filming, Carter shifts his attention to the teleplay for episode 17 – a story he’s co-writing with Frank Spotnitz and X-Files alumnus David Duchovny, who will also be directing as part of his deal to return for the series’ two-hour finale.

Understandably, Carter’s focus is on the immediate here and now, and the workload that lies ahead. The reality that this is the last season of his brainchild – a series no one, including the creator, anticipated would run for nine seasons – still seems far off. On the contrary, that foreknowledge is a small comfort considering the mammoth-sized task that still lies ahead.

“You’re asking me as I’m sitting here writing on the President’s Day holiday – no one’s at the studio but me,” he says. “I don’t feel relief at all. I feel burdened with the opportunity I see to do some really good work as we end the year.”

How, then, will it feel for the regular summer hiatus period to come and go – and, for the first time in eight years, not return to work on another new season?

“It will be strange not to take a couple of weeks off and come back and start working on X-Files again,” Carter says. “Is that a relief? I don’t know that [yet].”

The X-Files’ roots lie in telling chilling stories that conjure up fear. And while the series has experimented with other, more whimsical tales in recent years, this season follows in the footsteps of that which came before, continuing along the path back to creepy.

“It began as a show where we attempted to scare the pants off of people each week, and it’s always been that,” maintains Carter. “But as the show has evolved, there were seasons – for example, season 6, after the movie – where we decided to lighten it up, where we got away from being scary because it felt natural [to do so]. The show became almost comedic with the things we attempted with episodes like ‘Triangle.'”

Then came season 7, in which Carter and company felt a need to resolve certain mythology arcs such as the fate of Mulder’s sister.

“So all of a sudden, these are not necessarily scary things [we’re doing], but they are things that are important to the life of the show and to the characters in the show,” Carter says. “Season 8 was a new thing for us because ‘missing Mulder’ became a new kind of mythology season, although there were some good, scary stand-alones, too. Now, we’ve gotten back to solid ground again in season 9. And the thing that we do best is to go back to what we do best – which is to scare people.”

Finding fresh stories this season – which will cross the 200-episode mark before it’s finished – hasn’t been particularly difficult, Carter says, due in large part to the enthusiastic interest of executive producers Frank Spotnitz, Vince Gilligan and John Shiban.

“As long as you’re interested, and the show keeps amusing you and amazing you, as it oftentimes does, I think that’s the sign and signal of a show’s vitality,” Carter says. “It’s never easy, but it’s not like we are straining to come up with new story ideas. The sad thing is that now there are many stories left to tell, and we’re not going to be telling them, except in the movie franchise.”

Strangely enough, Carter find himself almost busier this year than in seasons past, despite the fact that he has only one series in production as opposed to his usual two.

“It’s funny – for me, I’ve worked on two things since Christmas of the third season of The X-Files, when I was doing research on and the writing of the Millennium pilot,” he says. “I’ve always been working on two things. This is the first year that I haven’t been working on two things, and I thought it would be such a luxury. And I don’t know how or why, but this year has been one of the hardest ever. If you’re a hard-working person, your time always gets gobbled up by different things. Maybe it’s the fact that we’ve come to the decision to no go on this year – maybe that took a lot of our energy. But I feel that we’re as strapped for time as we ever were.”

In many ways, Carter was exploring his own interests when he originally pitched the idea for The X-Files to the Fox network a decade ago.

“I knew it would take us on a journey,” he says. “And I knew that these characters had a lot to explore, because they’re exploring all of the rich material that I’m interested in.”

But in many ways, he adds, the memory of his original vision got lost amid the cacophony of divergent needs that a fledging series has to service.

“You’re fighting for your life, always, at the beginning,” he says. “Just trying not to make too many mistakes, trying to make the right choices, trying to hire the right people, and trying to appease the god of Nielsen. Luckily, a lot of good people came on to the show, and they helped to show exactly what kind of stories the characters of Mulder and Scully could explore and tell.”

That formative first season counted among its producers the talented writing teams of Howard Gordon (Beauty and the Beast, Strange World, 24) and Alex Gansa (Dawson’s Creek, Wolf Lake), as well as Glen Morgan and James Wong (TV’s Millennium and The Others, the feature films Final Destination and The One).

Critical to the show’s early success, however, was the balance between FBI partners Fox Mulder – all too willing to believe – and Dana Scully – perennial skeptical whose scientific background demanded she seek hard evidence before accepting Mulder’s wild theories. For Carter, the decision to assign these arbitrary, structural roles to the characters was much like one of the intuitive leaps Mulder is famed for.

“That was just my gut instinct, to have Mulder as the believer,” says Carter. “He’s not a believer outright. The poster on his wall – ‘I Want to Believe’ – really sums up Mulder to me. He wants to believe. He constantly wants to find that thing that gives him the basis in which to believe. And Scully, as the skeptic, her point of view represents our point of view. We are all skeptics; we are all wary of claims, these claims that Mulder would bring to her. I always said the story was told best from Scully’s point of view.”

As much as The X-Files has centered on scary case files and a complex web of mythology, Mulder and Scully – and their unique relationship – have always been at the heart of the show. And that’s something that Carter is very aware of, in spite of the fact that the past two seasons have seen a new duo of characters, Doggett and Reyes, added in an attempt to extend its longevity.

“The series was always about Mulder and Scully and their unique partnership, if you will, from the very moment I thought of the idea for the show,” says Carter. “I wanted this to be the ideal friendship, partnership, romance, if you will – in the literary sense of the word.”

In the early years of the series, the relationship between Mulder and Scully was always presented as being a platonic one – nothing more. But, insists Carter, the duo was always on a path that would take them to where they ended last season. The turning point, he notes, was in The X-Files feature, which was released between seasons 5 and 6. “I think that any intense friendship leads naturally to where it was going to lead with that kiss [in the movie],” he says. “That is a part of the consummation of that kind of relationship, which I think they couldn’t deny was romantic in its intensity. I always knew it was going there. It was just [a case of] when to get there.”

The same can be said of the show’s mythology, which has been woven together piecemeal as the series crept along. But will the end result converge with what Carter originally envisioned at the outset of this voyage?

“I’m always asked this question,” he says. “To be truthful, I knew I had certain ideas, but I never knew that I would have to stretch them out quite so long. I had some big ideas, and I was always surprised at how they evolved. At one point – it was during the making and writing of ‘Redux’ and ‘Redux II’ – I said to Frank Spotnitz that these stories start to tell themselves. We’d laid such good groundwork that at the point there were these interesting things that happened as a result of choices that were made way back when. I think the best things is not plan too carefully, so that you can find your way to where you’re going rather than to say, ‘I’m going over there, and let’s see how I can best get there.'”

But nine years is a long time to be weaving threads through disparate episodes – and even Carter admits, “It’s not like it’s all perfectly in my mind. There’s just so much material that’s come before, 200 hours of material.” When writing the series’ final episodes, he adds, “It’s going to take some effort to condense and winnow out the important things as we had conceived of them along the way. That’s going to be the important things to key on.”

Up until now, Mulder’s journey – standard monster-of-the-week tales notwithstanding 0 had been two-fold: a passionate quest for the truth about his sister’s fate, as well as the truth behind a government conspiracy to hide the existence of extraterrestrials.

“He’s been looking for a truth,” confirms Carter. “There are many truths that he’s been seeking, but the thing that he’s looking for is the thing that has now driven him into hiding. It’s going to be interesting to see when he comes back what it is he brought back, and at what consequence.”

Of course, any further detailed analysis is still classified information, unfortunately.

“I can’t [say], because I would be spoiling all the fun of when he comes back,” Carter says.

It’s a cryptic, evasive response, but we’ve come to expect that from The X-Files’ creator. After all, this is the series where questions are continually raised, but nothing ever seems to be conclusively answered. And like many things on The X-Files, the choice to keep the answers open-ended and ambiguous is a very purposeful one.

Explains Carter, with appropriate brevity, “It’s like life itself.”

The X-Files Magazine: Frank Discussion

Feb-??-2002
The X-Files Magazine [US]
Frank Discussion

The X-Files Magazine: Before we get into the specifics of how and why there’s a season nine, were you among those rooting for the show to return?

Frank Spotnitz: Yes, I was. I thought Robert Patrick was such a home run last year and I was excited about Annabeth Gish and what her character could be. I believed in the show and what the show could be this year.

The X-Files Magazine: What did you make of the prospect of doing the show without Chris?

Frank Spotnitz: For some time we didn’t actually know if we had Chris and we worked for, I don’t know, four to six weeks without him this year. It was actually Chris’ idea; he encouraged the rest of us to signup without knowing whether or not he was going to come back. I never would have done it unless he wanted us to do it and encouraged us to do it. I made it clear to him that I hoped he’d come back. So I guess I felt we could do it without Chris Carter and that we would do it, that we’d do as great a job as we could, but I was hoping all along that he would decide to come back.

The X-Files Magazine: Some people feel that the show itself is about Mulder’s quest for the truth. And those people argue that without Mulder there is no X-Files. How big a hurdle is that, in your mind, for the show to overcome?

Frank Spotnitz: The show has been Mulder’s quest for the truth. It was that for seven years and part of the eighth year. But I really think that with the introduction of John Doggett last year, the TV series started to take on e a new dimension. A baton was passed, almost literally. There was a scene in “Vienen” where Mulder literally handed over the X-Files office to Doggett. It’s always a question mark whether or not the audience will accept huge changes like this, because the characters are so important and so much of why you watch a TV series. But, having said that, I think The X-Files is a very strong idea for a series with an almost inexhaustible supply of stories. If you can find other characters that are strong and other actors who people like and want to watch. I think there’s potential for the show to go on indefinitely.

The X-Files Magazine: Were you pleased with David Duchovny’s final scene?

Frank Spotnitz: Yes, totally. That was one of my favorite scenes in the series. It moved me, so I was delighted with it.

The X-Files Magazine: Let’s talk first in broad strokes about Season Nine? To your thinking, what’s the big picture story wise?

Frank Spotnitz: It’s very interesting because Season Nine is sort of a three-lead show. It’s Scully and Doggett and Reyes. As you’ll see early on, it begins the way it left off last year, with Doggett and Ryes on the X-Files. Scully has a new role to play. She’s now a forensic investigator assigned to the FBI Training Academy in Quantico, Virginia. So you’ll have these three legged investigations all season. It’s a different way to tell the stories, which is exciting for us because it makes the show fresh and new again and not things we’ve done before. That became a challenge late in the Mulder-Scully era, how to keep ourselves really interested and excited when you’re up to the 175th episode, the 180th episode. When you’ve done that much, how do you keep Mulder and Scully’s investigations feeling new? That’s not a problem anymore for anyone. We’re on our toes every week because we’ve never done this before.

The X-Files Magazine: Let’s hit specifics. What will Scully’s role be? Will she be off at Quantico, communicating with Doggett and Reyes by cellphone and in separate scenes with baby William, or will we see her with Doggett and Reyes?

Frank Spotnitz: Well, there’s no standard format for it. Sometimes she’ll be primarily at Quantico and sometimes she’ll be out in the field. Sometimes it’s focused on her, and Doggett and Reyes are in the background. There will be different shapes to all of these different stories. It really is a three-lead show in that they’ll all have individual moments to shine as characters and actors. And there will be quite a few scenes of the three of them together. That’s really interesting to what, because not only do Gillian, David and Annabeth like each other personally, but they have great chemistry together. We’ve got different dynamics on the show that we’ve never had before. We’ve got scenes with two strong, independent, professional women together, which we’d never played like this. The other interesting thing is that all three characters are heroic, but in different ways, and they’ve all got different crosses to bear as characters.

The X-Files Magazine: Take us through the various character interactions in S9.

Frank Spotnitz: Doggett has kind of declared war on Deputy Director Kersh. He’s accused him of complicity in his alien conspiracy or super-soldier conspiracy as Knowle Rohrer claimed it was. So that’s really where we’ve picked up this season. It’s a very awkward thing to do when you’re an FBI agent–accuse your superior of corruption, essentially. Agent Reyes is by his side. Agent Scully has other issues to deal with, like what is her baby? We’ve said that Mulder and Scully consummated their relationship and that Mulder appeared to be the father of the baby. That’s what Mulder and Scully believe, but we haven’t answered the question, how a barren woman could become pregnant. We haven’t answered the question of why all these aliens, if that’s what they were, surrounded Scully at the Desert Hot Springs in Georgia and then left her untouched. So there are some deep, personal mysteries that Scully has to deal with and solve. As she said in the season finale last year, the X-Files has become personal and have become her life. It’s not a case. It’s not something she can walk away from. It’s her child.

The X-Files Magazine: And Skinner?

Frank Spotnitz: For many years Skinner was this kind of Hamlet-like figure. He was torn between his responsibilities as an Assistant Director and his sympathies for Mulder and Scully. What was fun for us last year, and I think for Mitch as well, was that the character finally took sides and went with Mulder and Scully all the way. That’s still pretty much the role he plays this season. He’s much more of a character of action than he’s ever been before. And one of the reasons he’s able to be such a partisan on behalf of The X-Files is that there are new antagonists that have developed within the FBI, like Deputy Director Kersh and Assistant Director Follmer, who ranks the same as Skinner.

The X-Files Magazine: David Duchovny is gone, but how long a shadow will Mulder cast on the proceeding? Will he be a ghost lurking around the X-Files office?

Frank Spotnitz: Yes and no. A lot of people on the Internet, at least the louder, more strident voices in chat rooms, kept saying, “Mulder is the absent center.” And the other people were saying, “He’s not the absent center. Look at all these episodes that went by without even a mention of Mulder.” I think that’s the fundamental misunderstanding of the X-Files TV series and has always been. If you look at any of the seasons leading up to last season, you had these mythology episodes that really bring us up to speed on the personal lives of the characters and on the alien conspiracy. Then you’ve got these stand-alone episodes that rarely touch on the personal lives of the characters and are really separate, discrete installments of life on the X-Files. You’ll see Mulder dealt with or mentioned in depth in certain episodes, like we did in the first two episodes this year and like we will in other mythology episodes later in the season. Then you’ll have cases that are cases, that investigate monsters and other paranormal phenomena. It’s very hard to shoehorn the search for Mulder or the disappearance of Mulder into stories like that, and we really don’t try. But having said that, I think the fact that Mulder defines the X-Files, Mulder turned the X-Files into a unit, is hard for anyone to forget. He does come up a lot. His name is mentioned because of the spirit with which he investigated these cases. I also think what’s appealing about Doggett and Reyes is how much respect they have for Mulder. They very much respect and honor what came before them.

The X-Files Magazine: Simply put, will there be an episode that explains why he’s not there anymore?

Frank Spotnitz: Yes. That’s the biggest question we faced, how to gracefully address that while being true to the character because, obviously, we just don’t have David Duchovny. We wanted to come up with a worthy explanation for why he’s not there anymore. It was a big question going into the new season and it was partially explained by the end of the second episode. It’s a question that will come up again and again in the mythology episodes this season.

The X-Files Magazine: David Duchovny has said he’s willing to do another movie. Chris Carter has said there will be another movie. Do you have to bear a potential movie in mind while doing the day-to-day work on the show? And if so, isn’t that a pain?

Frank Spotnitz: It was a pain in the ass, but we’ve figured all that out, I think. We know where we we’re going this year .We have a very clear idea about this season will end for Scully and Mulder’s characters. There’s an anticipation that this is Gillian’s last year whether or not it’s the last year of the series, so we have prepared ourselves for that and have a master plan.

The X-Files Magazine: Let’s switch to the Lone Gunmen series. What went right and what went wrong with the show?

Frank Spotnitz: I thought a long more went right than went wrong. I wished very much the network had brought back the show for another year. There was a mighty campaign internally to keep it on the air. There was a lot of support for the show among the studio executives and some of the network executives too. I think they just took a gamble that they could do better. But I think The Lone Gunmen was a really good show. I was really proud of it. I’m very proud of the work the guys did and that Zuleikha Robinson and Stephen Snedden did. I think that the biggest curveball we threw the audiences was how comedic, how blatantly comedic the show was. And I don’t think people we’re expecting that from the people behind The X-Files. If I had to do it over again I might have tried to make the transition more slowly. Having said that, I think if the show had come back for another year it would have had a chance to settle in and find its audience. It’s a great disappointment.

The X-Files Magazine: After all of your years with the show, how would you define your contribution to The X-Files?

Frank Spotnitz: That’s a really hard question to answer. I was a neophyte coming into this show. I started as a staff writer. It was my first job, not only on TV, but in Hollywood. So much of this show is the singular vision of Chris Carter. He’s got a very very clear vision and I think everybody who has worked here has come to appreciate and respect that vision. Once having understood his point of view about storytelling I think we’ve all tried to bring our best work to it. And so it’s been a very collaborative atmosphere. This is my eighth year on the show, my seventh year with John and Vince. That’s a long association, a long time for a group of people to work together. I look at all of these episodes-I flip and see them on FX or in syndication on weekends-and I have memories of pieces of me and pieces of them in virtually every show. We’ve all poured our hearts and souls into it. I don’t think people generally understand, nor do they need to, particularly, how hard you have to work on a show like this and how much of your life is devoted to it. I’m very proud of it.

The X-Files Magazine: You directed your first episode in S8. How did Alone come about?

Frank Spotnitz: Season Eight was one of my best years, if not the best year, I’ve had on The X-Files. I wrote a lot of stand-alone episodes. The whole Lone Gunmen experience, though it ended, was a joy. I loved the show and I loved watching dailies every day. The directing was something I was kind of dragged into, kicking and screaming. I didn’t really have a great desire to do it. But I was convinced by a number of people, including David Duchovny, to do it before the chance went away. It was a bad time for me to do it in a way, because there was so much work to do as a writer and producer. We were still trying to figure out the season finale. My show went prep and I had no idea how it was going to end because I hadn’t finished the script. So I was extremely stressed. I had all the issues outside of being a director, plus the pressure of directing for the first time and not being entirely sure how that would go. But nobody told me how much fun it is to direct. You’ve got all these people who are trying to help you succeed. The actors were so good. I was thrilled with Robert and David and Gillian and also Jolie Jenkins, the guest actress who played Leyla Harrison. I was very proud of the show.

The X-Files Magazine: Last question. If this would be the last year of The X-Files or your last year with the show, what would you do for an encore?

Frank Spotnitz: This is the first time in six years where I’m only doing The X-Files. I’ve always been doing The X-Files and Millennium or Harsh Realm or The Lone Gunmen or Fight the Future. That’s been a great. But now I’m waiting to see what comes next, to see if Chris develops another series. If this is the end of the X-Files for me, I may go do something else, develop another show or write a movie. I don’t know what I’ll do next. But it’s kind of an exciting time.

The X-Files Magazine: The Next Files

Feb-??-2002
The X-Files Magazine [US]
The Next Files
Martin Eden

[typed by MarieEve]

Executive producer Frank Spotnitz chats to Martin Eden about the progress of Season Nine, Mulder/David Duchovny’s return, and the end of The X-Files.

Can you tell us how the decision to end the show came about ?

It was difficult and emotional for us, because we all love the show so much and it’s been our live for a very long period of time – eight years for me, 10 years for Chris (Carter). Chris, John (Shiban) and Vince (Gilligan) have all worked together for a long time, so it’s like breaking up a family.

The reality was that as much as we believe in the show, and we really do, the audience this year just wasn’t what we hoped it would be. I don’t think it’s a verdict on the show, or on Robert (Patrick) or Annabeth (Gish), because it was really from the first episode out of the gate – there was just a certain portion of viewers who didn’t show up. And at some point you need to decide : do you want to fade away and struggle against the ratings or do you want to try and go out strong?

Have you been checking out the online reaction to the news of the show’s cancellation ?

I’ve really learned over the years to take all the online chat with a huge grain of salt. I think it can be a distorted view of what fans are thinking and feeling. Over the last two years, there’s been a very vocal negative chorus on the internet which has been unpleasant to read. I have read it though, and I continue to read it because I want to know what people are thinking, but I have never for a moment thought it was representative of the audience at large. And now that the decision has been made to end the show, a lot of the same people who’ve been kicking us in the teeth online are shedding tears and I find it hard to take seriously.

I think a certain number of people will start to be sorrier when they realize that the show’s coming to an end, because there’s so much unexplored territory with Robert and Annabeth that really could have been explored for years to come.

I king of look forward to syndication. That’s where I believe we’ll have vindication, because so many of the show we’ve done over the last two or so years are outstanding and will really age very well.

Will we see Robert and Annabeth in the next X-Files movie ?

I don’t really know. We haven’t even started to talk about what the movie will be other than in the broadest possible terms. Whether they are or not, I really hope I get the chance to work with both of them again because they’re not only extremely talented actor, but they’re also extremely nice people and they’ve been great to work with.

What have been your favourite episodes of Season nine so far ?

I liked “4-D” an awful lot, and “John Doe” and “Trust No 1”. There’s some that are coming up that I think are gonna be highlights as well. Episode 12 sees the return of Leyla Harrison, the fan/agent, and it’s all about comparing Doggett and Reyes to Mulder and Scully, so it’s kind of a fun episode. That’s written by Tom Schnauz. Episode 13 is an episode called “Audrey Pawley” and it’s a very far-out idea for an episode. It’s really a kind of “Twilight Zone” sort of episode, but really emotional, powerful story for Doggett and Reyes. And then Chris Carter is writing and directing episode 14, and I think it’s unlike anything we’ve ever done before. It’s kind of unique in the way that “Post-Modern Prometheus” was unique. And then episode 15 is our kind of valedictory for the Lone Gunmen. We’re gonna bring back characters from their show and it’s really gonna be kind of summation of their nine years on The X-Files.

I was interested to see Terry O’Quinn return to The X-Files universe in “Trust No 1”. How did that come about ?

We couldn’t resist! He’s just one of our favourite actors. He can do no wrong in our eyes. We’d used him in Season Two’s “Aubrey” and we used him in Millennium and The X-Files movie and in Harsh Realm. We missed him and we wanted a chance to use him and we did it despite the fact that many, many people would recognize him, especially from The X-Files movie.

Is the Season Nine finale going to be a two-parter?

Yes. Chris Carter is going to be writing it.

I’ve heard it’s going to be a cliffhanger …

That’s not really true. Mulder and Scully will be left able to go on to do movies, but beyond that it’s not a cliffhanger. We’re still working on what that story’s gonna be, because we only decided last week to end the series this year. It will hopefully have a very big satisfying conclusion.

And will David Duchovny be reprising his Mulder role for the finale, as had been rumoured?

Yes. He wants to and we all want him to, and now it’s just a matter of making the deal and seeing if he’s available, because he’s got a movie career. The truth is we’d been talking to him about coming back to do some work on the show even before the decision. So the conversation sort of just changed direction once the announcement was made.

How do you feel Reyes character has been shaping up ?

Annabeth Gish is doing great job and I think the character is growing nicely. I think it’s been a challenge because she’s not one of those characters who came into the series with a full biography. People have had to discover over time who she is and what her past is. We’re slowly learning more about Monica Reye’s past, how she was raised, and her relationship to Doggett. Some of the episodes we’re writing now are gonna explore that more deeply. She’s one of those characters where the more you get to know her the more depth you realize she has and the more you like her.

Some of the theories she’s coming out with are more far-out than some of Mulder’s theories. Is that something that you had in mind from day one ?

Yeah. I think we’re always thought she’s a little looser, funnier, quirkier, more neurotic than Mulder was. We didn’t just want to have another Mulder, we didn’t just want to have another Mulder, we wanted a type of character we’d never seen before and we have quite an elaborate back-story worked out for her. Unfortunately I don’t know that we’ll ever get chance to find out what that was because this’ll be the last year of the show.

Is Reyes proving popular with the fans ?

I think she has a growing contingent of support, especially after the episode “4-D” was broadcast. People really saw what Annabeth Gish could do, and they saw a new side of this character too. But I think in the beginning certain people were scratching their heads, because they weren’t quite sure who she was. I also think you can’t ignore the fact that there was resistance from a lot of people to anyone coming in to the show after Mulder and Scully, and I think she’s really worn down a great deal of that resistance. I think by the end of the season people will love and miss her character greatly.

Has it been a different type of atmosphere on set with the new cast members ?

Oh sure, it’s been very different. It can’t help but be different when you bring in new actor and new characters. It’s also very exciting for us because when you do a series for a long period of time it becomes more and more difficult to find fresh things for actors and characters to experience, and suddenly with the addition of Robert last year and Annabeth a little bit last year we had this whole new range of possibilities and ideas and emotions and situations that we could play. So for all of us it was very exciting.

There’s also an interesting process between the writing staff and an actor. It’s like getting to know each other and saying “Oh wow, look how well he or she does that’ and then you start to write things in response. It’s like a conversation between the dailies and what you’re writing now. They’re both just terrific actors, and very different from David and Gillian, but just as appealing and talented in their own ways.

Finally, are thoughts now starting to turn toward the next movie ?

We had been offered the movie before the season had even begun, and we expressed an interest, but the deal has just been on hold because of everything that’s been on hold because of everything that’s been going on. But I think it will happen. I don’t think it will happen until 2003 at the earliest but I actually think it’s a good thing to get to the end of the series, to catch our breaths and recharge, and then come back and look at the movies franchise with fresh eyes and decide where we’re going.

Zap2it: Duchovny Likely to Return for 'X-Files' Finale

Jan-25-2002
Zap2it
Duchovny Likely to Return for ‘X-Files’ Finale
Kate O’Hare

LOS ANGELES (Zap2it.com) – “I don’t really think we’ll be sad until it’s the last day,” says “X-Files” executive producer Frank Spotnitz, “and we realize that we’re not going to see these people we’ve seen for so long. That doesn’t happen often in television, where you work with the same group of people for so many years.”

“But, it’s scary, slash, exciting, disappointing and the right thing to do all at the same time.”

In a two-part episode, set to shoot in early April and air on May 12 and 19 on FOX, “The X-Files” bows out after nine seasons. Some may argue that it was one season too long, but Spotnitz isn’t sure what caused the decline. He is sure, though, that it wasn’t competition from ABC’s “Alias,” starring Jennifer Garner as a secret agent, in the Sunday, 9 p.m. ET time slot. “That’s silly,” says Spotnitz. “I’ve heard many, many theories about the show this year, but I don’t think there’s anything to that. If you look at the numbers for ‘The X-Files’ this year, in the very first episode, there was a significant portion of our audience that just didn’t come. They just weren’t there.”

“I could give you six different theories, and I don’t know which one it is. Is it because we started in November, and these other shows had weeks on the air to build an audience? Is it because we were up against ‘Saving Private Ryan’? Is it because Sept. 11 changed the zeitgeist of the country? Is it because people didn’t know we were on because there was so little promotion? Is it because David Duchovny left?”

“At the end of the day, from where we’re sitting, we just don’t know the answer.”

Spotnitz also doesn’t see a connection between FOX’s pickup of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” creator Joss Whedon’s science-fiction series “Firefly,” and “X” creator Chris Carter’s subsequent announcement that his show was over. “No, it’s just a coincidence, because the decision really was Chris’, and the timing of it was Chris’. He came to them. He had thought about it over the Christmas vacation. We delivered two really strong episodes at the beginning of January, and the audience wasn’t any bigger. He said, ‘Let’s get out while we’re ahead. We don’t want to limp out.'”

“I’m sure they have high hopes for ‘Firefly.’ Joss Whedon’s very talented, and I’m sure their hopes are high, as they should be. But ‘X-Files’ has been such a strong performer for so long, it’s got to be a little scary for them too, even with our ratings this year being lower than before.”

As for the rest of the season, Spotnitz promises a resolution to the cliffhanger finale of the short-lived “X” spin-off “The Lone Gunmen.” “We are going to clean up their finale, have Michael McKean in a great episode. Burt Reynolds is going to be in an episode written and directed by Chris. That’s episode 14, airing in April.”

And as for Duchovny returning to play Mulder in the finale, Spotnitz says, “I think it’s pretty likely. The irony is, he was going to come back to write and direct an episode before the season got announced.” Asked if questions will be answered, Spotnitz says, “I just want to say right away, we’re not going to answer all the questions. Anybody thinking we’re going to … you couldn’t possibly answer all the questions, you just couldn’t. We’ll do as much as we can.”

Of course, there is still the question of the second “X-Files” feature film, to which Spotnitz says, “Whatever the movie is, it’ll be a new beginning. What we’re most concerned about is finishing the series properly. We’re not really worried about whether there’s something left over for the movie. In all likelihood, the movie’s going to be a stand alone Mulder and Scully investigation anyway.”

Asked what’s next for him, Spotnitz laughs. “Frank doesn’t know. I know I’m going to do the next movie with Chris, but I don’t know if I’m going to go onto another show, create my own show, write another movie. It’s a very exciting, scary, weird time.”

Cinescape: Shiban talks final X-FILES stretch

Jan-21-2002
Cinescape
Shiban talks final X-FILES stretch
Christopher Allan Smith

In an exclusive interview with CINESCAPE Editor in Chief Anthony C. Ferrante, X-FILES co-executive producer and scribe John Shiban discussed the recent announcement that creator Chris Carter had decided to make this season the show’s last.

“Ultimately, it was Chris [Carter’s] decision,” Shiban said. “I think all the producers were feeling we wanted to go out in the right way and in a classy way. We wanted to give the series its due, to know the end is coming and plan for it. We also wanted to tie up the story lines we want to tie up and leave the storylines we wanted left open for the movies. We were all bittersweet it is to end. I think we all agreed this was the right thing to do and glad it happened this way, rather than waiting until the end of the season [to make that decision].”

Shiban also confirmed that discussions regarding the end of the show had been going on for quite some time.

“In each year at the beginning of the last few years, it’s been the question on everyone’s mind. ‘Is this going to be the last year?’ The timing of it, was all Chris.”

Shiban also said that despite Carter’s announced plan to use the time remaining to tie up loose ends, many of the episodes left will not deal with the elaborate mythology that originally made FILES famous. The crew is currently working on episode 14 of this season’s 20.

“Fourteen is going to be a standalone,” he said. “So will 15 and 16. We haven’t really changed our plan. We have episode 15, which features the Lone Gunmen. Although it’s an X-file, it’s a cool one. It features them prominently and its our way of tying up some of the loose ends from THE LONE GUNMEN series. Sixteen will also be a standalone – 17 and 18 are going to be standalones. [Episodes] 19 and 20 are a two-parter we planned for the end of the season which is a mythology show.

“To be honest, as we’re breaking each show, in the back of our minds [we’re thinking] this is the end. There’s more to do with the show than to tie up loose ends. We want the movies to go on and for the franchise to go on. There are emotional endings to be had that are not just plot endings. Even in the stand alones, I think there will be moments where we’re all aware this will be the last time we will be visiting some of these characters. That’s a nice thing. As far as changing our plans for the rest of the season, we’re still going to be doing the same number of mythology episodes.”