From: bank (wyatt@thaimail.com)

i love you molder keep fight

From: Jason Lane (jblane@usa.net / Wednesday, November 25, 1998 at 05:45:28)

X-Files is one of the best movies that I have seen all year. It contains everything that you could ever want in a good movie. It has action, suspense, drama, special effects, and the one thing that you see very rarely in movies anymore. A STORY LINE. This is a great movie and a I reccomend that you go see it more than once to get the full impact of everything.

From: peter gus (bcorgan79@hotmail.com / Tuesday, January 5, 1999 at 05:06:54)

Finally I've seen a good film. Carter, you're a genius!! Just remember: the truth is out there...

From: ( / Saturday, January 23, 1999 at 21:32:30)


From: LINDA SPAGNOLA (lindasbeat@earthlink.net / Saturday, January 30, 1999 at 04:09:08)

Truthfully, I was somewhat disappointed with the Movie: The X-Files. I liked the fast pace and the acting was great as always; but the movie left me with more unanswered questions and I really do hate to see the series get into that alien goop stuff. What has drawn me to the series is the great acting, and thotful, deep, intelligent, spooky and thot provoking story lines.. Alien goop negates all that for me. Also, I too have seen a drop in quality of script writing. Last season I even started guessing the outcome of the episode after the first 5-10 minutes. I knew unless things changed, it was the beginning of the end of viewing for me. When something gets to be old hat, I tune out. Further, David does need to stretch his acting wings a little; he is a great actor, but needs to grow. I could be wrong, but it seems to me that the cast and writers are subconsciously if not consciously tired/exhausted from the demands of this series. It takes MUCH to keep something of this caliber going strong!

From: Outside magazine, October 1996 (Outside magazine, October 1996 / Friday, March 26, 1999 at 08:00:46)

Outside magazine, October 1996 Be Like Sri By Lolly Merrell Hey, kids, try this at home. If you want to start your own mystical, spiritual movement, consider Sri Chinmoy. In order to carve out his particular niche--especially after his knees grew sore from running--he began lifting things: first a dumbbell, eventually an elephant. In between, he hoisted airplanes, football players, and a one-ton pickup. Wide-eyed disciples prostrated themselves before him. Publicists sent out glowing reports. Meanwhile, the Master modestly attributed his exploits to one simple technique: "meditation," he told reporters, adding, "The strength and power are coming from within--from an inner source." That source is more commonly known as the rule of levers. "Heard the phrase, 'Give me a fulcrum strong enough and I'll move the world?'" asks Terry Todd, a professor of kinesiology at the University of Texas. In a typical lever-enhanced lift, he argues, Chinmoy hoists less than a tenth of the actual weight before him. "With the right equipment, any of us could do that." To make like Sri in your own living room, build a platform, add a lever, position the fulcrum so that it's just above your shoulders, add hundreds, even thousands of pounds to the platform--in the form of machinery or celebrities--alert journalists to your plans, pray enigmatically, then stand on tiptoe, pushing upward from your calves. Voilą! The platform will rise a quarter-inch. A miracle. Copyright 1996, Outside magazine Outside magazine, October 1996 Be Like Sri By Lolly Merrell Hey, kids, try this at home. If you want to start your own mystical, spiritual movement, consider Sri Chinmoy. In order to carve out his particular niche--especially after his knees grew sore from running--he began lifting things: first a dumbbell, eventually an elephant. In between, he hoisted airplanes, football players, and a one-ton pickup. Wide-eyed disciples prostrated themselves before him. Publicists sent out glowing reports. Meanwhile, the Master modestly attributed his exploits to one simple technique: "meditation," he told reporters, adding, "The strength and power are coming from within--from an inner source." That source is more commonly known as the rule of levers. "Heard the phrase, 'Give me a fulcrum strong enough and I'll move the world?'" asks Terry Todd, a professor of kinesiology at the University of Texas. In a typical lever-enhanced lift, he argues, Chinmoy hoists less than a tenth of the actual weight before him. "With the right equipment, any of us could do that." To make like Sri in your own living room, build a platform, add a lever, position the fulcrum so that it's just above your shoulders, add hundreds, even thousands of pounds to the platform--in the form of machinery or celebrities--alert journalists to your plans, pray enigmatically, then stand on tiptoe, pushing upward from your calves. Voilą! The platform will rise a quarter-inch. A miracle. Copyright 1996, Outside magazine Outside magazine, October 1996 Be Like Sri By Lolly Merrell Hey, kids, try this at home. If you want to start your own mystical, spiritual movement, consider Sri Chinmoy. In order to carve out his particular niche--especially after his knees grew sore from running--he began lifting things: first a dumbbell, eventually an elephant. In between, he hoisted airplanes, football players, and a one-ton pickup. Wide-eyed disciples prostrated themselves before him. Publicists sent out glowing reports. Meanwhile, the Master modestly attributed his exploits to one simple technique: "meditation," he told reporters, adding, "The strength and power are coming from within--from an inner source." That source is more commonly known as the rule of levers. "Heard the phrase, 'Give me a fulcrum strong enough and I'll move the world?'" asks Terry Todd, a professor of kinesiology at the University of Texas. In a typical lever-enhanced lift, he argues, Chinmoy hoists less than a tenth of the actual weight before him. "With the right equipment, any of us could do that." To make like Sri in your own living room, build a platform, add a lever, position the fulcrum so that it's just above your shoulders, add hundreds, even thousands of pounds to the platform--in the form of machinery or celebrities--alert journalists to your plans, pray enigmatically, then stand on tiptoe, pushing upward from your calves. Voilą! The platform will rise a quarter-inch. A miracle. Copyright 1996, Outside magazine

From: Lital Porat (avazit@hotmail.com / Tuesday, March 30, 1999 at 06:57:11)

I read your review anout the x-files movie and i dont think you are right by telling people who have never seen the show: dont go and see the movie.. I saw the movie after i have seen maybe 4 or 5 episodes during the 5 years the show was running... (maybe one of them from the 4 and 5 seasons). I enjoied the movie very much- and i dont think it was a waste of time, or money. I understood most of it's plot, and the other part got clearer during the the 6 season. I have become a fan of the x-files and i think that the script writers done a good job with it- they didnt solved alot and i think it's ok.. that way people who have never seen the show can enjoy it as a movie and x-philers can enjoy it as well. I understand now that if the writers had been revealing us more details than they have- it wasnt have come out as a x- files movie because this is not their way of telling the plot.

From: Sarah Proepper (sproepp@hotmail.com / Thursday, April 8, 1999 at 13:05:07)

I think that the X-files movie the best movie is because they is so ....... and you will be very scarried !!!!!

From: Tanya (frei_bornen@hotmail.com / Monday, August 30, 1999 at 21:46:10)

I thought the movie was quite good, and the first episode of Season 6 was rather impressive as well. But all the subsequent episodes aeem like jokes to me-- funny without any 'real' X-file tone to them. What do you think?