With conspiracy culture now weaponised, can a revival of The X-Files really work today? ...Middle East

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But glance at any early episode of the hit sci-fi drama about investigations into the otherworldly and it soon becomes clear just how much of a product of its time it is.

To put that phrase into context, we must cast our minds back to 1993 – the year that the eerie whistle of The X-Files theme tune was heard for the first time. The date 9/11 was still a benign one on the calendar and Donald Trump merely a mega-rich hotelier who’d recently cameoed in the sequel to Home Alone. The political scientist Francis Fukuyama had us believing that we’d reached “the end of history”: liberal democracy had won, the Cold War was consigned to the past.

As it turned out, the truth in the case of The X-Files was that high-up suits in government had been colluding for malign purposes with aliens – a concept dreamt up by the show’s creator Chris Carter, who’d come of age in the era of Watergate and thus had his belief in institutions and authority tainted. He’d taken his personal trust issues and extrapolated them out into a grand science-fiction concept, feeding much of that wariness into the character of Mulder.

But this was conspiracy theorising of a high-spirited kind, the mythology of The X-Files being a tantalising puzzle to solve rather than a cry of nihilistic despair. When it came to discovering the secrets of The X-Files, viewers scented the thrill of the chase rather than anything more sinister. QAnon, “Globalist” puppet masters, 5G towers – all that lay in the future. The problem for The X-Files revival is that such polarising talk is now very much our present.

Coogler is free to go to whatever macabre extremes he chooses to scare us half to death, but when it comes to conspiracy culture, he ought to be more circumspect. For if he were to plot Mulder’s journey down a logical path, the FBI agent would, at the very least, be hosting a podcast called Trust No One, where no end of left-of-left field views would be being aired. But in the current climate, might he even have been among those storming the Capitol in 2021 in a horned helmet?

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And thanks to the immediacy of social media, any conspiracy arc that Coogler depicts runs the risk of being corrupted faster than Tooms can scurry down a ventilation shaft. What was once fantasy escapism will become confirmation bias. In short, what hope is there for dramatised fears of an alien invasion when reality is far more paranoid?

The X-Files is available to watch on Disney+. You can sign up to Disney+ from £5.99 a month now.

Add The X-Files to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

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