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| Dvdivas
was founded by John Gabbard in 2000. It's purpose has been and
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"The
X-Files: Season 9"
|
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Reviewed
by: |
Wayne A. Klein |
| Genre: |
Science fiction/horror
|
| Video: |
1.78:1 Anamorphic
Widescreen Transfer |
| Audio: |
Dolby Digital
5.1 |
| Languages |
English,
Spanish, French |
| Subtitles |
English |
| Length |
1110 minutes |
| Rating |
NR |
| Release Date |
5/11/04 |
| Studio |
20th Century
Fox Home Video |
| Commentary:
|
Paul Rabwin
on "Nothing Important Happened Today" "Trust No 1"; Chris Carter
on "Improbable"; Vince Gilligan, John Shiban, Frank Spotnitz,
Mat Beck on "Jump the Shark"; Kim Manners, Mat Beck, Paul Rabwin
on "The Truth"; deleted scenes with optional commentary by Frank
Spotnitz and Chris Carter |
| Documentaries:
|
"The Making
of 'The Truth'"; "Secrets of the X-Files"; "More Secrets of
the X-Files" |
| Featurettes:
|
"On Location"; "Cake
Cutting"; "Monica Reyes Profile", "Brad Follmer"' Tribute to
the X-Files" |
| Filmography/Biography:
|
None |
|
Interviews: |
Chris Carter
|
| Trailers/TV
Spots: |
None |
| Alternate/Deleted
Scenes: |
Deleted scenes
|
| Music
Video: |
None |
| Other:
|
DVD-ROM game
"The Truth" |
| Cast
and Crew: |
Robert Patrick,
Annabeth Gish, Gillian Anderson, David Duchovny, Mitch Pileggi,
William B. Davis, Carey Elwes, Lucy Lawless |
| Written
By: |
Chris Carter,
Frank Spotnitz, Vince Gilligan |
| Produced
By: |
Chris Carter,
Frank Spotniz |
| Directed
By: |
Kim Manners,
John Shiban, Vince Gilligan, Chris Carter, Tony Wharmby, Dwight
Little |
| Music:
|
Mark Snow
|
| The
Review: |
Entropy's a bitch. After a series
reaches its peak there's a chance that the quality of the
writing, direction and performances can ease into a certain
comfort zone. Once that point is reached a series will usually,
despite a couple of highlights, go into slow decline. Such
was the case with the revolutionary "The X-Files". Chris Carter's
original premise combining our collective paranoia about the
government, conspiracy theories and fascination with UFO's
and paranormal incidents propelled "The X-Files" into one
of Fox Network's first early hits. Unfortunately, Carter faced
the Roddenberry curse; "The X-Files" was so groundbreaking
and influential that Carter had a hard time coming up with
anything quite as innovative and interesting. Despite attempting
to channel David Fincher's "Seven" with the increasingly absurd
"Millennium" and other "Files" spin offs, Carter couldn't
recapture the lightening in a bottle that had made "Files"
so unique. ***
Despite a number of well crafted
episodes and a shift to new cast members earlier in the show's
life, the 9th season of "The X-Files" showed all the symptoms
of television's equivalent of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. While
newer cast members Robert Patrick and Annabeth Gish brought
much needed energy and a change in tone to the series, the
faced the challenge of following in the wake of David Duchovny
and Gillian Anderson as Mulder and Scully the two pivotal
characters that the series was build around. Still, there
were delights to be found during the 9th season. Episodes
such as "Sunshine Days", "Improbable" and "Scary Monster"
had some life in them and at times captured the show's power
from the two best seasons (3 and 4 were the strongest). While
the "mythology" episode arcs are interesting, I personally
found the stand alone episodes among the series' best. That's
much more the case here as the show was winding down. The
final episode "The Truth" tried to tie it all together but
the series fizzled out and Carter was well out of his depth
as a writer on this particular episode. ***
|
| Image
and Sound: |
With four episodes on each dual
layer disc, the picture quality appears quite good. There's
the usual transfer problems inherent with squeezing so many
episodes of such a textured series on onto one disc. The dark
look of many of the episodes might prove to be a problem for
a series that was transferred with less care. Luckily, the
transfer looks unusually rich with vivid colors, sharp image
quality. Edge enhacement (a technique used to sharpen the
picture but that sacrifices the detail in a picture) is kept
to a minimum throughout the set. ***
The exceptional sound quality of
the set gains considerable depth and motion in the 5.1 Surround
mix presented here. There's quite a bit of fine detail that
didn't come through on the broadcast episodes that are apparent
for the first time here on DVD. Some of these episodes would
have benefited from a separate Surround track for the soundtrack
but as it is Fox has done a fine job of keeping the presentation
quality very high. ***
|
| The
Extras: |
Although "The X-Files" has a retail
price higher than many other boxed sets, the extras included
(along with the nearly pristine picture and sound quality)
play a part in that expense. We get four documentaries including
a 90 minute "Making of" on the grand finale "The Truth". While
that particular episode probably shouldn't have enjoyed so
much attention (there were much better episodes during the
9th season), it's place as the conclusion of the "mythology"
story arc started during the first season of the series makes
it an appropriate choice. What would have worked better would
have been a 90 minute documentary covering the entire series
of story arcs presented during the show's run. Since Carter
created his "mythology" episodes initially without a full
idea as to how they would end once the series concluded, it
would have been much more interesting to find out about the
planning and creation of these episodes over the life of the
series. ***
We also get a couple of featurettes/documentaries
on "The Secrets of 'The X-Files'" and an interesting look
at season 9's creation. There's also profiles on a number
of characters from the show as well as deleted scenes some
of which would have improved a couple of episodes if they
had been reintegrated into the original broadcast shows. We
get the option of listening to commentary by Carter and/or
Frank Spotnitz about the deleted scenes which provides much
of rationale as to why they were cut. ---
|
| Commentary:
|
Fox has gotten
increasingly more generous when it comes to commentary with
each successive season. The 9th season has no less than 6 episodes.
We get a sense from the various writers/directors/producers/special
effects people on the various episodes as to the place and importance
these key episodes have in the series as a whole. Although some
might suspect Chris Carter's commentaries to be the most essential
and important, Spotnitz and the others contributing provide
just as much insight. *** The commentary on the deleted scenes
also gives the viewer a sense as to why they were created but,
more importantly, why they were deemed expendable when it came
to the final cut. Some of these deleted scenes were probably
shot for the foreign market as well and, as a result, amount
to padding but some provide essential character details. ---
|
| Final
Words: |
A terrific series that looked like
it might be a one trick pony when it was first aired, "The
X-Files" managed to help redefine television with its complex
story arcs, interesting characters and paranoid atmosphere.
Although the writing and direction sagged during the series
last three seasons, Season 9 still had enough kick to keep
the show interesting. ***
Like any series or film casting
became just as important as the high quality writing and direction
of the series. Even when the two main leads departed the series
or spent less and less time on screen, the inspired casting
managed to come up with interesting character actors to occupy
the new central roles of the series. The fine extras include
a number of quality documentaries, featurettes and commentary
tracks as well as deleted scenes making "The X-Files" (despite
its considerable cost) a worthwhile investment for fans of
the series.
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