X-Files | Complete Third Season | 7 Disc Collector's Edition DVD
X-Files | Complete Third Season | 7 Disc Collector's Edition DVD
Condition: Used - Excellent
Low stock: 1 left
7 dual layered discs with all 24 episodes from the 3rd season:
- Disc 1 - The Blessing Way, Paper Clip, D.P.O., Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose, deleted scenes, international clips
- Disc 2 - The List, 2Shy, The Walk, Oubliette, deleted scenes, international clips
- Disc 3 - Nisei, 731, Revelations, War of the Coprophages, deleted scenes, special effects clips, international clips
- Disc 4 - Syzygy, Grotesque, Piper Maru, Apocrypha, special effects clips, commentary, international clips
- Disc 5 - Pusher, Teso Dos Bichos, Hell Money, Jose Chung's "From Outer Space", special effects clips, international clips
- Disc 6 - Avatar, Quagmire, Wetwired, Talitha Cumi, deleted scenes, international clips
- Disc 7 - All New Documentary - "The Truth About Season Three," 12 interviews with Chris Carter, special effects clips, behind the scenes, deleted scenes, behind the truth spots on 17 episodes, promo spots on all 24 episodes, all new DVD-ROM game - "Unholy Alliances"
By its third season, The X-Files had grown from a cult hit to a global phenomenon, becoming the most popular show in many countries outside the U.S. Armed with the knowledge that the show was here to stay, series creator Chris Carter expanded its mythology, and the 24 episodes in this boxed set represent arguably the strongest of all the X-Files seasons. As usual, stand-alone episodes explored the paranormal and sometimes terrifying possibilities in mythology, pop culture, and religion. Darin Morgan helps the show to mature by expanding its use of humor, directing classic episodes such as "Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose" (featuring a fabulous performance from Peter Boyle) and "Jose Chung's 'From Outer Space.'" Meanwhile, two-part episodes continue to delve into the X-Files own mythology, introducing the alien black oil, the implant in Scully's neck, the mysterious Agent X, and the shape-shifting Jeremiah Smith. But following the complex mythology is not crucial to enjoying the show. The strength of the X-Files lies not in resolution but in feeding the paranoia of its rabid audience by revealing conspiracies that linger in the mind as unanswered questions. Series creator Carter realized wisely that fans did not look to the X-Files to explain the unexplained, but to question that which they thought they understood. The third season was effective because it hinted that while the truth was out there, it was more complex, sinister, and amazing than even Mulder had imagined.