Tempus Fugit (The X-Files)

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"Tempus Fugit"
Rob Bowman
Written byChris Carter
Frank Spotnitz
Production code4X17
Original air dateMarch 16, 1997 (1997-03-16)
Running time44 minutes
Guest appearances
  • Joe Spano as Mike Millar
  • Tom O'Brien as Sergeant Louis Frisch
  • Max Fenig
  • Chilton Crane as Sharon Graffia
  • Pendrell
  • Greg Michaels as Scott Garrett
  • Robert Moloney as Bruce Bearfeld
  • Felicia Shulman as Motel Manager
  • Rick Dobran as Sergeant Armando Gonzales
  • Jerry Schram as Larold Rebhun
  • David Palffy as Dark Man
  • Mark Wilson as Pilot
  • Marek Wiedman as Investigator
  • Jon Raitt as Father
  • Kathy Rollheiser as Mother
  • Maria Lusia Cianni as Teenager
  • Peter Taraviras as Go Team Member
  • Mark Schooley as Go Team Member 2[1]
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Unrequited"
Next →
"Max"
The X-Files season 4
List of episodes

"Tempus Fugit" is the seventeenth episode of the

Rob Bowman, and written by Frank Spotnitz and series creator Chris Carter. "Tempus Fugit" featured guest appearances by Joe Spano, Tom O'Brien and Brendan Beiser, and saw the return of Scott Bellis as alien abductee Max Fenig. The episode helped to explore the overarching mythology, or fictional history
of The X-Files. "Tempus Fugit" earned a Nielsen household rating of 11.9, being watched by 18.85 million people in its initial broadcast. The title translates from Latin as "time flies."

The show centers on

X-Files. In the episode, Max Fenig—an old acquaintance of Mulder—is found dead following an airplane crash, which Mulder believes to have been caused by a UFO attempting to abduct Fenig. "Tempus Fugit" is a two-part episode, with the plot continuing in the next episode, "Max
".

"Tempus Fugit" was conceived when the series' special effects supervisor Dave Gauthier constructed an elaborate rig capable of simulating a crashing airplane. Carter and Spotnitz expanded upon the idea of a crash to bring back the character of Fenig, who had last been seen in

Emmy Award
nominations, including a win for Outstanding Sound Editing For A Series.

Plot

Four years after

UFO
. The emergency door next to Max's seat is opened.

Elsewhere, Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) celebrate Scully's birthday. They are approached by a woman named Sharon Graffia, who claims to be Max's sister; she tells them that Max planned to deliver something to Mulder, but that his flight to Washington has crashed. The agents head to the crash site in Northville, New York, and attend an NTSB meeting where Flight 549's final transmissions are shown. Mulder theorizes that the plane was forced down by aliens attempting to abduct Max; the NTSB team, led by chief investigator Mike Millar (Joe Spano), dismisses his claims.

When Mulder and Scully survey the crash site, they realize that there is a nine-minute disparity between the crash and the time on the victims' wristwatches, indicating missing time. Mulder believes that Max was abducted from the plane and that his body will not be found. Meanwhile, Scott Garrett, a Man in Black posing as an NTSB investigator, steals the zip gun from the assassin's body and erases his face and fingerprints with acid. Larold Rehbun, a passenger who sat next to Max, is found alive. His injuries indicate exposure to radiation.

Upon being confronted by Scully, Sharon denies that Max brought a radioactive substance aboard the plane, but gives up details about his underground life. Scully subsequently tells Mulder that Max worked at a nuclear weapons assembly facility in Colorado under an alias, and believes that he may have caused the crash after bringing plutonium on board; Mulder, however, believes that Max was taken off the plane by a UFO, and that Rehbun's injuries were caused by exposure to the craft. Scully informs Mulder that Max's body has already been pulled from the crash site. Meanwhile, Sharon is abducted from her hotel room.

After identifying Max's body, Mulder finds that the wristwatches have been stolen from the other victims. He refutes the NTSB's official explanation of malfunction as a cause of the crash, and is doubtful that the true cause will be found unless they discern what happened during the nine minutes of missing time. The agents visit Sergeant Louis Frisch (Tom O'Brien), an air traffic controller from the U.S. Air Force who was on duty during the crash. Frisch denies anything unusual happened. However, after the agents leave, Frisch and a colleague argue over whether to reveal the "truth" about Flight 549's demise.

After finding Sharon's trashed hotel room, Mulder meets with Millar, who tells him that the door was pulled off the plane from the outside while it was in flight. Later, Frisch finds his colleague dead from a faked suicide. A group of commandos arrive to capture Frisch, but he escapes. Frisch goes to see Mulder and Scully, telling them that he lied before and that his commanding officer had ordered him to track the plane's coordinates as it was being intercepted by a second aircraft. Seconds later, there was an explosion and the plane disappeared from his radar. Mulder believes that a third aircraft, a UFO, approached the plane and was destroyed by the second aircraft, also causing Flight 549 to crash. The agents leave with Frisch and are soon chased by the commandos, but they manage to lose them by driving under a landing plane. Meanwhile, Millar returns to the crash site and encounters a UFO. He finds Sharon nearby, having just been returned by her abductors.

Scully returns to Washington with Frisch while Mulder heads to Great Sacandaga Lake, searching for the crashed UFO. Scully brings Frisch to a local bar where they run into fellow FBI agent Pendrell (Brendan Beiser). Garrett soon enters the bar seeking to kill Frisch, accidentally shooting Pendrell instead while Scully shoots him back. Meanwhile, Mulder arrives at the lake where he finds a team of men already searching for the crashed UFO. He dives underwater and finds the craft, including an alien body. Before he can return to the surface, a bright light shines down from above the water.[1]

Production

Dave Gauthier's Boeing 737 rig was the basis of the episode's conception.

Writing

During the production of the third season, special effects supervisor Dave Gauthier constructed an elaborate mock-up of a Boeing 737 airplane in order to be able to simulate a crash.[2] Series creator Chris Carter decided to make use of this rig during the fourth season. When conceiving of the episode, the desire to add to Fox Mulder's emotional involvement by having someone he knew on board led to the writers bringing back the character of Max Fenig to be that person.[3]

Scott Bellis, who had previously portrayed Fenig in the first season episode "Fallen Angel", had auditioned for other roles on the show in the interim, but had always been rejected by the producers because his character was felt to be too memorable. Bellis met series star David Duchovny at a gym several times, and learnt from him that the character of Max was being considered for a two-part episode. The episode's co-writer Frank Spotnitz did not want to have Fenig's appearance "milked" or do something the show had already done. As such he came up with the idea to kill off Fenig in the first part of the episode, which he felt was "a bold choice".[3]

Filming

Gauthier's 737 rig—which required 400 U.S. gallons (1,500 L) of

Rob Bowman admitted that the episode exceeded its given budget, noting that Carter would often defend him from Fox studio officials angry at his production costs.[5]

Broadcast and reception

"Tempus Fugit" premiered on the

Nielsen household rating of 11.9 with an 18 share, meaning that roughly 11.9 percent of all television-equipped households, and 18 percent of households watching television, were tuned in to the episode.[7] A total of 18.85 million viewers watched this episode during its original airing.[7]

The episode received mixed to positive reviews from critics. Zack Handlen, writing for

Emmy Award for Outstanding Sound Editing For A Series for their work on this episode; while four others received a nomination for Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Drama Series.[11][12]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Meisler, pp. 177–184
  2. ^ a b Edwards, p. 211
  3. ^ a b Meisler, pp. 184–185
  4. ^ Meisler, p. 196
  5. ^ Hurwitz and Knowles, p. 111
  6. Fox.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link
    )
  7. ^ a b Meisler, p. 298
  8. ^ Handlen, Zack (January 29, 2011). ""Tempus Fugit"/"Walkabout" | The X-Files/Millennium | TV Club". The A.V. Club. Retrieved May 2, 2012.
  9. ^ Vitaris, Paula (October 1997). "Returning from Space, Glen Morgan and James Wong re-join the X-Files". Cinefantastique. 29 (4–5): 57.
  10. ^ Shearman and Pearson, p. 97
  11. ^ Meisler, p. 296
  12. ^ "The X-Files | Emmys.com". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved May 2, 2012.

Bibliography

External links