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X files home mother
X files home mother












x files home mother

He was at home visiting from Santa Barbara on the eve of November 22, 1998, which was the air date for the 6th season episode "Triangle." For some reason, even though I have always been an avid TV watcher, I had not watched the critically acclaimed show before that night. And Margaret’s death only leaves more Scully finds a quarter her mother had made into a pendant, and she is frustrated by not knowing its significance to her mom.Īs they sit under a gray sky with Scully’s mother’s urn, Scully tells Mulder, “I believe that you will find all of your answers, you will find all the answers to the biggest mysteries and I will be there when you do.” I hope she’s right, and I’m ready.First of all, I must thank my brother for bringing the joy of The X-Files into my life. The questions that still survive from the past. And he’s totally made me rethink my dream of owning a Keurig. This time around, though he and Scully cross their flashlight beams and find the root of the problem, Band-Aid Nose Man, may still be roaming the streets of Philadelphia. Back in the day, Mulder would have put the kibosh on the killing. It’s almost as if because odious people are the only ones losing their lives, there’s no need for a conclusion. Band-Aid Nose Man is sinister and apparently very smelly, but he’s not exactly scary, and his targets, while maybe not deserving of death, are selfish and unlikable. Because the killings are secondary, that story line feels a bit incomplete. The point underlying the murders is the thread that leads us back to the dark lives that Mulder and Scully have tried unsuccessfully to leave behind. Despite his efforts, Scully tells him, and herself, that we are responsible for the things we make (whether they be children or murderous phantoms). This is a man convincingly afraid of his creation but unable to stop the killing.

x files home mother

The creature, we’re told, took a violent thought from his maker and adopted it as his purpose. The Band-Aid Nose Man, as he’s known, also appears sometimes as a graffiti figure, and he’s revealed to be the “thought form” ( tulpa or tulku) of a street artist. He rips apart a couple of developers, some art thieves and a snooty school board president, carefully disposing of some of the body parts in nearby waste receptacles (though, as Mulder drolly points out, not in the proper recycling bins). Their guardian arrives in a garbage truck. The message “You’re Responsible,” emblazoned on a yellow poster, is the first image we see, which sets up gentrification and environmental apathy as villains and the homeless as victims in need of an avenging angel. The weight of responsibility - and the price of neglecting it - is also the theme tying together the two halves of this episode: Scully’s torment and loss and the fly-swarmed trash monster terrorizing downtown Philadelphia. With the death of her mother, she’s feeling her son’s absence - and her own guilt over that absence - even more keenly. “Home” began the rumination, which continued with “Never Again,” where Scully seemed to be turning away from the idea of motherhood to find herself, “only to discover a dark side” she had been unfamiliar with, and ends with this episode, “Home Again.” The story line is woven together by the thread of personal responsibility, something Scully fears she has abandoned in putting William up for adoption.

x files home mother

Anderson had just given birth to her first baby, a daughter named Piper Maru, whose name would grace an episode in Season 3 and who lent her artwork to last week’s episode). bedside, we flash back to Scully’s own coma in Season 2’s “One Breath.” We see a much younger Mulder attending her as she fights her way back from the aftermath of what they thought was an alien abduction.

x files home mother

We are pulled swiftly and painfully back in the day and into “X-Files” mythology, with the death of Margaret Scully (a role reprised very briefly by Sheila Larken, whose stoical performances match Gillian Anderson’s, suggesting the origin of Scully’s inner strength and reserve).Īfter Scully rushes from a horrific crime scene in Philadelphia to her mother’s I.C.U. Scully lost her husband (Season 1, “Beyond the Sea,” which is also beyond creepy), and her other daughter, Melissa (Season 3, “Paper Clip”). Scully was about the only person who called Mulder Fox. And she never pushed Mulder away, even when his exploits repeatedly put her daughter in peril. She supported her choice to leave behind a medical career and pursue her work in the F.B.I. Back in the day, Scully’s mother was her rock. “Back in the day,” both the concept and the actual phrase, are prominent in this episode of “The X-Files.” So let’s begin there.














X files home mother