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Reviews
> Season 8 > Roadrunners
by
Visimag.com
(Cult Times)
It's all change this year. In Mulder's absence the
people on The X-Files are finding new roles. We examine
the cast's place in the latest episodes on Sky this month.
Gillian Anderson's suddenly got a massive responsibility
to assume. David Duchovny's swanned off trying to get his
film career into top gear, and if he succeeds, we'll never
see him much again. If he fails, then Mulder will probably
be back before we know it. But in the meantime, Anderson's
Scully, as the established character, has to step up and
carry more of the show than she ever has in the past.
This shouldn't be too much of a problem. Seven years into
The X-Files and now a veteran of of a number of films
(including, to great acclaim, the lead in Terence Davies's
The House of Mirth), Anderson knows what she's
doing inside out. In the past couple of years, as Duchovny
has grown less interested in The X-Files, there have also
been episodes that have almost been solo outings for
Scully. And even with Mulder gone, it looks like those
solo outings will continue. Roadrunners hardly
features Scully's new partner, John Doggett, with Anderson
hogging all the attention and putting in an outstanding
performance as a vulnerable woman isolated and out of her
depth.
One of the highlights of the season so far, Roadrunners
is The X-Files at its ghoulish best. Scully hears about
the corpse of a man in his mid-20's who was beaten to
death, literally in the middle of nowhere, out in the
desert. What piques her interest is the fact that the
man's spine is prematurely aged - she tells Doggett that
it's like that of a 90-year-old woman. But, thinking that
she's been around a bit and can cope with performing the
post-mortem, having a look round the murder site and going
on her way, Scully doesn't even mention where she's gone
to her new partner until she's already on the scene of the
crime. Doggett grumbles down the phone at her, cross that
he's been left out of the loop, but there's nothing weird
to make Scully regret not having brought him to keep her
company.
Until, that is, the locals of the only village for miles
around fill her petrol tank with water so that her car
stalls, cut all their phone wires so that she can't call
anyone for help, and beg her, in her role as a doctor, to
treat a sickly stranger whose spinal column is playing
host to a particularly nasty-looking parasitic worm. And
guess who the locals think will make a good home for their
pet worm when the current host dies...
Roadrunners plays heavily on Scully's unexplained
pregnancy. The episode's events could (and should, but
this is The X-Files, so events don't necessarily have
their rightful consequences) have serious implications for
the unborn child's safety. What's more, it doesn't take
Freud to see something sinister and phallic in the
mysterious worm. Despite Doggett's marginal role, it's an
important episode for the relationship between the two
characters, proving to Scully that, in Mulder's absence,
she's got to trust and rely on new
friends.
Quote of the ep: "This
wound in your back, it seems to be a point of entry for a
parasitic organism....Now, this is something I'm
completely unfamiliar with." - Special Agent Dana
Scully. Source:
Cult
Times, typed by me
- Text © 2001 Visual Imagination Limited (see the Visimag
Website)
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