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The X Files: I Want to Believe

Movie Info

RATING:

PG-13 for violent and disturbing content and thematic material.

GENRE:

Science Fiction / Fantasy, Thriller, Adaptation, Sequel

RELEASE:

July 25, 2008

STARRING:

David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson, Xzibit , Amanda Peet, Billy Connolly

DIRECTOR:

Chris C. Carter

DISTRIBUTORS:

20th Century Fox/News Corp.

OFFICIAL WEB SITE:

www.xfiles.com

 

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MOVIE REVIEW

The X Files: I Want to Believe

Movieguide Magazine

CBN.com - The TV series of The X Files often flirted with the sometimes fine line between belief and doubt about religion, paranormal events, monsters, and aliens. The second feature length movie, subtitled I Want to Believe, returns to that ambiguity in a story that takes the relationship between the two lead characters to a new level. The acclaimed Bulgarian-French literary theorist Tzvetan Todorov labels this supernatural ambiguity in storytelling as “the fantastic.”

The X Files: I Want to Believe opens six years later, with former FBI Agent Dana Scully working as a doctor at a Catholic hospital. She is trying to save the life of a boy with an incurable brain disease, but the hospital hierarchy, including its top priest, believes it’s time to stop doing more tests or looking for a cure.

An FBI agent approaches Scully. He’s looking for her ex-partner, Fox Mulder, to help them find a female agent who was apparently kidnapped. A priest claiming to be getting visions from God has found a severed arm from one of the men who apparently took the female agent but was severely hurt during his struggle with her. The priest, named Father Joe, believes God is telling him that the agent is still alive. The FBI needs Mulder’s expertise in the paranormal to deal with Father Joe, who also happens to be a pedophile seeking absolution for his own crimes. They promise amnesty for Mulder, who previously had been charged with criminal acts of insubordination against his FBI superiors.

Mulder takes up the FBI on its offer. He wants Scully to help him with the case, but she doesn’t want to follow Mulder into the darkness again. A skeptic regarding the supernatural, Scully also is personally disgusted by Father Joe’s crimes. She thinks there are some crimes that should never be forgiven. Something the priest says begins to haunt her, however. Then, when Mulder finally discovers who’s behind the kidnapping, Scully may be the only one who can save Mulder’s life.

The X Files: I Want to Believe is like a standalone episode of the TV series. That gives it a B movie level quality that may only please fans of the TV show. Other fans, however, may be disappointed that the movie doesn’t explore further the connection between Mulder’s missing sister and the alien conspiracy that occupied much of the show’s later episodes and the first X Files movie.

(SPOILER ALERT) The new movie does, however, take Scully and Mulder’s relationship to a new level. By the end of the movie, they decide to spend their lives together, although there is no mention about getting married. Still, David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson continue to give appealing performances that make the viewer want to follow these characters.

Like in the TV series, Mulder is the believer and Scully is the skeptic in the movie. There is brief mention of Mulder’s faith, implying that he’s a Catholic like Father Joe, but Mulder also tends to believe in occult manifestations too. This time, the conflict between Mulder and Scully revolves around Father Joe. Is Father Joe truly receiving psychic visions from God. Or, is he somehow involved with the kidnappers, who turn out to be running a black market ring for organ transplants? Another question about Father Joe is the question of whether God has accepted his petitions of forgiveness for his acts of pedophilia.

The movie leaves most of these questions open ended for the audience to decide. One scene at the very end, however, shows Scully choosing to believe a cryptic comment Father Joe made to her. He tells her, “Don’t give up,” and that’s exactly what she does in trying to cure the boy with the terrible brain disease.

Despite this, and Mulder’s, positive nods to faith, the movie’s portrayal of the Catholic clergy is not entirely positive. Father Joe is a pedophile searching for forgiveness and regeneration. And, the priest at the Catholic hospital is shown to be mean and manipulative. Finally, the cure for the boy involves stem cell research, but the movie makes no distinction between adult stem cells and embryonic stem cells. The movie tries to downplay or avoid the moral controversy surrounding this issue, which doesn’t make much sense considering that the movie clearly takes a stand against the macabre Frankenstein experiments of the people who kidnapped the female FBI agent. Embryonic stem cell research abuses, kills, and destroys the gift of human life. Adult stem cell research does not, so many Christian authorities believe that medical science should rely on that option instead.

Ultimately, therefore, the movie’s worldview is mixed. It’s neither here nor there. Consequently, sensitive media-wise moviegoers probably will want to avoid any further exploration into the macabre world of The X Files. That said, the release of this movie does present an opportunity for believers to discuss the historical evidence on which their Christian faith is based. As Paul writes in Hebrew 11:1, “Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen [King James Version].”

Address Comments To:
Rupert Murdoch, Chairman/CEO of News Corp.
Peter Chernin, President/COO of The Fox Group
Tom Rothman and Jim Gianopulos, Chairmen/CEO
Fox Filmed Entertainment
20th Century Fox Film Corp.
10201 West Pico Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90035
Phone: (310) 369-1000
Web Site: www.fox.com

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NOTE from Dr. Ted Baehr, publisher of Movieguide Magazine. For more information from a Christian perspective, order the latest Movieguide Magazine by calling 1-800-899-6684(MOVI) or visit our website at www.movieguide.org. Movieguide is dedicated to redeeming the values of Hollywood by informing parents about today's movies and entertainment and by showing media executives and artists that family-friendly and even Christian-friendly movies do best at the box office year in and year out. Movieguide now offers an online subscription to its magazine version, at www.movieguide.org. The magazine, which comes out 25 times a year, contains many informative articles and reviews that help parents train their children to be media-wise consumers.


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