Humbug (The X-Files)

"Humbug"
The X-Files episode

The Conundrum consumes a raw fish.
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 20
Directed by Kim Manners
Written by Darin Morgan
Production code 2X20
Original air date March 31, 1995
Running time 43 minutes
Guest stars
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List of The X-Files episodes

"Humbug" is the twentieth episode of the second season of American science fiction television series The X-Files. It was written by Darin Morgan and directed by Kim Manners. Morgan had previously appeared in a guest role as the Flukeman in an earlier episode of that season called "The Host". "Humbug" aired in the United States on March 31, 1995 on the Fox network. It was the first explicitly comedic episode in the series and Morgan wrote three more scripts for the series that continued his comic take on the show.

The show centers on FBI Special Agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) who work on cases linked to the paranormal, called X-Files. In this "monster of the week" episode, Mulder and Scully investigate a series of murders in a community of former circus sideshow performers. According to critical analysis of the episode, "Humbug" explored themes of "Otherness" and difference. Guest stars included real-life sideshow performers Jim Rose and The Enigma, as well as actors Michael J. Anderson and Vincent Schiavelli. "Humbug" was nominated for an Edgar Award and a Cinema Audio Society Award. It received generally positive reviews and critics appreciated Morgan's different writing style.

Contents

Plot

Agents Mulder and Scully travel to Gibsonton, Florida, to investigate a 28-year series of attacks by an unknown assailant in a community of former circus sideshow performers. Among the people they meet are "self-made freaks" human blockhead Dr. Blockhead (Jim Rose) and his "geek" sidekick The Conundrum (The Enigma), who will eat anything, but says nothing.

Mulder and Scully stay at the Gulf Breeze trailer court, whose name is a reference to the 1987 Gulf Breeze UFO incident, also mentioned in season 1 episode, "Fallen Angel".[1] Here, they meet the distrustful manager Mr. Nutt (Michael J. Anderson), and Lanny (Vincent Schiavelli), an alcoholic with an underdeveloped conjoined twin named Leonard. The agents hear a story about the legendary Fiji mermaid, a common sideshow act in the 19th century that generally turned out to be a monkey with a fish tail attached—the "humbug" referred to by the episode's title.[2] Despite Scully's skepticism, Mulder is intrigued because of what look like simian tracks left by the mystery attacker.

They eventually discover that the attacker is Lanny's twin, Leonard, who is able to detach himself from Lanny's body. According to Lanny, Leonard attacks people and attempts to burrow into them because he is looking for a new brother to replace Lanny. While Leonard has made one of his escapes, Lanny dies from liver damage. Mulder and Scully try to capture Leonard, but he gets away. They find The Conundrum lying on the ground, rubbing his stomach, apparently having been attacked by Leonard. As Dr. Blockhead prepares to leave town with The Conundrum, he comments to Scully that with modern science eradicating genetic anomalies, it will be up to self-made freaks like him to remind people that "nature abhors normality". The Conundrum looks unwell and Mulder asks what the matter is. The Conundrum—in his only line of the episode—replies, "probably something I ate".[3]

Production

"Humbug" was written by Darin Morgan; it was his first script for the series. Earlier in the second season, he appeared in the second episode "The Host" as the Flukeman. He also helped his brother Glen Morgan—already a regular writer on The X-Files—with the script for the following episode, "Blood".[4] Series creator Chris Carter offered Darin Morgan a permanent place on The X-Files writing team, which he reluctantly accepted. Morgan said he was uncomfortable initially, stating "One of the reasons I was uncomfortable joining the staff is that I'm a comedy writer and this isn't a comedy show, so I was trying more or less to have an episode with a little bit of humor, without telling anybody what I was doing."[5] Glen suggested that he write an episode about sideshow freaks.[6] Before writing the episode Darin Morgan watched a tape of Jim Rose's circus sideshow and subsequently cast Rose and The Enigma as Dr. Blockhead and The Conundrum, respectively.[6] Other guest stars were Twin Peaks regular Michael J. Anderson as Mr. Nutt and Vincent Schiavelli as Lanny.

Morgan's script turned out to be the most comedic episode of the series so far. The departure from The X-Files' usual style made some of the crew, including director Kim Manners, uncomfortable, and some of the more explicitly comic scenes were cut.[4][6] After "Humbug", Morgan went on to write three more comedy-infused stories for the show: "Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose", "War of the Coprophages" and "Jose Chung's From Outer Space". David Duchovny later commented, "what I loved about his scripts was that he seemed to be trying to destroy the show."[4]

Themes

In his 2002 book Strange TV, M. Keith Booker describes "Humbug" as an important episode in the show's "ironization" of its exploration of "Otherness"; from the start it challenges the characters'—and viewers'—assumptions about difference. In the teaser, what appears to be a monster is in fact a suburban father and eventual murder victim. When Mulder and Scully are quick to suspect the freak show performers of murder, Dr. Blockhead, a self-made freak and "postmodern celebration of difference", confronts their prejudice and bemoans a future with no genetic anomalies.[7] The agents, with their conventional appearance are considered outsiders, and are quickly (and correctly) judged to be working for the FBI.[8] According to Booker, the freak show characters from the episode exemplify the concept of the Other. He contrasts the perspective of "Humbug", which celebrates Otherness, with that of The X-Files overall in which "Other" is generally synonymous with danger and evil, much like Leonard.[9] Despite this association between difference and malevolence generally found in The X-Files, the show meets the audience's need for difference and diversity, in its sheer number of strange and different characters. This need for something beyond everyday existence is mirrored by the main characters in Mulder's "wanting to believe" in the paranormal and Scully's Catholic faith.[9] In "Humbug", this is highlighted by Dr. Blockhead's argument that the freaks add a richness to life that will be eliminated by genetic advancements.[9]

According to Rhonda Wilcox and J. P. Williams in "What Do You Think? The X-Files, Liminality, and Gender Pleasure", "Humbug" is about "difference, sex, and looking". Regarding The X-Files as a whole, they say that the relationship between Mulder and Scully is non-sexual and "quasi-marital".[10] Although sharing a degree of intimacy that allows them to share each other's space, they avoid a sexual or objectifying gaze: "They look into each other's eyes and argue ideas, rather than gazing at each other's bodies."[10] This status quo is challenged in this episode as the objectifying gaze is highlighted and deconstructed, although not between the partners themselves. According to Wilcox and Williams, a key scene involves Agent Scully and Lanny. When Lanny goes to wake Scully in her trailer one morning, he catches a glimpse of her breasts; she inadvertently exposes herself as she in turn catches sight of Lanny's uncovered parasitic twin; "each gaze involves the objectification of difference".[10] This objectification is emphasized by the fact that Scully's body is not normally revealed in this way.[10]

Broadcast and reception

"Humbug" was first broadcast in the United States on March 31, 1995, on the Fox network.[11] In its original broadcast it was watched by 9.8 million households, according to the Nielsen ratings system. It received a 10.3 rating/18 share among viewers meaning that 10.3 percent of all households in the US, and 18 percent of all people watching television at the time, viewed the episode.[11] The episode was nominated for an Edgar Award for 'Best Episode in a Television Series' and a Cinema Audio Society Award for 'Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Series'.[4][12]

In a 2010 review of the episode, The A.V. Club's Toff VanDerWerff gave it a "Grade A" rating. He noted the difference between the style of the episode and previous stories of the series, saying that at first, it "feel[s] like it might be a very special Murder, She Wrote or something," and that later, "we're clearly in some other show entirely, the only links in the continuity chain being Mulder and Scully themselves." Including Morgan's other scripts for the show, VanDerWerff called his writing "deeply, deeply funny", but said that "Humbug" "may be [his] weakest script". He particularly praised the ending of the episode, saying "there are few other TV writers that would come up with something as haunting and as perfectly understanding of the human condition as the final reveal of who the killer is."[13] Also writing for The A.V. Club in 2010, Zack Handlen called "Humbug" "a terrific episode ... well-written and odd".[14]

Ted Cox of the Daily Herald called "Humbug" "the pivotal episode of The X-Files."[15] Robert Goodwin said of the episode "Talk about offbeat. It's very theatrical and grandiose. The trick was being careful that it didn't become like a bad Vincent Price movie, but it worked out well."[5] Reviewers for website IGN named "Humbug" the tenth best standalone X-Files episode of the entire series.[16]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Lovece (1996), pp. 120–21
  2. ^ Booker (2002), p. 131
  3. ^ Lowry (1995), pp. 210–12
  4. ^ a b c d Kirby, Jonathan (October 29, 2007), "Not Just a Fluke: How Darin Morgan Saved The X-Files", PopMatters (PopMatters Media), http://www.popmatters.com/pm/feature/not-just-a-fluke-how-darin-morgan-saved-the-x-files/, retrieved July 11, 2010 
  5. ^ a b Edwards (1997), p. 120
  6. ^ a b c Lowry (1995), p. 212
  7. ^ Booker (2002), p. 132
  8. ^ Booker (2002), p. 129
  9. ^ a b c Booker (2002), p. 133
  10. ^ a b c d Wilcox & Williams (1996), p. 112
  11. ^ a b Lowry (1995), p. 249
  12. ^ "The Cinema Audio Society Awards", Cinema Audio Society, http://www.cinemaaudiosociety.org/casawards/casprev.php, retrieved July 26, 2010 
  13. ^ VanDerWerff, Todd (June 20, 2010), ""Død Kalm"/"Humbug"/"The Calusari"", The A.V. Club (The Onion, Inc), http://www.avclub.com/articles/dd-kalmhumbugthe-calusari,42292/, retrieved July 17, 2010 
  14. ^ Handlen, Zack (June 27, 2010), ""F. Emasculata"/"Soft Light"/"Our Town"/"Anasazi"", The A.V. Club (The Onion, Inc), http://www.avclub.com/articles/f-emasculatasoft-lightour-townanasazi,42344/, retrieved July 17, 2010 
  15. ^ Cox, Ted (November 21, 1997), "Chuckling On The Dark Side: Fox's Self-Important 'Millennium' Gets A Delightful Dose Of Humor", Daily Herald (Paddock Publications, Inc), http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=ADHB&p_theme=adhb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0ED0285BDAE966FD&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM, retrieved July 17, 2010 
  16. ^ Collura, Scott, et al (May 12, 2008), "IGN's 10 Favorite X-Files Standalone Episodes", IGN, http://tv.ign.com/articles/870/870608p1.html, retrieved November 15, 2011 

Sources

External links