OPINION

Fringe Treads on The X-Files Territory... Again

Written by Josh Lasser
Published September 17, 2008
Part of TV Nights

Let's say, strictly hypothetically, that I was producing a television series about an FBI agent who was tasked with investigating weird scientific occurrences.  Let's further state that my show was airing on a network which for nine seasons had a different series that featured an FBI investigating tasking with weird scientific occurrences.  Now, if I wanted my show to be seen as different from the other show, if I didn't want to have my show seen as the poor step-child of the other series (which is widely recognized as one of the best Sci-Fi shows of all time), I don't know that I would have filmed the episode of Fringe that was on last night.

Back in 1993, in their third episode ever, The X-Files introduced a serial killer known as Eugene Victor Tooms (affectionately known to many as "The Liver Man").  In order to survive, Tooms (who was born in 1903) had to eat people's livers every 30 years or so.  Hey, it's just who he was.  It kept him alive (and is similar to an episode of Kolchak:  The Night Stalker where a killer needed blood to stay alive).  It was a fantastic episode, truly a highlight of the series, and the character actually reappeared later in the season.

Flash forward to last night's Fringe, only the series' second episode and where a serial killer needs to take people's pituitary glands out and eat them in order to stay young.  Sure, maybe the killer's origin was different on Fringe, and the length of time he could go without killing was certainly shorter, and they might have been thinking back to the Kolchak episode, but it still seems like a bad idea for their second episode. 

If I wanted to differentiate myself from a different, hugely popular show, if I didn't want people to have to keep drawing parallels between my series and The X-Files I wouldn't mimic (whether intentional or not), one of the most famous episodes of The X-Files.  There have to be people sitting in the writer's room at Fringe or working on the show for FOX that have a vague recollection of The X-Files and they should have made them do something different in their second episode.

Don't get me wrong, after being disappointed with the series premiere, I went into last night's episode of Fringe with severely diminished expectations and ended up really liking the episode, but it was impossible to watch and not think X-Files.  I simply don't understand why Fringe would want to draw that allusion… again.  It doesn't make Fringe feel like a revamped or reimagined or reenvisioned X-Files, it makes the show feel like a retread X-Files

If an oldish guy shows up in the secret evil corporate entity meetings next week speaking in hushed tones and with a cigarette hanging from his mouth I'm only going to be more upset about the whole thing.  It also won't help if we learn that Olivia has a long-lost sibling who mysteriously disappeared.

Fringe doesn't have to be like The X-Files. There is enough new there that it could, successfully, carve out a wholly different identity for itself.  It could create a new mythology and a new dynamic amongst the characters.  Tweaking old serial killers from The X-Files really isn't the way to go about it though.  I half expected Mulder to show up last night and reference the Tooms case to point Olivia in the right direction. 

That can't be what the producer of Fringe want.  It just can't.  Can it?

Josh Lasser, formerly known as "TV and Film Guy," and complete with a Masters Degree in Critical Studies in said areas, gives his opinions on TV, Film, and Entertainment in general. All of which he does in a shameless attempt to try to get paid to do the exact same thing. Josh is also the editor of the Blogcritics Magazine Television Section.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Fringe Treads on The X-Files Territory... Again
Published: September 17, 2008
Type: Opinion
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: SF, Video: Television
Part of a feature: TV Nights
Writer: Josh Lasser
Josh Lasser's BC Writer page
Josh Lasser's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
Articles in this series
BC articles by Josh Lasser
Video: SF
Video: Television
All Video Articles
All Opinion articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — September 17, 2008 @ 19:01PM — krishna

wasn't there an episode in which black men turn albino because their pituitary gland is sucked out by the mutant from Africa?

#2 — September 18, 2008 @ 06:39AM — Lisa

Amen! And tragically, there actually WAS an X-Files episode depicting a killer who murdered his victims in order to steal their pituitary glands to sustain himself. Season 4's "Teliko." Oy. This show could be so much cooler.

#3 — September 22, 2008 @ 10:57AM — Lisa Solod Warren

You guys watch too much television. The X files has been off the air for years. I never watched it. I am enjoying Fringe.

It is obvoiusly a generational thing.

Josh, you like all sorts of things I have no use for. I don't watch much television. I pick stuff that is good, like The Shield, which you haven't even mentioned, and follow it through till the end, then find another show. Did that with Six Feet Under. Am a House fan. Lost. Stuck through a million years of Hill Stree Blues (before you were born), ThirtySomething, etc. I won't sit down in front of the TV every night, or even more than 2 nights a week.... too much life going on, books to read, and so on.

There are a lot of different people watching a lot of different things out there, besides the Americans with 7 hours of tv on a day, or those who review it for a "living" like you do:)

#4 — September 22, 2008 @ 15:06PM — Carolina

Maybe the guys from Fringe should call The X Files crew...Frank Spotnitz still have great ideas he didn't use on The X files. And everybody knows that his ideas work. But truth be told if you look long enougth you will see references to TXF everywhere. The show change the landscape of television. It couldn't be diferent.

#5 — December 4, 2008 @ 22:43PM — bec

hmmm. that sounds exaclty like the episode of the x files teliko. then again alot of things copy the x files.

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/81346)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments