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X files home song
X files home song











  1. X FILES HOME SONG MOVIE
  2. X FILES HOME SONG TV

They then go on a horrific night time killing spree, breaking into homes and murdering everyone inside. During this sequence, a gang of deformed, inbred hillbillies, drive an open-top Cadillac whilst listening to Jonny Mathis' "Wonderful! Wonderful!" on the car radio. The most famous is the "Wonderful! Wonderful!" sequence, which occurs at the middle of the episode. "Home" isn't one of those episodes, but it contains several very memorable and cinematic sequences. Episodes of such artistic quality that they can easily hold their own against most cinema releases. Every season of the X files has at least 4 or 5 classic episodes. She emerges only occasionally to mate with her grotesque sons, thereby producing ugly, inbred monsters. The plot centres around an elderly woman who lives under the floorboards of a spooky house. This episode is noteworthy for being banned from TV, due to its disgusting subject matter. Home stands on its own in terms of episodes and I can completely understand it being banned. Also, didn't like Scully doing the "Babe" thing. I didn't like that Mulder and Scully just let the deputy go all rambo and get himself killed. Whole time, felt the same as if been making breakfast. sewed me up just like the family learnt in the War of Northern Aggression. Karin Konoval was quite chilling as the mother.

x files home song

The music playing as they drive along and pull in, is what gives it that added class.

x files home song

:) That scene at the house, brutal and of excellent quality. I'm like, you probably wanna take that with you bud. When he gets out his gun and looks to see that no bullets have been fired, then puts it back. Sheriff Taylor: Their folks were in a bad car wreck and we suppose they died. Tucker Smallwood's really good in his one time appearance as the sheriff. I was really surprised how calm Scully was throughout the episode. No not wonderful, of a disturbing high quality though. Home is about the investigation into the death of a newborn child, buried by a deformed family through generations of inbreeding. Personally, I think it contained some tour de force writing that makes it memorable for many years after having first seen it, but on the flip side, probably viewing it once every twenty years or so is enough. Anyway, the episode garners critical acclaim today for the way it was written and filmed, even though at the time it originally aired it carried a viewer discretion warning, the only X-File to do so. Oddly, the name of the singer is not mentioned in stories I've read about the episode and remains anonymous. Not surprisingly, Mathis declined his version of the song to be used in the story because of it's unwholesome subject matter, so the producers had to find someone to do the cover. Adding to the bizarre nature of the story, the film makers chose to provide the Johnny Mathis hit, 'Wonderful, Wonderful' as part of the scoring for the episode. I guess the writers were trying to maintain some balance of normalcy here for a demented story about a family of troglodyte farmers suffering severe, multiple birth defects and passing on their genes via the incapacitated mother's compliant reproductive behavior. And yet, writers Glen Morgan and James Wong managed to inject some humor into the story line, with Scully cracking wise about Mulder's preference to retire to a town like Mayberry, only to have Sheriff Andy Taylor (Tucker Smallwood) show up with an appropriately named deputy, Barney.Paster (Sebastian Spence). Peacock (Karin Konova) staring out at you from underneath the floorboard, you think to yourself 'how much worse can it get', and ultimately come to realize that that was only the beginning of the horror to come.

x files home song

X FILES HOME SONG MOVIE

For some perspective, it edges out what I think is one of the most terrifying endings I've ever seen, in a movie titled "The Boy in the Striped Pajamas".

X FILES HOME SONG TV

This episode was then, and remains now, the most disturbing show I've ever seen, whether it be on TV or in the movies.













X files home song