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The X Files: I Want to Believe
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The X Files: I Want to Believe (2008) More at IMDbPro »

Photos (see all 77 | slideshow) Videos (see all 9)
This is the second theatrical trailer for The X-Files: I Want to Believe, directed by Chris Carter.
FBI agents Mulder and Scully are called back to duty when a priest's visions may contain information about a kidnapped agent.
Interview: Chris Carter "On what the audience can expect"

Overview

User Rating:
6.0/10   24,633 votes
Director:
Chris Carter
Writers (WGA):
Frank Spotnitz (written by) and
Chris Carter (written by) ...
more
Release Date:
25 July 2008 (USA) more
Genre:
Drama | Mystery | Sci-Fi more
Tagline:
Believe Again more
Plot:
Mulder and Scully are called back to duty by the FBI when a former priest claims to be receiving psychic visions pertaining to a kidnapped agent. | full synopsis
NewsDesk:
(93 articles)
Worst Excuse for an Award Show Announces Their Nominees
 (From Rope Of Silicon. 7 January 2009, 12:24 PM, PST)

Dread Central's Best & Worst of 2008
 (From Dread Central. 29 December 2008, 7:09 PM, PST)

User Comments:
No Country for Old X-Files more

Cast

 (Cast overview, first billed only)
Create a character page for: ?

Additional Details

Also Known As:
The X Files 2 (USA) (working title)
The X Files: Done One (USA) (working title)
The X-Files (USA) (promotional abbreviation)
The X-Files Movie (USA) (promotional title)
The X-Files: I Want to Believe (USA) (alternative spelling)
Untitled X Files Sequel (USA) (working title)
X-Files: Je veux y croire (Canada: French title)
more
MPAA:
Rated PG-13 for violent and disturbing content and thematic material.
Runtime:
USA:104 min
Country:
USA | Canada
Language:
English | Russian | Czech
Color:
Color
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Dolby Digital | DTS | SDDS
MOVIEmeter: ?
V 21% since last week why?

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
When Mulder and Scully first walk back into the FBI offices right before they walk into the bullpen, a female agent walks by that catches Mulder's attention and he watches her walk away. The woman is Vanessa Morley, who throughout the series played the young Samantha Mulder, and is the same Samantha in the photo Mulder has taped to the back of his home office door. more
Goofs:
Errors in geography: In parts of the movie, you can clearly see snow capped mountains in the background. No such mountains exist in West Virginia. more
Quotes:
Fox Mulder: What's up, Doc? more
Movie Connections:
Features "The Jeffersons" (1975) more
Soundtrack:
Ohh la la more

FAQ

Will there be a third film?
Is this movie inspired by real-life paranormal activity like in the TV series?
Is this a "Shipper" movie?
more
126 out of 210 people found the following comment useful:-
No Country for Old X-Files, 27 July 2008
5/10
Author: David H. Schleicher from New Jersey, USA

The world is a greatly changed place since the heyday of "The X-files." Back in the late 1990's the TV show was at its height and tapping into the shared fears of the day: fear of the unknown, fear of the impending millennium, and fear that something larger than us (the government or alien invaders) was up to no good. Flash forward to the year 2008 and we know all that hubbub about the millennium was for nothing, our government has been up to no good for years, and it's not space invaders we need to worry about but other people terrorizing us. The murky, gloomy, grim style of "The X-Files" is now the norm with feverish and dark films like "There Will Be Blood" and "The Dark Knight" tapping into the mindset of culture today from opposite ends of the film spectrum.

Apparently creator Chris Carter didn't realize his baby was irrelevant now. His only mission should've been to please the faithful. If he wanted to revive his series on film, he had best stick to the labyrinthine alien mythology that still has some die-hard fans buzzing, or at the very least deliver a fun stand-alone monster-of-the-week style flick that would make fans jump in their seats. With "The X-Files: I Want to Believe" he does neither of those things. Instead, he gives us a story where Mulder and Scully come out of hiding to work on a case where the FBI are using a psychic criminal priest to help locate a missing agent and track down a potential serial killer. The plot fits more into the mold of his far less popular companion series "Millennium" than it does to "The X-Files." Apparently Carter wanted to please no one except perhaps himself.

The weirdest thing about the film is that it isn't all that bad. Carter as a director lays on some decent atmosphere (with all the global-warming defying snow and some eerie nighttime shots) and creates some palpable tension as the horrors of the case grow grimmer. The chemistry between Mulder (a lazy but effective David Duchovny) and Scully (an amazingly fully ranged and emotional Gillian Anderson) is still there, and Anderson's performance is especially gripping. Billy Connolly, cast against type, gives an interesting turn as the corrupted priest searching for redemption through his visions that probably would've garnered an Emmy nod had this been a very special two-part TV episode. Also good is Amanda Peet, looking smashing in her smart FBI pantsuits.

Most interesting is the story arc given Dana Scully. I honestly had stopped watching the show after the sixth season, and aside from the mythology storyline that built up to the first film released ten years ago, I recall some of my favorite episodes being the ones where Scully questioned her faith and struggled with reconciling her Catholicism with her scientific approach to the paranormal investigations. This is again explored here, as Scully, always the skeptic, so desperately wants to believe in something. However, it's an odd choice for Carter to focus on this internal human drama when he should be focusing on how to bring fans back into the fold. It would've been an interesting and compelling layer had Carter not been so inept with the rest of the plot.

In the end some fine performances and a moody atmosphere do not add up to a good time. Eventually it becomes an uncomfortable and anachronistic creep-fest that plays like the type of suspense thriller that ruled the roost in the mid-1990's after films like "Silence of the Lambs" and "Seven" made police detection and serial killing popular entertainment. Well, it's 2008, Mr. Carter, and it's time to wake up from your prolonged nightmare that was rendered uninteresting in 2001.

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I just saw this Wellis6867
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