He then ignored our emails asking him to complete his coverage (we had no one else to cover those TV shows).
Philadelphia x files home again places series#
**** We hired Reggie, fulfilled our obligations to him, and he quit in the middle of covering two TV series w/ no notice and no explanation. For more The X-Files reviews, photos, videos, and information, visit our The X-Files Page, subscribe to us by Email, “follow” us on Twitter, Tumblr, Google+ or “like” us on Facebook. Leave your thoughts on this review and this episode of The X-Files in the comments section below.
If the two remaining episodes are similar to this one, then The X-Files is well on it’s way to ending on a satisfying note. On top of that, Mulder and Scully are able to explore their own personal tragedies and demons without taking time away from the main storyline. The Trashman does not get too much screen time, but the presence he brings to the scenes he is in (and even scenes he is not in) makes him the strongest monster of Season 10 so far. This is the second explicit reference to Mulder and Scully’s long-since-given-up son this season, strongly suggesting, as was previously speculated in our review of Founder’s Mutation, that a final reckoning involving the two FBI agents and William is coming up.Īfter the major narrative and stylistic missteps of last week’s episode, Home Again is a welcome return to the quality and caliber of the program’s better monster of the week episodes. Scully is devastated: her mother was asking for William – their son, not hers.
Margaret snaps out of her coma, but instead of reconciling with him, she says that she has a son named William too before dying. Thinking that her mother asked for her younger, long-estranged brother William before going into a coma, Scully gets ahold of him and lets her unconscious mother hear his voice. Whilst investigating the case, Scully learns that her mother, Margaret ( Sheila Larken) had a heart attack and rushes to the hospital. In addition, the otherworldly nature of this week’s monster dovetails nicely with the personal issues of our heroes, Fox Mulder ( David Duchovny) and Dana Scully ( Gillian Anderson). An attempt at fleeing on her part ends in failure, and all we see of her grisly demise is the Trashman placing organs into her trashcan before departing in the garbage truck in which he came. Looking up, thunder claps and the music crescendos when she sees the towering thoughtform, staring right back at her. Huff is going about her business when she notices a trail of puddles swimming with maggots on the staircase. As rain pours and Petula Clark’s irrepressibly cheerful “Downtown” plays, the Trashman makes his way into the home of Nancy Huff ( Peggy Jo Jacobs), a middle-class lawyer who seeks an injunction against the planned removal of the city’s homeless only because it means they will be moved closer to her well-kept suburban home. The monster’s most effective scene however, is probably the one where we see the least carnage. The decaying giant kicks the door of a callous city official in before literally tearing him apart and rips the head of a graffiti collector off of his body, exposing the unfortunate art connoisseur’s spine, still dripping blood, for all the audience to see. He is not a zombie in any way, shape or form: the Trashman is in fact a tulpa, or thoughtform, unintentionally willed into existence by a socially-conscious street artist ( Tim Armstrong) disgusted by the cruel way the authorities treat the homeless of Philadelphia but horrified by the brutal way in which his creation tries to solve the problem.įor that matter, viewers are just as liable to be horrified (or at the very least entertained) by the Trashman’s method of sticking it to the man. Simply called “The Trashman” ( John DeSantis), the lumbering, maggot-infested figure resembles a living corpse more than your neighborhood garbage collector, but don’t get the wrong idea. In contrast to last week’s embarrassingly sub-par monster (and episode as a whole, for that matter), Home Again gives us an engaging creature to contend with.