The X-Files: The Complete Fifth Season (1993)
The X-Files: The Complete Fifth Season Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Allen Coulter, Brett Dowler, Chris Carter, Cliff Bole, Daniel Sackheim
Studio:20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Rated:Unrated
Date Added:2011-07-04
ASIN:B000CNE0T2
UPC:0024543228585
Price:$39.98
Genre:Television
Release:2006-03-28
Duration:904
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.78:1
Languages:English
Features:Box set
Allen Coulter, Brett Dowler, Chris Carter, Cliff Bole, Daniel Sackheim  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
David Duchovny  ...  
Gillian Anderson  ...  
Mitch Pileggi  ...  
Robert Patrick  ...  
Tom Braidwood  ...  
Summary: The midpoint of what would be a nine-season show, the fifth season of "The X-Files" (the first to be put on DVD in anamorphic widescreen format) gives fans a heavy heaping of what they love. For the mythology buffs, riveting episodes from the season bookends "Redux" and "The End" to several episodes in between tease with new revelations about the vast government conspiracies and alien invasion plot lines sketched in earlier seasons. But enough questions are left unanswered for the theatrical "X-Files" movie, which was released the subsequent summer, and the seasons that followed. Supporting characters like the Lone Gunmen, Agent Krycek, the Pusher Robert Modell, and Fox's father and sister Bill and Samantha Mulder are flushed out in more detail in several episodes that occasionally jump back in time to cover the prehistory of the X-files. New chess pieces are introduced, each raising new questions: the clairvoyant child Gibson Praise, Agent Spender, faceless alien resistance fighters with pyromaniacal tendencies, a child who may be Scully's, and Mulder's old flame, agent Diana Fowley (Mimi Rogers). All the time, no one knows who will be assassinated next, who is or isn't dead, just who isn't potentially a child of the Cigarette Smoking Man, and why the base of the neck is everyone's vulnerable spot. The creature feature stand-alone episodes vary in quality, but all are redeemed by the outrageously funny self-parody episode "Bad Blood," a fan favorite that guest stars Luke Wilson as a small-town sheriff who catches Scully's eye.
Finally, "shippers" (fans who would love nothing better than to see Mulder and Scully act upon their feelings for each other) get a heavy dose of the usual sexual innuendo and lingering, tender glances between the attractive costars. Mimi Rogers and Luke Wilson incite palpable jealousy between the leads; the appearance of a wedding band on Mulder's hand in a back story hints at stories not told; and the usual extreme and dimly lit crises illustrate just how far Mulder and Scully will go for each other. In the end, the complexities of their relationship may be the most tense and intriguing of all the mysteries explored by this epic television series. "--Eugene Wei"