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The List (The X-Files)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"The List"
The X-Files episode
The List
The head of a death row prison guard named Fornier, found inside a paint can.
Episode no.Season 3
Episode 5
Directed byChris Carter
Written byChris Carter
Production code3X05
Original air dateOctober 20, 1995 (1995-10-20)
Running time45 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose"
Next →
"2Shy"
The X-Files season 3
List of episodes

"The List" is the fifth episode of the third season of the science fiction television series The X-Files. It was first broadcast in the United States on the Fox network on October 20, 1995. "The List" was written and directed by series creator Chris Carter. The episode is a "Monster-of-the-Week" story, a stand-alone plot which is unconnected to the series' larger mythology. "The List" received a Nielson household rating of 10.8, being watched by 16.72 million people on its initial broadcast, and received mixed to positive reviews from critics.

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 and Scully investigate a case where a death row inmate declares that he will be reincarnated and that as a result five men will die.

"The List" was written and directed by Carter after the success of the second season episode "Duane Barry". The art department of The X-Files was tasked with creating a death row set quickly, a feat which eventually caused the episode to go over budget. Several sequences necessitated the use of real maggots, a turn of events that was not popular with the cast, most notably with Anderson. "The List" later was nominated—and won—several International Monitor Awards.

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Transcription

Television has been evolving ever since Americans first welcomed TVs into their living room. Today there's more money to be made on the small screen than ever before. Whether it's on HBO, Netflix or any other platform, there's something out there for everyone, no matter what their taste. Nailing down which shows have been most influential in television's development is pretty tough; there's so much TV to choose from that we could write multiple top tens and they'd all be unique. But we're always up for a challenge, so here are our picks for the ten most influential TV shows of all time. The Wire Before Boyd Crowder toed the line between being a good guy and a total heel, before Game of Thrones shocked audiences by taking Sean Bean�s head, and before Walter White made ruthless meth dealing cool, there was The Wire, a show where main characters were never safe and amorality ruled. Sure, The Wire has been influenced by other entries on this list, but the show reminded viewers that great TV could exist outside of network stations. Although it owes a debt to its predecessors, this police drama was groundbreaking on its own. Even casual fans probably can�t hear �The Farmer in the Dell� without looking over their shoulders. Law & Order Law & Order aired between 1990 and 2010. During that time it spawned four spin-offs and immortalizing actors like Jerry Orbach, Jesse L. Martin, Mariska Hargitay, and Sam Waterston. So if you detect shades of the iconic series while watching, say, The Shield, or The Practice, it�s probably not an accident. The original Law & Order is the best of the brand, but the show�s �ripped from the headlines� realism has had a massive role in molding police and courtroom dramas. Lost Five years after it ended, some of its viewers are still Lost. But if the story�s lingering questions and unsolved mysteries still drive debate about the show's quality, then there�s no denying the impact it had on television during and after its six season run. Consider shows like Flashforward, Person of Interest, and Fringe - each of them has benefitted in some way from Lost�s massive popularity. The series also took J.J. Abrams� �mystery� box approach to storytelling and brought it to new heights. Audiences would continue to see in films like Cloverfield and Star Trek Into Darkness - it's not a stretch to think that these movies might not exist without the success of Lost. Star Trek: The Next Generation Speaking of Star Trek, how much do you love your tablet? Gene Roddenberry beat Steve Jobs to that idea by several decades. So next time you load up Candy Crush on your Android or iPad, just remember to give credit where it's due. More importantly, Star Trek: The Next Generation carved a foothold for sci-fi shows at a time when the genre was in a slump. It helped geek culture get break into the mainstream and paved the way for shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The X-Files, and even Lost. Who knows, we might not have comic book blockbusters like The Avengers if Star Trek hadn't made it cool to be a nerd in the 80s and 90s. The X-Files The X-Files might seem more like a benefactor of Star Trek: The Next Generation�s influence than an influence in itself. But The X-Files brought things a step further. It introduced niche concepts to a wide audience, and made aliens, werewolves, and ghosts interesting for people who otherwise didn't care about the paranormal. The X-Files was also one of the earliest shows to use the Internet to engage with fans. It's also where Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan started his career. Plus, without the adventures of Scully and Mulder, we�d probably be missing out on shows like Supernatural and Bones. Seinfeld Seinfeld took what people knew about sitcoms and completely turned it inside out. The show that gave us Festivus, Pigman and The Soup Nazi is somehow still relatable to our day-to-day lives. Seinfeld meddled with the sitcom�s traditional A-plot/B-plot structure. It introduced audiences to the unlikeable jerk as protagonists, it didn�t use multi-camera set-ups, and it turned self-referentialism into art. From Girls to It�s Always Sunny in Philadelphia to The Big Bang Theory, Seinfeld has been copied but never cloned. Not too shabby for a show about nothing. Saturday Night Live Saturday Night Live is a comic institution, one that's been making names for four decades. Adam Sandler, Bill Murray, Steve Martin, Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Bill Hader, Kristen Wiig, Eddie Murphy, Seth Meyers, Chris Rock, and the list goes on. SNL�s influence expands beyond the stage, too. A world without SNL would probably mean a world without The Daily Show and The Colbert Report. The show�s format has also been ripped off by Mad TV, All That, and Mr. Show, and its humor is echoed in Tina Fey�s 30 Rock. The Simpsons The Simpsons has shaped just about every cartoon that has aired since it started in 1989. Sure, cartoons were around before The Simpsons, and people would have still made them without The Simpsons, but Springfield�s first family changed the game by showed that cartoons didn�t just have to be for kids. Without The Simpsons there's no Family Guy or American Dad, (and pretty much everything Seth MacFarlane has ever done), as well as South Park, King of the Hill, and The Critic (which had a crossover with The Simpsons back in 1995). Live-action shows like Arrested Development can also trace influence to Matt Groening�s TV landmark. I Love Lucy Seinfeld may have influenced the sitcoms of today, but I Love Lucy gave birth to the sitcom way back in the 1950s. Small things we take for granted - like reruns, continuously running storylines, or the multi-cam set-up - didn�t exist until I Love Lucy conjured them into being with a knowing wink. The show is also a major feminist milestone, which is admirable because it aired during a time when most viewers expected women to be stay at home wives and mothers. At a glance I Love Lucy endorses those social norms, but Lucy Ricardo speaks up and lets her dreams be known to her husband, Ricky, and defies him from one episode to the next. I Love Lucy may look dated today, but it was totally progressive in its era. The Sopranos There are a number of creative types who have contributed to the renaissance we're seeing on TV today, but one name rises above the rest. David Chase was the architect of The Sopranos back in the late 90s and he emerged as a champion for bold, risky television. In the grand scheme of the TV history, The Sopranos is a fairly young series, but it�s already iconic and completely essential. Take away The Sopranos, and say goodbye to HBO and other premium cable channels. It�s possible that the show�s influence is so strong that competitors like Showtime may not have produced Homeland and Shameless without it.

Plot

Napoleon "Neech" Manley (Badja Djola), a death row inmate at a Floridian prison, is brought to the electric chair. Before he is executed, Neech proclaims that he will be reincarnated and avenge himself against five men who tormented him in prison.

Shortly after the execution, Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) investigate the prison after a guard is mysteriously found dead in Neech's cell. The agents meet the prison's warden, Brodeur (J. T. Walsh), who believes that Neech planned the guard's murder with someone on the outside before the execution. John Speranza, another inmate, believes that Neech has returned. When Scully explores the prison's showers, she meets another guard named Vincent Parmelly (Ken Foree). He claims that another prisoner, Roque (Bokeem Woodbine), is keeping a list of the remaining four victims.

Later, the head of another guard, Fornier, is found inside a paint can. An examination of the head shows the premature appearance of larvae. The prison coroner tells Scully that the first guard's lungs were completely infested with the larvae, belonging to the green bottle fly. Meanwhile, Mulder talks to Roque, who wants a transfer out of the prison in exchange for revealing the remaining three people on the list, but Brodeur refuses to let this happen. Brodeur later finds Fornier's headless body in his office. While searching Neech's cell, Mulder discovers evidence of his obsession with reincarnation. The agents talk to Neech's fearful widow, Danielle Manley (April Grace), who is secretly seeing Parmelly. Roque is brought to the showers, where he is beaten to death by Brodeur after revealing he is the fifth person on the list.

Brodeur puts the prison under lockdown and tells Mulder that Neech had a violent history with all three victims. Mulder believes that Neech came back for revenge against the guards, but doubts that Roque was on the list. He requests that he be provided with the name of Neech's executioner, who turns out to be a volunteer named Perry Simon. The agents arrive at Simon's home to discover his decomposing body in the attic. Mulder confronts Speranza about the list, but Speranza only tells him that Roque was not on it. He claims to have seen Neech "big as life" outside of his cell. Based on phone records, Scully theorizes that Neech's lawyer, Danny Charez, may have engineered the murders with Speranza. The agents interview Charez, who tells them about Danielle's relationship with Parmelly; after they leave, Charez is suffocated by a resurrected Neech.

Brodeur visits Speranza in his cell, and offers to have his death sentence commuted in exchange for stopping the murders. Speranza takes the offer. That night, Parmelly visits Danielle, who has become agitated since Mulder and Scully have begun staking out her house. The agents now suspect Parmelly to be behind the murders and leave to notify Brodeur, who asks that Parmelly be arrested. Soon afterward, Danielle wakes up to see Neech standing at her bedroom door. She grabs her gun and confronts Parmelly, thinking he is Neech's resurrected form. The agents and a police task force arrive to see her shoot and kill Parmelly. Meanwhile, Brodeur—assuming that Charez and Parmelly were on the list—thinks Speranza has reneged on their deal and has him taken to the showers. Before Brodeur kills him, Speranza claims that one person remains on the list.

Parmelly is blamed for the murders. The agents start to leave Florida, but Mulder soon pulls over. He remains frustrated, since Parmelly was on-duty during only one murder, and was not one of the three men who knew Perry Simon's confidential identity. He also points out inconsistencies in the actions of Parmelly and Roque, who was also assumed to be part of the plot. Mulder believes that Parmelly was not responsible for the deaths, and that Neech had indeed been reincarnated to exact his revenge. However, Scully convinces Mulder that the case is over, and that they should return home. Just then, Brodeur passes them in his car. Looking in his rear view mirror, he sees Neech, who attacks Brodeur and causes his car to crash into a tree, claiming his last victim.[1][3]

Production

The episode was written and directed by Chris Carter.

"The List" was written and directed by series creator Chris Carter, making it the second time he had directed an episode after season two's "Duane Barry".[4][5] For this episode, the art department was asked to create a "convincing" death row set "out of thin air".[4] The set took 10 days to construct, making it one of the season's more complicated set assignments. Construction of the set almost single-handedly caused the episode to go over budget, but the show was able to reuse the set in the season in the later season episodes "Teso Dos Bichos" and "Talitha Cumi". Unaffiliated television and film projects in the Greater Vancouver area also rented the set for use in their productions.[6]

For many of the scenes, the show's producers opted to use real maggots—creatures that series co-star Gillian Anderson later called among the hardest animals with which to work. Due to a number of issues, the show's design crew was not able to create a "full-body replica" of the first murder victim, so the portraying actor had to lay on an autopsy table while maggots were poured over his body. In other scenes, rice grains were used as maggot stand-ins. The elaborate car crash featured at the end of the episode was described by stunt coordinator Tony Morelli as "the most harrowing action sequence" during the show's third season.[6] Hoping to give the episode somewhat of a different look, the producers applied a green tint to the film in the post-production editing process.[7]

The executioner, Perry Simon, was named after an NBC executive producer that Carter knew.[8] The part was played by Bruce Pinard, but he was uncredited.[2] Joseph Patrick Finn, a producer on the show, played the prison chaplain.[3]

Reception

"The List" premiered on the Fox network in the United States on October 20, 1995.[9] The episode earned a Nielsen rating of 10.8, with a 19 share, meaning that roughly 10.8 percent of all television-equipped households, and 19 percent of households watching television, were tuned in to the episode.[10] It was watched by a total of 16.72 million viewers,[10] and was later nominated for several International Monitor Awards, including nominations for best director, best editing, and best color correction. "The List" later won the award for best director.[11] Story editor Frank Spotnitz said of the episode, "I think this is a vastly underrated episode. I also think it was a very brave and different show to do and that it will weather the test of time very well. I think it was brave because there is not a single likable character - nobody you can root for. Mulder and Scully do not solve the case, and that is something I had been interested in doing for some time."[12] Chris Carter was nominated for an award by the Directors Guild of America for his work on this episode.[13]

"The List" received mixed to positive reviews from television critics. Entertainment Weekly gave "The List" a B+, describing it as "standard but well executed".[14] Zack Handlen, writing for The A.V. Club, had mixed feelings about it, ultimately rating it a B−. He felt that "The List" embodied a bland stand-alone X-Files episode for its underdeveloped concept and script, with "attempts at drama" that had no depth, and "sideplots [that] have so little effect on the main narrative as to be basically padding". Handlen however praised the cinematography and art direction, the performances of both Ken Foree and J.T. Walsh, and the final scene, but ultimately considered that "once you get past the set-design and cinematography, you end up with some good lines and a few scary moments, and that's it."[15]

Paula Vitaris from Cinefantastique gave the episode two stars out of four. She praised Carter's directing, but felt that the story suffered in comparison to the second season's "Duane Barry", also written and directed by Carter, which was better at "unsettling ambiguity". She felt that there were too many characters for the audience to get to know them, and the lack of resolution would leave the audience "utterly frustrated".[16] Other reviews were more critical. Author Phil Farrand wrote negatively of the episode, calling it his third least favorite episode of the first four seasons in his book The Nitpickers Guide to the X-Files.[17] 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. The two positively critiqued Carter's directing, calling the entry "good looking" and noting that it was "a decidedly grisly hour of television."[18] However, they derided the plot and called it "barely cooked", writing that the characters that are killed are wholly one-dimensional and are not fleshed out.[18]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Lowry, pp. 99–101.
  2. ^ a b "Bruce Pinard". Yahoo! TV. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  3. ^ a b Lovece, pp. 193–94.
  4. ^ a b Hurwitz and Knowles, p. 76.
  5. ^ Hurwitz and Knowles, p. 57.
  6. ^ a b Lowry, pp. 101–03.
  7. ^ Edwards, p. 145.
  8. ^ Lowry, p. 142.
  9. ^ Goodwin, R.W.; et al. (2001). The X-Files: The Complete Third Season (booklet). Beverly Hills, California: 20th Century Home Entertainment.
  10. ^ a b Lowry, p. 251.
  11. ^ Lowry, p. 254–55.
  12. ^ Edwards, p. 147.
  13. ^ Lowry, p. 103.
  14. ^ "X Cyclopedia: The Ultimate Episode Guide, Season 3 | EW.com". Entertainment Weekly. 29 November 1996. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  15. ^ Handlen, Zack (July 11, 2010). ""Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose" / "The List" / "2Shy" | The X-Files/Millennium | TV Club | TV | The A.V. Club". The A.V. Club. Retrieved November 23, 2011.
  16. ^ Vitaris, Paula (October 1996). "The X-Files Season Three Episode Guide". Cinefantastique. 28 (3): 16–62.
  17. ^ Farrand, Phil (1997). The Nitpickers Guide to the X-Files. Dell Publishing. p. 222.
  18. ^ a b Shearman and Pearson, p. 61.

Bibliography

External links

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