loves creating a buzz! movies. music. tv shows. concerts. events. reviews.

You can watch “The X-Files: I Want to Believe” as a sci-fi thriller or as a romantic tragedy, but it works much better as the latter: Former FBI agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) — though I’ve no idea why I’m using their first names; no one else ever does — are one of the great screen romances.
Through the ups and downs of the nine-season TV show (it went off the air in 2002), the two actors forged a chemistry so palpable you could almost see it lighting up the space between them. Both characters were cool and cerebral; each drawn to the other’s intelligence, yet repelled by a crucial difference exemplified in this movie’s title. Mulder believed in the paranormal because he wanted, badly, to believe in it; Scully, the skeptical doctor who dwelt in facts, wanted to believe but couldn’t.
Like a lot of people, I stopped watching “The X-Files” long before the series ended; it just became insurmountably mystifying. But I missed Duchovny and Anderson’s deadpan exchanges, and the way she would look up at him (she’s short, he’s tall) searchingly and soulfully, trying to read his quiet face. So “I Want to Believe,” directed and co-written by series creator Chris Carter, is at turns both disappointing and satisfying. As a movie, it doesn’t add up to much; as another glimpse at two characters who remain fascinating, it’s worth seeing.

The movie plays remarkably like a longer episode of the TV show; it’s a stand-alone story, not requiring much knowledge of what came before. Both Mulder and Scully have left the FBI long ago; she’s a physician at a hospital; he seems to spend his time cutting things out of newspapers. It seems that they live together, though that’s not entirely clear. (In the grand tradition of the X-Files, the truth is still out there, somewhere.) A call from the FBI brings them back into the world of the paranormal: Mulder’s assistance is needed in a case involving a missing FBI agent and a priest (Billy Connolly) who sees visions of the missing woman.
The story, once it unfolds, turns out to be both uninvolving and a little silly; you may well raise an eyebrow to the ceiling at the missing agent’s potential fate. A subplot involving a seriously ill patient at the hospital should have the other brow joining the first: Dr. Scully meticulously Googles “stem cell research,” prints out some random things, and almost immediately presides over surgery using her new-found knowledge? (No, I don’t want to believe. At least, I want to believe that doctors have access to something better than Google.)
But, after six years, it’s a kick to watch Duchovny and Anderson gazing into each other’s eyes again. Screen chemistry is as mysterious as any X-Filed paranormal event; it’s hard to pin it down precisely. Watching this film, though, you just want these two characters together (even though we learn, in a brief scene, that they dissect toxicology reports as pillow talk), as they just don’t seem right apart.
Mulder and Scully, two lonely misfits in an unwelcoming world, are destined to be each other’s other half; calling out each other’s name in the darkness, so rarely seeing light. This reason alone could sway the X-files fans to the cinemas
![]()
credits: Seattle Times
Official Movie Poster![]() |
Singapore Date: 24th July 2008 Language: English Running Time: 104 mins Rating: PG Tagline: Believe Again Starring: David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson Directed by: Chris Carter Company: Crying Box Productions Singapore Distributor: 20th Century Fox iZone Rating: 6/10 |
I watched it and I still can’t believe it. Not a single alien in the entire movie?
Yeah thats true! Unbelieveable isn’t it how they managed to do that for an X-Files movie. Would be too predictable I guess if there is one. LOL.
This is one of the more positive reviews I’ve seen. It gives me a glimmer of hope at least…
Funny X-Files comic
Yup the movie is not really that bad like what the ratings had been given by the critics. If you’re an X-Files fan before or you’re still one now don’t miss it.