Posted on 01/30/2016 5:02:19 PM PST by E. Pluribus Unum
The truth has never been more out there.
Foxâs upcoming and eagerly awaited revival of The X-Files is updating its conspiracy theories â only this time, the sci-fi series might cause more controversy than when the show told tales of government-aided UFO cover-ups during its initial 1990s run.
RELATED: X-Files Returns: EW Exclusive Photos
In the first return episode screened for reporters (trailer below), paranormal investigators Mulder (David Duchovny) and Scully (Gillian Anderson) team up with a charming web-series host named Tad OâMalley (played by the usually comedic Joel McHale, here in a dramatic role). The character, loosely based on conservative online personalities Alex Jones and Glenn Beck, bashes the âliberal mediaâ in the episode; at one point, Mulder compares OâMalley to Fox News host Bill OâReilly (âWhat Bill OâReilly knows about the truth can fill an eyedropper,â OâMalley retorts).
Now we donât want to reveal too much about the episode, or how the conspiracy relates to the showâs existing labyrinthine mythology. What we will report â and stop reading if you donât want to know anything about the first hour â is that OâMalley eventually sways Mulder and Scully to adopt a new conspiracy that lays a framework for the six-episode revival. The theory involves global warming, war in the Middle East, NSA spying, chem-trails (here called âaerial contaminantsâ), police militarization, supposed FEMA prison camps, and the eventual military âtakeover of Americaâ by a UN-like group of âmultinational elites.â The conspiracy theory plays a bit like Oliver Stone during his JFK fever pitch â only if his source material was Infowars instead of UFO lore.
âWe live in a CitizenFour world now,â says creator Chris Carter, referring to the documentary on NSA leaker Edward Snowden. âWeâve given up certain rights and freedoms because we want the government to protect us after 9/11. We see the admitted spying by the government. These are not things weâre making up and it informs everything Mulder and Scully and doing are doing.â
Carter describes himself as a âmostly interested observerâ in the conspiracy world, and notes he researched the new show by combing through conspiracy websites and attending a conspiracy convention.
âIâve kept my finger to the wind and trying to figure out whatâs relevant and possible credible,â Carter says. âPeople know the show deals with science and fact and also deals with far-flung theories about not only the supernatural but government conspiracies. It throws out as many questions as it does answers. And I have to say what itâs done for me and the writers it has given us a whole new open field which to run. Itâs given the show an interesting new life and context that it might not have had in 2002.â
The U.N. takeover threat, however, is something Carter suggests is credible. âThe idea of a New World Order is relevant,â Carter says. When we suggest the show is embracing âright-wingâ theories, Carter counters, âItâs not necessarily. I donât see Alex Jones as right-wing, I see him as libertarian ⦠[and OâMalley is] a character who casts everything in doubt.â
The most eyebrow-raising moment in the premiere is when OâMalley brings the 9/11 terrorist attacks into his conspiracy framework. â9/11 was a false flag operation,â OâMalley declares on his Truth Squad with Tad OâMalley show, echoing on Infowars theory. âItâs all part of a conspiracy dating back to the UFO crash at Roswell.â The clip is presented early in the episode. Later, Mulder and Scully embrace OâMalleyâs overall position, though the 9/11 element isnât referenced.
âSo hereâs the thing,â Carter says when we asked about the âfalse flagâ line. âChris Carter doesnât believe that. Chris Carter is very open minded about these things. But the character OâMalley believes it. And he convinces Mulder to â not necessarily believe that â but to believe many other things heâs exposing. I donât think Mulder and Scully adopt any political position so much as a new approach in their search for the truth. While I think their politics are balanced, I think the turn they take is toward a more heretical political position.â
X-Files is obviously as fictional of a series as they come, but it will be interesting to see how fans respond to their heroes exploring a conspiracy framework that touches on issues more sensitive than the ones when the show first aired.
For more on what to expect from The X-Files revival, pick up this weekâs issue of Entertainment Weekly. The series returns Jan. 21. Hereâs the trailer:
The conspiracy spiel in the first episode was cringe-worthy.
I love it !
I did indeed cringe.
More David Icke than Alex Jones, actually.
Fox has gone dark side. I am leaving.
Chris Carter said Alex and Glenn in the article.
I used to watch it about half the time. Seems like most episodes were not that good but still a lot of interesting ones.
One I remember was when they were in the Apalachicola National Forest where descendants of Ponce de Leon’s men were still hiding.
Ditto...evil right wing government types messing with embryos. Sure sounds plausible. /s
I never watched any of the original series episodes. But I heard a lot of talk about how great it was. After this smear, I don't think I'll watch any more of these episodes.
I was really disappointed. We have enough real problems without making up this fantasy conspiracy stuff. Our big problem is Islam. It is the real truth.
Oââ¬â¢Malleyââ¬â¢: this is an example of mangled text that is seemingly ubiquitous here at FreeRepublic. Can’t the webmaster do anything about it? It is very annoying.
The original could be fun — and Gillian Anderson was a cutie.
Mulderisms and Scullyisms
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T0sVps-bRsA
The reverse I think as Dave says its aliens that control the planet wile Alex says it just corrupt elite humans & does not subscribe to the alien postulation.
It's the other way around -- Alex Jones (born on February 11, 1974) appears to have nabbed most of his nitwit ideas from the X-Files (originally aired September 10, 1993, to May 19, 2002). The creator of the X-Files and the writers borrowed some real and quasi-real events and whatnot from the fringe literature, and created other material out of the whole cloth.
The conspiracy theories in X-files are like the zombies in Walking Dead- just dressing.
The original X Files was never about reality.
No reason to expect the reboot to be.
X files?
Heck, we have X files right here on FR.
The posted article looks like it was typed out by aliens in their native langauge.
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