#7

The X-Files
I Want to Believe.
The truth is out there.
FOX’s paranormal/suspernatural hit, The X-Files, comes in at number severn. I just finished a three year long rewatch of the show this past summer through all eleven seasons. The show even inspired two feature length movies.
The X-Files was created by Chris Carter and was the story of FBI agent Fox Mulder, who looked into cases deemed too mysterious or unsolvable for the FBI. Mulder was in search of the truth, spurning from his sister Samantha’s disappearance when he was a child. Mulder believed that Samantha had been abducted by aliens.
The FBI, afraid of secrets that Mulder might uncover, assigned agent Dana Scully to “debunk” his investigations. Scully, though a skeptic, was also honest and willing to listen to the insane scenarios Mulder would lay out. Scully became the only person Mulder could trust,
The show moved between episodes dealing with government conspiracies to monsters-of-the-week. Some of the best episodes of the series included “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space,” “Bad Blood,” “Home,” “Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose,” “Small Potatoes,” “The Post-Modern Prometheus,” and “Humbug.”
The show was the best with the pairing of Mulder and Scully. Over the run of the series, both David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson were away or off the show and they were replaced by other actors, most notably Robert Patrick, who replaced an abducted Mulder, as Agent John Doggett. Though many episodes were still solid, the show was never the same without Mulder.
The show also had one of the greatest villains ever in the Cigarette Smoking Man. CSM, played by Willaim B. Davis, was a character that I hated SOOOOOO mcuh. I constantly just wished Mulder would shoot him in the head, and I called for that to happen on a regualr basis. CSM has to be near the top of any TV villain list.
The show was revived for a tenth and eleventh season in the mid 2010s. These seasons were shorter and had their ups and downs. Both Duchovny and Anderson returned to their roles for the revival.
The X-Files was one of the most successful FOX shows and transcended television.