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Gillian’s truth Gillian Anderson on what’s kept her going until season 11 of ‘The X-Files’ — premiering tonight in the UAE — and why she’s quitting it

The new run of the rebooted series, extended due to high ratings, will be the last for Gillian Anderson

- Sarah Rodman — Los Angeles Times

I f you have found yourself contemplat­ing rewatching some old episodes of The X-Files to brush up before the upcoming Season 11 premiere, you’re in good company.

“The mythology of this show, it was complex,” said series creator Chris Carter in a wild understate­ment. “Sometimes,” he admitted by phone from Vancouver, where he was recently finishing up the season finale, “I have to go back and remind myself of the way the puzzle pieces fit together.”

After a 14-year hiatus, the beloved scifi drama returned in 2016 for a quick-hit miniseries. The six episodes reacquaint­ed viewers with the tangled history of FBI special agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) and their quest to ferret out the truth about aliens, the paranormal and all manner of monsters and monstrous men. Fox was pleased enough by the ratings success of the reboot to order up 10 more episodes — which Anderson says will be her last — to continue the pair’s journey.

Reaction to the miniseries was mixed, even among the X-Files cast and crew, but all are optimistic that they found a groove with the upcoming season.

“Last season we really went from a standing start, and this season I feel we have much more of a running start,” Carter said. “When it was proposed to me that The X-Files would come back, it came out of the blue. When it was proposed to me when it would return again for Season 11, it was something I had been actively involved in and half-anticipate­d.”

“I think we were rusty,” Duchovny said of the 2016 season by phone shortly after Christmas.

“It felt like we were finding our way with it,” Anderson agreed. “It didn’t necessaril­y feel like what it used to be and what it could be. It didn’t feel like we were living its potential, necessaril­y.”

But, she said by phone from Vancouver, that unfulfille­d sense of how great it could be served as motivation. “Part of my decision to come at it again one more time was to have an opportunit­y to do that. And certainly there’s more of an opportunit­y with 10 than there was with six, just because of the nature of the show and that it is so many different things, there are so many different worlds that we live in, and aspects of these characters that we get to play, and types of episodes that we do. So to have an opportunit­y to explore that full range through a larger arc was interestin­g, and with the hope and the understand­ing that that perhaps will create a better conclusion for ourselves and for the fans.”

Those fans, said Carter, can count on the normal ratio of “monster of the week” to mythology episodes and expect the series to run the gamut emotionall­y from absurd and uproarious to poignant and pulse-pounding.

As for this being the end, Anderson is resolved — “This is it for me,” she said — but Duchovny isn’t ready for that conversati­on, pointing out that he himself left the show at one point during its original

run. “Gillian said it’s been it before... I don’t know. We can make pronouncem­ents or we could say, ‘Well, Fox might not want more.’ Who knows? I have no idea, so I’d rather not even dwell on the hypothetic­als of it. I’d rather just enjoy these 10.”

Time will tell, but for now, Anderson says, “It has been an extraordin­ary gift and I’m incredibly grateful for the existence of Scully in my life and for the gift that Chris gave me in casting me, and my friendship with David, and it’s been a wonderful run, but I’ve got other things to do.”

One of those things, unfortunat­ely, will not be appearing again as the new god Media in the second season of American

Gods on Starz. Anderson says the departure of showrunner­s Bryan Fuller and Michael Green means she will not return to the show. She does, however, have two feature films slated for 2018, including the espionage comedy The Spy Who Dumped

Me with Mila Kunis and Kate McKinnon, and Duchovny is about to set off on a tour of Australia and New Zealand in support of his upcoming album Every Third

Thought, out digitally on January 26. For his part, Carter said he needed to focus on finishing up this season but could envision being struck by an idea of where to go next. “That happens all the time,” he said. “Every time I pick up a newspaper there’s something that sparks.”

And the news itself appears to have caught up with The X-Files, given the recent revelation­s by the Pentagon about the sanctioned government investigat­ion into UFOs. As the show long contended, it would appear that the truth was indeed out there.

Anderson, Duchovny and Carter have disparate thoughts on the matter and the fact that the news didn’t make much of a ripple this holiday season. “It’s funny, I listen to this [New York

Times] podcast called The Daily, and they did a piece on it, which was nice to see,” Carter says. “We should be talking about it. But the only way that people are really going to sit up and pay attention is if a UFO becomes an IFO. It still seems loopy, in a way, because these are unidentifi­ed objects, and even though now there’s reports of recovery of some of [them], everything still remains shadowy.”

Anderson points out the prepondera­nce of sobering, tangible current events that kept the news from creating a bigger buzz.

“It fascinates me, but a percentage of my life is not spent in that world,” she said. “And so I think I read that and went, ‘Huh.’ Rather than, ‘Oh, my God. Don’t you know what this means?’

“Yeah it’s a big deal, but so much of what’s going on right now is a bigger deal than that. I mean, that there’s somebody in office who is causing more damage to the world and our relationsh­ips with the rest of our fellow human beings than any alien race could do landing on this planet is of more concern than the fact that there were funds put into unusual research. I’m sorry.”

 ?? Rex Features ??
Rex Features
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 ?? Photos courtesy of Fox Broadcasti­ng Company ?? David Duchovny as Fox Mulder and Gillian Anderson as Dana Scullyseas­on 11 airs in the UAE on OSN First HBO HD on Sundays at 10pm and on Mondays at 3am. Guest star William B. Davis
Photos courtesy of Fox Broadcasti­ng Company David Duchovny as Fox Mulder and Gillian Anderson as Dana Scullyseas­on 11 airs in the UAE on OSN First HBO HD on Sundays at 10pm and on Mondays at 3am. Guest star William B. Davis

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