
It began with a werewolf. I'm speaking about my interest, that is, in 20th Century Fox's brand spankin' new
X-Files feature film. But for the sake of explanation and full disclosure, allow me to back up and come clean about a few things. As a fan once living in New York City, I attended one of the first
X-Files fan conventions at the Javits Center. First in line. Opening day. Stamp "Chick Magnet" on me now. Yes, I had an appreciation of the show and, like so many out there, my fascination with the quest for truth - spearheaded by Fox Mulder and Dana Scully - checked out the back door when the ninth season rolled around and T-1000 joined the FBI with Annabeth Gish. Six years later, series creator Chris Carter, longtime contributor Frank Spotnitz and company are picking up the pieces with this enigmatic new venture.
And it may or may not have anything to do with a hirsute beast.
You see, a certain "spy photo" leaked online a few weeks prior to my receiving an invite to visit the Vancouver location of the film. Said snapshot revealed a professional exchange between Carter and a lycanthrope (some dude in a suit) on set. Was it a ruse? Something to throw us journos off the beaten path from the secrecy-enshrouded plot? Whatever the case, it was enough to stir long dormant pangs of excitement in this
X-Files fan. After all, what X-phile worth his or her salt wouldn't be excited over the prospect of a creature feature recalling the days of the Flukeman?
I ride in a production van to the Playland Amusement Park in Vancouver, Canada with all of this in mind. - hoping to perhaps eye a swatch of fur, a yellowed claw,
anything to confirm, or even deny, the "werewolf" talk.
This latest
X-Files marks a return home for Carter and his crew. When the series began in '93 lensing took place in Vancouver before the production ultimately moved to Los Angeles. Familiar faces of
X-Files' past populate the crew providing the director with a comfortable insulation. John Bartley, director of photography on seasons one through three, is working second unit alongside first assistant director and ex-
Lone Gunman Tom Braidwood. Meanwhile Bill Roe, from the Los Angeles days, resumes his duties as d.p. on first unit. Then, of course, there's Duchovny and Anderson as Mulder and Scully, respectively. They're joined this time by newcomers Amanda Peet (
Identity), Billy Connelly (
Fido) and Xzibit, in a slice of arguably inspired casting.
The entrance to Playland directs one past a roller coaster - the same one used by James Wong (another
X-Files alum) for the opening of
Final Destination 3. But where I'm heading is to the ice rink, that's where the crew is working today. Inside it appears the converted rink has been bisected, most of the action is predominantly occurring around a
faux house facade garnished with the foliage.
"This would be Mulder's house," co-writer and producer Frank Spotnitz informs us, greeting ShockTillYouDrop.com by the porch. He's enjoying the warmer environs here after shooting for three weeks in sub-zero temperatures north of Whistler in Pemberton.
"It matches the real house [located in Fort Langley] which is supposed to be somewhere around the Washington D.C. area in the movie." For Spotnitz, the realization of another
X-Files case,
"has been a dream. I didn't think it was going to happen - after six years, negotiations, working on the story."
His cynicism is understandable and he estimates his commitment to a sequel was sealed in 2002 or '03. Where things get rocky is in the ensuing years and, as Spotnitz suggests, best explained by Carter. Luckily for us, we find the director by craft service, an enormous black poodle by his side.
The years have been kind to Carter. Same ol' friendly eyes. Defined chin. White hair a stark contrast to the puffy black winter coat he hugs tight (not to mention his dog). He's a blue jeans kinda guy.
"Fox had come to Frank Spotnitz and me and asked us to do the movie about a year after the TV series had wrapped," he clarifies.
"We said yes and had worked out a story, pitched it to them, they said yes. We went into negotiations and those, shall we say, got protracted. All of a sudden there was this other issue and that took a couple of years to get resolved."
In the interim, Carter and Spotnitz tabled sequel notes they scribbled together and later revisited them with slightly more mature eyes.
"We feel there is a lot to be proud of with the X-Files and we wanted to move forward knowing we had a real story to tell and a reason to tell it," Spotnitz says.
"I think we have that. I already think this is going to be something we're all proud of and feel good about."
"I was surprised by how alive they still were in our imaginations," he adds referring to protagonists Mulder and Scully.
"We arrived at what they would be doing at this point in their lives and what happened to them the last six years. For eight years I wrote and produced this show, I spent many hours thinking about Scully and Mulder so in a sense they're very real to me."
The sequel, as Spotnitz said, picks up six years after the show's conclusion. Real time has elapsed which has brought about change in the lives of Mulder and Scully. What those changes are, we're never told save for the fact that the two are drawn back into the world of
X-Files by one case in particular. Carter likens the film's air of secrecy to a Christmas present. It's something we can shake. Something we can hypothesis about but when all is said and done, he'd prefer to have all of the details blown wide open when the sequel arrives in theaters on July 25th.

Mystery permeates every aspect of the set. Call sheets and script sides are accounted for and whisked out of public view (especially today). Absolutely
no cameras are allowed. A tour of Mulder's house gives us everything and nothing. Spotnitz guides me up the porch and through the front door into a warm, earth tone-driven living room. Issues of
Scientific American are neatly scattered about. Framed black and white photographs are hung on the wall. Mulder's digs are nice...and a step up from the apartment we're accustomed to seeing him in. The cleanliness is befitting of a woman, however.
"You'll notice the brown railing," Spotnitz points out.
"There was one just like that in his apartment." The reference is a bit over my head but those fans with the photographic memories will be pleased to hear there is plenty of continuity they'll appreciate. Take the gold fish for instance.
"The tank is bigger than the one in the show." Well, sure, it only seems right they get a big pad if Mulder is moving up. Oh, and look at that, there's the scuba diver at the bottom of the tank.
"Mulder's been living here since 2002," Spotnitz adds.
"Come on in here..."
I follow, awash with nostalgia the minute I enter the next room: The office. A clutter of piled-up newspapers, clippings and monstrous sketches. Removed is that aforementioned tidiness. I actually miss it. But here...here is where the eye candy comes into play. Gaze closer at one of the headlines screaming from a nearby paper and you'll find FBI ARRESTS MODERN DAY FRANKENSTEIN DOCTOR. The ceiling above has been skewered by pencils which hang like stalactites. Sunflower seeds peek out from under the mess on Mulder's desk where a photo of his sister rests.
Then there's the poster.
You know the one. Series staple. Black and white, sorta fuzzy image of a UFO with big bold white letters proclaiming I WANT TO BELIEVE. Yeah,
that one. Rippling with wear, but present nonetheless. Still signifying all that is "Mulder" and hung with care as a teen would hang a rock idol by his bed.
"I'm not sure if it's one of the L.A. or Vancouver posters, it is an original though," Spotnitz notes.
So, what is Mulder and Scully up against this time...an alien menace, more government spooks, Scully's offspring back for revenge like the Davies baby? Try an X-file that has
never been covered before. Hard to believe, I know.
"I have to say it was challenging after 202 hours to find something that wasn't done," admits Spotnitz.
"That isn't to say there are not elements - there will always be [familiar] elements - but the fundamental idea is different from anything we had done in the show. What we also wanted was an X-file, however fractured, that could serve as a mirror to Mulder and Scully - we were looking for a case that could expose things about them."
Carter adds:
"I think the first three seasons really helped lay the foundation for the rest of the show. If you look at those first three, you'll see connections to what you're going to see in the movie. We're trying to scare the pants off of you. It's not a mythology episode but it owes to the character's lives, what they've been through, the relationship and the arc of the show."
As a result, this level of intimacy with the characters means scaling back on locations and not going as global as the first film did.
"[The story] comes from the heart and who these characters are," Spotnitz reinforces.
"That is part of why it's such a pleasure to do, we were freed of the complications and the machinery of the plot which had gotten quite complicated over nine years. We didn't really have to service a lot of that, we could just tell a really good scary, stand-alone story and go deeper into the characters of Mulder and Scully and their relationship than you could in a weekly series. Mulder and Scully bare a lot of scars from their experiences and you can't do a movie like this without recognizing that ."
I'm allowed to sit in on a scene featuring Duchovny and Anderson. Naturally, Fox has me bound from talking about specifics. It's a key moment and the actors are chewing it up, especially Duchovny who hasn't lost his dry edge after all of these years. Minutes earlier, Carter recalled the first table reading of the script.
"I felt a wistful moment, something came over me. It was like no time had passed and a lot of time had passed. Our lives had moved on and we've all come back together, it felt like family again, it felt right."

As my day on set wears on, my search for lycanthropic evidence becomes a joke. Carter merely grins with a,
"I can't say anything." when asked about it. I mean, seriously - who better to ask than the man standing less than five feet away from the creature in the photo? But then I have a slight breakthrough.
On the far end of the ice rink-cum-soundstage, an on-set photographer is snapping away at actors dressed like priest. One by one they file in, stand before a burgundy curtain. Click. Another priest moves in. Click. And another. Click.
Curious, I saunter over and ask what the pics are for. The photographer tells me they'll be used as set dressing for a sequence set in a rectory. She and I carry a decent conversation about the production, working in Vancouver, past shows she's been on, then, none too smooth, I drop the question:
"So, what were those werewolf pictures all about anyway?" (Think Griffin Dunne's delivery -
"Excuse me, what's that star on the wall for?" - in
An American Werewolf in London. It's that abrupt.) Unnamed photographer smirks and doesn't miss a beat.
"What are they saying on the internet?" she asks me back.
"People think it's a hoax."
"Oh?"
"You know, to throw off us nerds from trying to ruin Chris' Christmas surprise."
"Interesting."
She looks away.
"I was there that day," she whispers.
"I took the picture."
"And?
"I'm not saying," she smiles as another priest poser steps up to his mark.
Sheesh. The truth
is out here, but I'll be damned if I can find it. Time may have passed, but it seems things never change. Good luck, Mulder.
Read on for our on-set interview with David Duchovny!
Read on for our on-set interview with Gillian Anderson!
Comments
Posted by: Jsyn on April 16, 2008 at 01:44:44
X-Files Expo at the Javits Center? I still have my "evidence bag"! East Coast geeks unite!
Posted by: Michael on April 16, 2008 at 08:23:04
This made my day.
Really well-written, brief set report that got me excited to see the film.
Good job!
Posted by: Meghann on April 16, 2008 at 09:46:58
This has made not just my day but six years of waiting just for this article! It isn't a picture but it paints one very well for this movie! I LOVE the line "the cleanliness is bennefitting of a woman, however"..us shippers have been so patient with the writers, it's time they make mulder and scully settle down a little bit, in terms of their relationship, i mean its only right..sooo excited that it'll be about a case they've never explored before..makes me almost guess it's about William..because they haven't really explored a whole lot about him..together, anyway..Scully did her own investigations in the 9th season but still..and it's so true the way they describe it, like a christmas present..can't wait for christmas in july! =D
Posted by: kathy1013 on April 16, 2008 at 10:10:25
Thanks so much for this great article. You have helped make the wait for XF2 almost unbearable for me! But the building anticipation is all part of being an X-Phile these days! After all these years, I'm enjoying every minute of it.
Posted by: 18 m CO on April 16, 2008 at 15:08:48
i've been waiting for this movie 2 come out now it its time and it will B Fxxxxxg awesome
Posted by: daniel clavette on April 16, 2008 at 16:34:29
The title is truly cool i like it and hope to see the movies.
Posted by: melissa on April 16, 2008 at 20:43:37
great article, thanks so much. I cannot wait to see Mulder and Scully together again.
Posted by: Dr Pretorius on April 17, 2008 at 02:58:16
I cant` believe people are still going on about that dumb werewolf. It`s a fake for heavens sake. If that`s the best Carter can do to generate excitement about this movie, then I`m concerned.
Posted by: zerokul on April 17, 2008 at 18:21:22
I will say it has to b something religious related... maybe about creation and biblical stuff?? I dont know, is just an idea, but this article got me all pumped up... X-FILES ARE BACKKKK!!!!!.. Welcome back Mulder and Scully...
Posted by: keri on April 18, 2008 at 08:50:54
can't wait
Posted by: Walter S on April 18, 2008 at 11:34:39
I'm nearly as hyper as a kid on Christmas Eve. I've been waiting and hoping and praying and waiting and hoping...for the rumored next movie to begin filming.
I was hooked on the show right from the start. I'm a dyed in the wool X-Phile. Loved the show and watch the DVDs whenever I can. Chris Carter came up with a show that was part Twilight Zone, part Night Stalker, part Cops, part Alfred Hitchcock and more. It was at once one of the best written, directed, filmed, and acted series of all time. It's a show that left its mark as few others have. It will be a long time before there is another television show that had the feel of a big theater experience and was so consistently good.
I am on pins and needles waiting for the movie's premier.
Thanks to Chris Carter & Company.
Posted by: piper maru on April 19, 2008 at 00:34:37
I don't know about all you guys... but I'm literally counting the days until, after 6 looong years, I get to sit in the theatre and anxiously await the curtain to open and "XF: I Want To Believe" to start!!
I'm a fellow vancouverite... so the fact that they shot it back on the home turf just made it even more real!!
Cheers to XF
Posted by: FoxyMulder2Cute on April 28, 2008 at 10:50:44
I'm looking forward to this movie more than Indiana Jones ( and Raiders of the Lost Ark is my favorite film of all time )
I would love a werewolf movie as long as it didn't have fake CGI all over it as for me werewolves and CGI don't work and An American Werewolf in London has the best werewolf transformation ever committed to film. It won't be a werewolf movie because as Carter says in the interview it's a story they have never done and they already featured a werewolf in the television series.
I really hope though it's a creature feature and is very spooky and full of suspense and i would love it to be a success and for there to be a third film.
Posted by: XTrust_No1X on April 30, 2008 at 06:02:22
The wait will soon be over. In less than 86 days now, loyal fans of the greatest TV show in history will be rewarded with The Return of Mulder & Scully in X-Files:I Want To Believe. The Truth is still out there and only Mulder & Scully can find it! This definitely looks like Chris Carter & Frank Spotnitz took there time, and made one Very Scary stand alone movie. I'm so looking forward to it, but, I am kinda of ticked, that there will be NO Agent John Doggett & No Agent Monica Reyes. Although from what I've heard, A.D. Skinner will be in the film. I'm also hoping that Chris Carter will end the film with a lead into the third X-Files film. How this ending, or lead in? Two figures meeting secretly in the dark parking garage of the Watergate Hotel, as the camera closes in from a distance, that at first, you can't tell who these two men are, until one man lights a familar type of cigarette, and as the camera focuses on the man's hand lighting the cigarette, you can see a old silver lighter, with the enscription "Trust No One". Then as the camera pans up until everybody reconizes these two dark figures, both well known to X-Files fans, a certain Bounty Hunter & CGB Spender, long thought deceased...But How???? And Why??? The Alien Invasion is Coming!!! Dec 21, 2012. Then, Everything Dies!
Posted by: XTrust_No1X on April 30, 2008 at 06:18:51
After reading this story, and how they went on about Never covering the story content in the X-Files before, I have two words for everybody!.....BIG-FOOT?????
Posted by: FoxyMulder2Cute on May 2, 2008 at 04:38:25
BIG-FOOT!!!!
You mean they signed the ex basketball player Michael Jordan and he's going to be some alien or something that comes to earth and tries to take over with his big foot ?....I'm pretty sure this film will be a PG-13 rating which makes any horror type film aspects hard to do so they're going to have to rely on atmosphere to make it all work and the best of the television episodes had atmosphere in abundance.
I can't wait.
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