Terma (The X-Files)

"Terma"
The X-Files episode
Episode no. Season 4
Episode 9
Directed by Rob Bowman
Written by Chris Carter
Frank Spotnitz
Production code 4X10
Original air date December 1, 1996
Running time 44 minutes
Guest appearance(s)
Episode chronology

"Terma" is the ninth episode of the fourth season of the American science fiction television series The X-Files. It premiered on the Fox network on December 1, 1996. It was directed by Rob Bowman, and written by Frank Spotnitz and series creator Chris Carter. "Terma" featured guest appearances by John Neville, Nicholas Lea and Fritz Weaver. The episode helped explore the series' overarching mythology. "Terma" earned a Nielsen household rating of 10.3, being watched by 17.34 million viewers during its original airing.

FBI special agent Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) and assistant director Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi) attend a United States Senate hearing, while Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) attempts to escape from a Russian gulag. "Terma" is a two-part episode, continuing the plot from the previous episode, "Tunguska".

Several scenes in "Terma" were inspired by the novels of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, while its tagline—changed to "E pur si muove" from the usual "The truth is out there"—is a reference to Galileo Galilei's investigation by the Roman Inquisition. "Terma" features a climactic explosion at an oil refinery wellhead which required the physical effects staff to ignite a 300 feet (91 m) plume of flammable liquids.

Plot

Having been imprisoned in a gulag in Krasnoyarsk, Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) learns that Alex Krycek (Nicholas Lea) is a double agent working for the Russian taskmasters. Mulder is able to escape from the camp while taking Krycek hostage, although the two become separated in the confusion. Krycek is found by a group of men whose left arms have all been amputated, and has his arm forcibly severed to prevent his involvements in black oil vaccination tests.

Meanwhile, Vasily Peskow (Jan Rubes), a former KGB agent, has come out of retirement and traveled to America. While there, he assassinates Bonita Charne-Sayre, a doctor working for the Syndicate to develop a black oil vaccine. From here, Peskow tracks down Charne-Sayre's test subjects, testing a Russian vaccine on them before killing them to cover his tracks.

Mulder has been able to return to America with the help of a group of Russian peasants, and rejoins his partner Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson). Scully and assistant director Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi) had been detained by a United States Senate committee seeking to uncover Mulder's whereabouts, but the committee was adjourned upon Mulder's arrival. The agents attempt to track down Peskow, following a trail of murders in Boca Raton, Florida. However, the assassin is able to outwit the agents, and destroys the last of the oil-containing rocks seen in the previous episode in an oil-well explosion. He returns to Russia, where it is revealed that he had been hired for this task by Krycek.[2]

Production

The episode's gulag scenes were inspired by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (left), while its tagline is a reference to Galileo Galilei (right)

The episode's title refers to terma, a set of Buddhist teachings hidden from the world. Series creator Chris Carter felt these represented the secrets kept by the Syndicate.[3] The opening credits of the episode saw the series' usual tagline of "The truth is out there" replaced with "E pur si muove". The phrase, Italian for "and yet, it moves", is attributed to astronomer Galileo Galilei, when forced by the Roman Inquisition to denounce his belief in heliocentrism.[4] The episode's gulag scenes were inspired by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's novels The Gulag Archipelago (1973) and One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (1963).[4]

Shots of the oil refinery seen in the episode were filmed at a thermal energy station situated in Port Moody, British Columbia.[4] The climactic oil-well explosion was achieved through physical effects, with crew member Dave Gauthier building a replica wellhead in a disused rock quarry, through which liquid was piped at pressures of 250 pounds per square inch (1,700,000 Pa)[4] to create a plume 300 feet (91 m) high.[3] This wellhead was rigged to spray oil-colored water for shots of the plume itself, which was switched with a remote control to a stream of kerosene and liquid propane for the shots involving the oil catching fire.[4]

Actor Nicholas Lea, who plays recurring character Alex Krycek, worked with a Russian-speaking vocal coach to ensure that his dialogue was delivered with the correct accent and stresses.[4] Malcolm Stewart, who portrayed NASA scientist Dr. Sacks in the episode, had previously appeared in several earlier episodes of the series, including "Pilot",[5] the second season episode "3",[6] and the third season's "Avatar".[7] Carter has called "Terma", along with its companion piece "Tunguska", "an action piece from beginning to end".[3]

Reception

"Terma" premièred on the Fox network on December 1, 1996, and was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC Two on November 4, 1997.[8] The episode earned a Nielsen household rating of 10.6 with a 15 share, meaning that roughly 10.6 percent of all television-equipped households, and 15 percent of households watching television, were tuned in to the episode.[9] A total of 17.34 million viewers watched this episode during its original airing.[10]

Writing for The A.V. Club, Zack Handlen rated the episode a B-, finding that it contained too much "vamping for time", without enough focus on any of the individual plot threads. Handlen felt that the plot thread based on the murder of the Well-Manicured Man's doctor friend should have been the episode's focus, and derided the "pomposity" of the dialogue elsewhere in the episode.[11] Based on an advance viewing of the episode's script, Entertainment Weekly rated "Terma" an A-, praising the "arms race" plotline.[12] Robert Shearman and Lars Pearson, in their book Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen, rated "Terma" one star out of five, comparing it unfavourably with the previous episode. Shearman and Pearson described the episode as "awful", noting that there "is virtually no structure to it at all". The episode's dialogue was described as being "dreadful, boring and facile", with its long, clumsy lines and "ever more complex and ever less interesting" speeches.[13]

Footnotes

  1. Meisler, p. 104
  2. Edwards, pp. 200–201
  3. 1 2 3 Chris Carter (narrator) (1996–1997). Interview Clip: Tunguska. The X-Files: The Complete Fourth Season (featurette). Fox.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Meisler, p. 102
  5. Robert Mandel (director); Chris Carter (writer) (September 10, 1993). "Pilot". The X-Files. Season 1. Episode 1. Fox.
  6. David Nutter (director); Glen Morgan, James Wong & Chris Ruppenthal (writers) (November 4, 1994). "3". The X-Files. Season 2. Episode 7. Fox.
  7. James Charleston (director); Howard Gordon & David Duchovny (writers) (April 26, 1996). "Avatar". The X-Files. Season 3. Episode 21. Fox.
  8. The X-Files: The Complete Fourth Season (booklet). R. W. Goodwin et al. Fox.
  9. Edwards, p. 201
  10. Meisler, p. 298
  11. Handlen, Zack (November 20, 2010). ""Terma"/"Wide Open" | The X-Files/Millennium | TV Club". The A.V. Club. Retrieved January 7, 2012.
  12. "X Cyclopedia: The Ultimate Episode Guide, Season IV". Entertainment Weekly. November 29, 1996. Retrieved January 7, 2012.
  13. Shearman and Pearson, pp. 89–90
References
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