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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, July 25, 2008

MOVIE REVIEW
'X-Files' leads are back together

By Roger Moore
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) are back, minus much of the sizzle they displayed on the tube.

20th Century Fox

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'THE X-FILES: I WANT TO BELIEVE'

PG-13, for violent and disturbing content and adult themes

110 minutes

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The new "X-Files" movie? Not exactly "out there."

The truth is they've taken the spooky, paranormal-minded TV show (1993-2002) and drained much of the "super" right out of the supernatural.

Whatever creator Chris Carter wanted to say in "The X-Files: I Want to Believe" about science, faith and morality, all he delivered is a solid (if far-fetched) police procedural, a movie that benefits from - but doesn't make very good use of - the history and the chemistry between its stars, David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson.

Scully (Anderson) has returned to medicine, permanently. But an FBI agent has gone missing and the bureau, in the person of Agent Dakota Whitney (Amanda Peet) needs help. There's this priest (Billy Connolly), who seems to have psychic clues.

Scully must deliver the reclusive, bearded Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) to his old employers, his tormentors. Mulder can win the psychic's confidence. But he can't get involved in a snowy West Virginia missing-person case without getting in over his head.

The leads bicker. For every Scully "That's not my life anymore," there's a Mulder "Let's just say I want to believe." Which, of course, was the whole point of the TV show and 1998 movie. He believes in paranormal weirdness. She's scientific, rational, a skeptic.

But Scully has a very sick patient, a little boy. She works for a Catholic hospital. She wants to grab at a miracle, or at least keep the bottom-line-oriented priest in charge from kicking the kid into a hospice, sentencing him to death.

Our psychic friend keeps wandering the snowscape, pointing to things he sees "in my mind's eye" and experiencing stigmata. Mulder, using a combination of cop logic, reason and intuition, pieces things together, spouting off his usual blitz of statistics on phenomena that he so fervently wants to believe in.

And unseen to the Feds, the bad guys, Russians, are making like "Silence of the Lambs."

Carter makes great use of the snow and mountains of British Columbia, which doesn't really look like West Virginia at all. He cast another squinting, scowling rapper (Xzbit, hired for his "X" name?) in a role a real actor could have made something of - Agent Whitney's assistant. Carter keeps the villains all but faceless. And he does clever things in the editing as he lets us in on the gory details of what is going on with these missing people.

But what sells this "X-Files," to fans especially, is the re-teaming of Anderson and Duchovny. Fans don't care that 15 years into their relationship, with hints of intimacies known and unknown, they still call each other by their last names, that they use those last names, ad nauseam, in every conversation. (Memo to C. Carter: This isn't TV. You don't need to re-identify the characters in between commercial breaks.)

All fans want is the conspiracy, the "But that's impossible" weirdness and those little electronic pings that were the musical signature of the most popular paranormal show since "The Twilight Zone." Unfortunately, in "I Want to Believe," the pings are the spookiest thing in here. And out there.