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Demons (The X-Files)

"Demons" is the twenty-third episode of the fourth season of the American science fiction television series The X-Files. It premiered on the Fox network in the United States on May 11, 1997 and in the United Kingdom on BBC One on February 25, 1998. It was written by R. W. Goodwin and directed by Kim Manners. The episode helps explore the series' overarching mythology. "Demons" received a Nielsen rating of 11.8, being watched by 19.1 million viewers in its initial broadcast. The episode received mostly positive reviews from television critics, with many complimenting the episode's look in Mulder's mind.

"Demons"
The X-Files episode
The Smoking Man with Samantha Mulder in a flashback. The sequence's colors were manipulated during film development; the film's negatives were filtered with strobe lights.
Episode no.Season 4
Episode 23
Directed byKim Manners
Written byR. W. Goodwin
Production code4X23
Original air dateMay 11, 1997 (1997-05-11)
Running time44 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Elegy"
Next →
"Gethsemane"
The X-Files (season 4)
List of episodes

The show centers on FBI special agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) who work on cases linked to the paranormal, called X-Files. Mulder is a believer in the paranormal, while the skeptical Scully has been assigned to debunk his work. In this episode, Mulder wakes up in a hotel with blood all over him and no memory of what happened. Mulder and Scully soon discover that Mulder was involved in a double homicide and may have been the killer. It is soon revealed that Mulder had been seeing a doctor who had allowed him to view glimpses of his past memories. After evidence becomes paramount, Mulder is cleared of the murder charges.

The episode was written by R. W. Goodwin, an executive producer and director for the show. This marked the second instance where a member of the production crew wrote an episode, after the third season entry "Wetwired", written by Mat Beck. The episode was influenced by An Anthropologist on Mars, a series of essays by Oliver Sacks, in particular The Landscape of Dreams featuring a man who could recall every detail of his childhood. During the flashback sequences in the episode, various effects were created by manipulating the camera and its film.

Plot edit

Fox Mulder's (David Duchovny) mind flashes back to being in the attic with his sister Samantha while their parents are arguing downstairs. Back in the present, Mulder wakes up in a hotel room in Providence, Rhode Island, covered in blood. Mulder calls Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), who arrives, finding him in shock. Mulder has a pounding headache and has no memory of what he has done in the past two days. Scully finds that two bullets have been fired from Mulder's gun and that he has keys belonging to a David and Amy Cassandra. Scully wants Mulder to check into a hospital, but he wants to find out if he was involved in a crime before doing so. The agents arrive at the Cassandras' house where the housekeeper tells them they are not at home. Mulder recognizes a house in many of the Cassandras' paintings: a house that is near his parents' summer home in Rhode Island. When they arrive there, Mulder has striking pains in his head and flashes back again to when he was a child, seeing a younger version of The Smoking Man (Chris Owens) in his home. The agents enter the home, where they find the Cassandras dead from gunshot wounds.

The agents call the police, who take Mulder with them due to the circumstantial evidence against him. Scully performs an autopsy on Amy Cassandra, finding a scab on her forehead. The detective in charge of the case tells Mulder that they have found David and Amy's blood on his shirt. Mulder refuses to confess to the murders, not remembering anything. Scully arrives, saying she found in Amy's blood traces of ketamine, an anesthesic substance that has hallucinogenic properties. The substance was detected in Mulder's blood as well. Meanwhile, one of the officers at the station kills himself; he has similar symptoms to that of the Cassandras. Mulder suffers a seizure and flashes back to his childhood again, witnessing his parents arguing with The Smoking Man. Scully sees Mulder the next day, telling him that she believes that the Cassandras killed themselves after receiving psychiatric treatment and that Mulder was visiting them about their alien abduction experiences.

The agents visit Dr. Goldstein in Warwick, Rhode Island, who was treating Amy with an aggressive method to help her recover her abduction memories. Goldstein also treated the police officer, but says he has not met Mulder before. Mulder has another painful flashback of The Smoking Man arguing with his mother, Teena Mulder. Mulder declines Scully's request that he go to the hospital and goes to visit his mother, demanding she explain what really happened when they had to make a choice between him and Samantha. Mulder believes that The Smoking Man forced them to take Samantha. Mulder also questions who his father really is. Mulder's mother gets upset and refuses to provide him answers. Later Mulder visits Goldstein, and convinces him to again treat him so he will remember what really happened. Mulder has further visions of the past. Scully and the police arrive soon after to arrest Goldstein but find Mulder gone. Scully finds him at the family's summer home in Rhode Island and is able to calm him down. While Mulder is cleared in the deaths of the Cassandras, what truly happened when he was a child remains a mystery.[1]

Production edit

Writing edit

 
The episode was inspired by the essay "The Landscape of His Dreams", written by Oliver Sacks.

"Demons" was written by R. W. Goodwin, an executive producer and director for the show. Goodwin was inspired to write the episode after reading "The Landscape of Dreams", an essay by the neurologist and best-selling author Oliver Sacks from the anthology book An Anthropologist on Mars: Seven Paradoxical Tales (1995), which details a man who could recall every detail of his childhood. Interested in this idea, Goodwin developed a story in which "Mulder wakes up in a strange place [with] no idea how he got there".[2] After receiving approval from series creator Chris Carter, Goodwin spent approximately six weeks writing the final episode.[2]

The episode explores the past of The Smoking Man, the series' chief antagonist. William B. Davis, the actor who played the character, later noted, "As the story developed, we developed a relationship between Cigarette-Smoking Man and Mulder's apparent father, and Cigarette-Smoking Man and Mulder's mother; then we started backfilling with an historical connection."[3] Carter explained that the episode was the start of the series' greater conspiracy: "It's an interesting development because it really was the development of the conspiracy. The elements of the conspiracy were part of his development. But [The Smoking Man's] back story, of course, intertwined with Mulder's."[3] For this episode, actor Chris Owens reprised his role as The Smoking Man; he had previously played him in the season's earlier episode "Musings of a Cigarette Smoking Man".[4]

The episode is based around the idea that Geschwind syndrome (a group of behavioral phenomena, of which one is the ability to recall every memory of one's younger life) can be self-induced by using a unique combination of technology and drugs—something that is not supported by modern medicine. When writing the episode, Goodwin was aware of the idea's implausibility and admitted that he took significant creative liberties with the disorder. In fact, the technology used in the episode to induce Mulder's flashbacks was based on various New Age equipment, including a "brain stimulator".[2]

Filming edit

The cottage used in the episode was actually a farmhouse located in South Surrey, near where the previous episodes "Home" and "Tunguska" had been filmed. The show's art department rented and refurbished the house, took photographs of the building, then returned it to its original state for the actual filming. The paintings of the house were then manipulated with Adobe Photoshop and Corel Painter, allowing it to look like Amy Cassandra had made numerous paintings of the house.[2]

The show's camera operators and editors made use of several distortion techniques to give the flashback sequences a hazy, uneasy, and "dystemporal" feel.[5] First, the camera's shutter was "continuously stopped and started" to give the captured scenes an "out-of-time" feel.[5] The scenes' colors were then manipulated by having the film strips negatives filtered with strobe lights during processing and development. To add to the sense of disorientation and confusion, the scenes' dialogue was mixed in with ambient background noise by producer Paul Rabwin.[5]

Reception edit

"Demons" was originally broadcast in the United States on the Fox network on May 11, 1997, and was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on February 25, 1998.[6] This episode earned a Nielsen rating of 11.8, with an 18 share, meaning that roughly 11.8 percent of all television-equipped households, and 18 percent of households watching television, were tuned in to the episode.[7] It was viewed by 19.10 million viewers.[7]

Critical response to the episode was mostly positive. Zack Handlen from The A.V. Club wrote highly of the episode and awarded it an A−. Handlen praised the episode's exploration of Mulder's mind, noting that the entry allowed the audience to see Mulder's views of the world. He argued that "Mulder's desperate need to understand what happened to his sister […] drives him to expect betrayal, because at least with betrayal, the world makes some kind of sense."[8] He did write, however, that he was "a little disappointed at how "Demons" doesn't really hold up in retrospect from a story perspective," but noted that "what does work here is great."[8] Paula Vitaris from Cinefantastique gave the episode a largely positive review and awarded it three-and-a-half stars out of four.[9] She wrote that "Demons" works "as a character study of Mulder" and praised the episode's "hyper-realistic flashback" sequences.[9] Vitaris, while calling the structure of the story "not particularly imaginative", wrote that "Mulder's condition is intriguing".[9] Not all reviews were positive. Robert Shearman and Lars Pearson, in their book Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen, rated the episode one-and-a-half stars out of five, calling it "the wrong episode at the wrong time."[10] The two argued that the attention given to Mulder's potential "aneurysm" are oddly juxtaposed next to Scully's real, life-threatening brain cancer. However, they did call the flashback sequences "masterpieces of editing", but noted that their contents "lack[ed] information".[10]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b Meisler, pp. 245–256
  2. ^ a b c d Meisler, p. 256
  3. ^ a b Hurwitz and Knowles, pp. 113–114
  4. ^ Meilser, p. 74
  5. ^ a b c Meisler, p. 257
  6. ^ The X-Files: The Complete Fourth Season (Media notes). R. W. Goodwin, et al. Fox. 1996–1997.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  7. ^ a b Meisler, p. 298
  8. ^ a b Handlen, Zack (12 March 2011). "'Demons'/'Gethsemane'". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 24 June 2012.
  9. ^ a b c Vitaris, Paula (October 1997). "Episode Guide". Cinefantastique. 29 (4/5): 35–62.
  10. ^ a b Shearman and Pearson, p. 103

Bibliography edit

  • Hurwitz, Matt; Knowles, Chris (2008). The Complete X-Files. Insight Editions. ISBN 978-1933784809.
  • Meisler, Andy (1998). I Want to Believe: The Official Guide to the X-Files Volume 3. Harper Prism. ISBN 0061053864.
  • Shearman, Robert; Pearson, Lars (2009). Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen. Mad Norwegian Press. ISBN 978-0975944691.

External links edit

  • at TheXFiles.com
  • "Demons" at IMDb

demons, files, demons, twenty, third, episode, fourth, season, american, science, fiction, television, series, files, premiered, network, united, states, 1997, united, kingdom, february, 1998, written, goodwin, directed, manners, episode, helps, explore, serie. Demons is the twenty third episode of the fourth season of the American science fiction television series The X Files It premiered on the Fox network in the United States on May 11 1997 and in the United Kingdom on BBC One on February 25 1998 It was written by R W Goodwin and directed by Kim Manners The episode helps explore the series overarching mythology Demons received a Nielsen rating of 11 8 being watched by 19 1 million viewers in its initial broadcast The episode received mostly positive reviews from television critics with many complimenting the episode s look in Mulder s mind Demons The X Files episodeThe Smoking Man with Samantha Mulder in a flashback The sequence s colors were manipulated during film development the film s negatives were filtered with strobe lights Episode no Season 4Episode 23Directed byKim MannersWritten byR W GoodwinProduction code4X23Original air dateMay 11 1997 1997 05 11 Running time44 minutesGuest appearancesJay Acovone as Detective Joe Curtis Mike Nussbaum as Dr Charles Goldstein Chris Owens as Cigarette Smoking Man Rebecca Toolan as Teena Mulder Andrew Johnston as Medical Examiner Terry Jang Barclay as Officer Imhof Vanessa Morley as Samantha Mulder Eric Breker as Admitting Officer Rebecca Harker as Housekeeper Shelley Adam as Young Teena Mulder Dean Aylesworth as Young Bill Mulder Alex Haythorne as Young Fox Mulder 1 Episode chronology Previous Elegy Next Gethsemane The X Files season 4 List of episodesThe show centers on FBI special agents Fox Mulder David Duchovny and Dana Scully Gillian Anderson who work on cases linked to the paranormal called X Files Mulder is a believer in the paranormal while the skeptical Scully has been assigned to debunk his work In this episode Mulder wakes up in a hotel with blood all over him and no memory of what happened Mulder and Scully soon discover that Mulder was involved in a double homicide and may have been the killer It is soon revealed that Mulder had been seeing a doctor who had allowed him to view glimpses of his past memories After evidence becomes paramount Mulder is cleared of the murder charges The episode was written by R W Goodwin an executive producer and director for the show This marked the second instance where a member of the production crew wrote an episode after the third season entry Wetwired written by Mat Beck The episode was influenced by An Anthropologist on Mars a series of essays by Oliver Sacks in particular The Landscape of Dreams featuring a man who could recall every detail of his childhood During the flashback sequences in the episode various effects were created by manipulating the camera and its film Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Writing 2 2 Filming 3 Reception 4 Footnotes 5 Bibliography 6 External linksPlot editFox Mulder s David Duchovny mind flashes back to being in the attic with his sister Samantha while their parents are arguing downstairs Back in the present Mulder wakes up in a hotel room in Providence Rhode Island covered in blood Mulder calls Dana Scully Gillian Anderson who arrives finding him in shock Mulder has a pounding headache and has no memory of what he has done in the past two days Scully finds that two bullets have been fired from Mulder s gun and that he has keys belonging to a David and Amy Cassandra Scully wants Mulder to check into a hospital but he wants to find out if he was involved in a crime before doing so The agents arrive at the Cassandras house where the housekeeper tells them they are not at home Mulder recognizes a house in many of the Cassandras paintings a house that is near his parents summer home in Rhode Island When they arrive there Mulder has striking pains in his head and flashes back again to when he was a child seeing a younger version of The Smoking Man Chris Owens in his home The agents enter the home where they find the Cassandras dead from gunshot wounds The agents call the police who take Mulder with them due to the circumstantial evidence against him Scully performs an autopsy on Amy Cassandra finding a scab on her forehead The detective in charge of the case tells Mulder that they have found David and Amy s blood on his shirt Mulder refuses to confess to the murders not remembering anything Scully arrives saying she found in Amy s blood traces of ketamine an anesthesic substance that has hallucinogenic properties The substance was detected in Mulder s blood as well Meanwhile one of the officers at the station kills himself he has similar symptoms to that of the Cassandras Mulder suffers a seizure and flashes back to his childhood again witnessing his parents arguing with The Smoking Man Scully sees Mulder the next day telling him that she believes that the Cassandras killed themselves after receiving psychiatric treatment and that Mulder was visiting them about their alien abduction experiences The agents visit Dr Goldstein in Warwick Rhode Island who was treating Amy with an aggressive method to help her recover her abduction memories Goldstein also treated the police officer but says he has not met Mulder before Mulder has another painful flashback of The Smoking Man arguing with his mother Teena Mulder Mulder declines Scully s request that he go to the hospital and goes to visit his mother demanding she explain what really happened when they had to make a choice between him and Samantha Mulder believes that The Smoking Man forced them to take Samantha Mulder also questions who his father really is Mulder s mother gets upset and refuses to provide him answers Later Mulder visits Goldstein and convinces him to again treat him so he will remember what really happened Mulder has further visions of the past Scully and the police arrive soon after to arrest Goldstein but find Mulder gone Scully finds him at the family s summer home in Rhode Island and is able to calm him down While Mulder is cleared in the deaths of the Cassandras what truly happened when he was a child remains a mystery 1 Production editWriting edit nbsp The episode was inspired by the essay The Landscape of His Dreams written by Oliver Sacks Demons was written by R W Goodwin an executive producer and director for the show Goodwin was inspired to write the episode after reading The Landscape of Dreams an essay by the neurologist and best selling author Oliver Sacks from the anthology book An Anthropologist on Mars Seven Paradoxical Tales 1995 which details a man who could recall every detail of his childhood Interested in this idea Goodwin developed a story in which Mulder wakes up in a strange place with no idea how he got there 2 After receiving approval from series creator Chris Carter Goodwin spent approximately six weeks writing the final episode 2 The episode explores the past of The Smoking Man the series chief antagonist William B Davis the actor who played the character later noted As the story developed we developed a relationship between Cigarette Smoking Man and Mulder s apparent father and Cigarette Smoking Man and Mulder s mother then we started backfilling with an historical connection 3 Carter explained that the episode was the start of the series greater conspiracy It s an interesting development because it really was the development of the conspiracy The elements of the conspiracy were part of his development But The Smoking Man s back story of course intertwined with Mulder s 3 For this episode actor Chris Owens reprised his role as The Smoking Man he had previously played him in the season s earlier episode Musings of a Cigarette Smoking Man 4 The episode is based around the idea that Geschwind syndrome a group of behavioral phenomena of which one is the ability to recall every memory of one s younger life can be self induced by using a unique combination of technology and drugs something that is not supported by modern medicine When writing the episode Goodwin was aware of the idea s implausibility and admitted that he took significant creative liberties with the disorder In fact the technology used in the episode to induce Mulder s flashbacks was based on various New Age equipment including a brain stimulator 2 Filming edit The cottage used in the episode was actually a farmhouse located in South Surrey near where the previous episodes Home and Tunguska had been filmed The show s art department rented and refurbished the house took photographs of the building then returned it to its original state for the actual filming The paintings of the house were then manipulated with Adobe Photoshop and Corel Painter allowing it to look like Amy Cassandra had made numerous paintings of the house 2 The show s camera operators and editors made use of several distortion techniques to give the flashback sequences a hazy uneasy and dystemporal feel 5 First the camera s shutter was continuously stopped and started to give the captured scenes an out of time feel 5 The scenes colors were then manipulated by having the film strips negatives filtered with strobe lights during processing and development To add to the sense of disorientation and confusion the scenes dialogue was mixed in with ambient background noise by producer Paul Rabwin 5 Reception edit Demons was originally broadcast in the United States on the Fox network on May 11 1997 and was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on February 25 1998 6 This episode earned a Nielsen rating of 11 8 with an 18 share meaning that roughly 11 8 percent of all television equipped households and 18 percent of households watching television were tuned in to the episode 7 It was viewed by 19 10 million viewers 7 Critical response to the episode was mostly positive Zack Handlen from The A V Club wrote highly of the episode and awarded it an A Handlen praised the episode s exploration of Mulder s mind noting that the entry allowed the audience to see Mulder s views of the world He argued that Mulder s desperate need to understand what happened to his sister drives him to expect betrayal because at least with betrayal the world makes some kind of sense 8 He did write however that he was a little disappointed at how Demons doesn t really hold up in retrospect from a story perspective but noted that what does work here is great 8 Paula Vitaris from Cinefantastique gave the episode a largely positive review and awarded it three and a half stars out of four 9 She wrote that Demons works as a character study of Mulder and praised the episode s hyper realistic flashback sequences 9 Vitaris while calling the structure of the story not particularly imaginative wrote that Mulder s condition is intriguing 9 Not all reviews were positive Robert Shearman and Lars Pearson in their book Wanting to Believe A Critical Guide to The X Files Millennium amp The Lone Gunmen rated the episode one and a half stars out of five calling it the wrong episode at the wrong time 10 The two argued that the attention given to Mulder s potential aneurysm are oddly juxtaposed next to Scully s real life threatening brain cancer However they did call the flashback sequences masterpieces of editing but noted that their contents lack ed information 10 Footnotes edit a b Meisler pp 245 256 a b c d Meisler p 256 a b Hurwitz and Knowles pp 113 114 Meilser p 74 a b c Meisler p 257 The X Files The Complete Fourth Season Media notes R W Goodwin et al Fox 1996 1997 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link a b Meisler p 298 a b Handlen Zack 12 March 2011 Demons Gethsemane The A V Club Retrieved 24 June 2012 a b c Vitaris Paula October 1997 Episode Guide Cinefantastique 29 4 5 35 62 a b Shearman and Pearson p 103Bibliography editHurwitz Matt Knowles Chris 2008 The Complete X Files Insight Editions ISBN 978 1933784809 Meisler Andy 1998 I Want to Believe The Official Guide to the X Files Volume 3 Harper Prism ISBN 0061053864 Shearman Robert Pearson Lars 2009 Wanting to Believe A Critical Guide to The X Files Millennium amp The Lone Gunmen Mad Norwegian Press ISBN 978 0975944691 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to TXF Season 4 Demons at TheXFiles com Demons at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demons The X Files amp oldid 1168141532, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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