The X-Files Season 1: Difference between revisions

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Aaaand the first appearance of the lone gunmen.
Aaaand the first appearance of the lone gunmen.
How do Mulder and Scully get away with investigations like this?  Simply from the standpoint of paying for their trips and vehicles presumably with Bureau funds?  I mean, giving Mulder wide latitude to investigate strange cases, OK, but just plain checking out a UFO report and following up on it aggressively goes beyond investigating a strange FBI case.
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118: '''Miracle Man''' ''[[1994]] [[March 18]]''
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119: '''Shapes''' ''[[1994]] [[April 1]]''
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120: '''Darkness Falls''' ''[[1994]] [[April 15]]''
Heeey, the Man in Black is looking a bit Tom Selleck in his young age.
So I am left with questions.  They believe the loggers who disappeared decades ago met the same fate as these recent ones.  However, they also believe these recent loggers were their own doom by chopping down an old tree.  So what happened to the first set of bugs?  Did they just die off?  Or not care to migrate at all?  In which case being so worried about them doing so now seems overblown?
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121: '''Tooms''' ''[[1994]] [[April 22]]''
Our man Eugene from the first monster-of-the-week episode is back!
Also the first appearance of [[Mitch Pileggi]] as Skinner.
I note they say Scully and Mulder have a 75% success rate of solving cases.  That... seems like a lot.  Usually I watch these episodes and get the impression that while the viewer knows what happened, it's not the sort of thing that some FBI higher-up is going to look at and say "Case closed!"  Usually things are left vague, or people end up dead before things can go to court, or they disappear.  Buuut I guess they must be doing pretty well off-screen.
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122: '''Born Again''' ''[[1994]] [[April 29]]''
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123: '''Roland''' ''[[1994]] [[May 6]]''
They sure didn't make Arthur very sympathetic.  I mean, sure, he's a killer, but usually unless they're just crazy they have some good reason behind it.  But this guy... just seemed pissed that his coworkers were going to finish a project they'd all been cooperatively working on, and he wasn't going to get any of the glory because he's dead.  Now for a bit they made it seem like they were going to say Arthur had been killed by them, but they never did.  They said there wasn't an apparent reason for his car crash, and showed one of the survivors to be a douche, but that's not nearly enough.
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124: '''The Erlenmeyer Flask''' ''[[1994]] [[May 13]]''
Crazy microscope lady says something like "This isn't found in nature.  That means by definition it's extra-terrestrial!"  Whoa whoa whoa, hold your horses.  Does that make Twinkies and Wiis extraterrestrial?
DVD note: The reveal of the frozen body just isn't such a big reveal when it's the DVD menu image for the episode.  And the season.  And the main image on the case for the season.
So Deep Throat is shot and killed here.  This leaves me with a few procedural questions.  One, how do Mulder and Scully report this?  Anonymously, and ditch him there?  Say that their super secret source was shot during a trade-off of stolen goods?  And though I don't think this is mentioned until early next season, Mulder says he looked at the guy's funeral.  So at least THEY now know the guy's real name and official position, but they're not bothering to tell the viewer?


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[[The X-Files Season 2]]
[[The X-Files Season 2]]
[[Category:The X-Files Seasons]]