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x-files....i'm one of the hardcore fan!
so far the series yg best dr film.
terutama season 1 sampai 7.
pastu ada sedikit kehampasan.
hrp2 2nd movie ni best sbb dah byk genre citer mcm x-files kat luar skrg ni. |
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:pompom: yeah!xsbr nk tgk!!!!:pompom: |
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The X-Files: I Want to Believe (???)
"The X-Files: I Want to Believe" is the second feature film based on the TV series The X-Files, following the 1998 film of the same nam The untitled X-Files sequel is the second feature film based on the TV series The X-Files, following the 1998 film of the same name. The sequel is directed by the TV series creator Chris Carter and written by Carter and Frank Spotnitz. The film was first anticipated in November 2001 to follow the conclusion of the ninth season of the TV series, but it remained in development hell for six years before entering production in December 2007 in Vancouver. The stars of the TV series, David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson, return to reprise their roles as Fox Mulder and Dana Scully. The premise of the film is not yet publicly known, but many of those involved, including Carter, Duchovny, and 20th Century Fox, have spoken of the film as one that would stand alone and be apart from the mythology of the TV series. The film is currently scheduled to be released on July 25, 2008.
trailer rasmi versi record/kurang clear (byk fake kat youtube tu - tapi yg ni betul)...
[youtube]jpQQ2x3jlqU[/youtube]
[youtube]emkQETpv2KU[/youtube]
kualiti kureng... tapi still boleh nampak/dengar...
[ Last edited by y0sh at 17-4-2008 12:39 PM ] |
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Reply #44 y0sh's post
tgk trailer makin la teruja nak tgk........ |
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Reply #44 y0sh's post
wow...kellasnya poster dia. |
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kalau aku lelong x-files notes aku mesti aku kaya kan? heheheheh.......... mcm tu la gilanya aku kat x-files ni..... |
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The X-Files 2 Gets A Title
Posted on 17-Apr-2008
It was untitled for months but finally, creator Chris Carter revealed yesterday that the new X-Files movie will be The X-Files: I Want To Believe.
"It's a natural title," Chris told The Associated Press. "It's a story that involves the difficulties in mediating faith and science. 'I Want To Believe'. It really does suggest Mulder's struggle with his faith."
David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson reprise their roles of Fox Mulder and Dana Scully. The movie also features Xzibit, Amanda Peet and Billy Connolly.
But folks from the film are tight-lipped about the storyline. All anyone knows is that it is a stand-alone story and the focus will not be on the show's convoluted alien mythology. The idea is to draw in a new audience and keep fans of the series happy too.
Oh, and if you've seen those pictures on the internet of Mulder and Scully kissing in front of a house with cameras trained on them, that was staged strictly for the benefit of the paparazzi!
The local release date for this highly-anticipated sequel is 31 July. It's almost hard to believe that this movie will open 10 years after the first X-Files film was released and six years after the TV series ended.
We can hardly wait! |
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yeay....x-files kembali....suka sgt mulder ngan scully.....:pompom: |
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Reply #48 ladydolph's post
bukan kah itu poster yang ada kat belakang mulder dalam gambar kat atas...... tue!
poster tue real..... kan?
ke produksi x-files wat sendiri poster tue? |
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lo.. tajuk dia I Want To Believe? |
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The X-Files: I Want to Believe
International Release Date - MALAYSIA - 31 JULY 2008
lambat sikit banding negara2 lain... tapi xkisah la :pompom: :pompom:
--- http://www.xfiles.com/ |
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Excerps from Cinematical : X-Files movie plot finally revealed?
This photo is quite intriguing -- ShockTillYouDrop did a set visit where a religious element was mentioned, but with so much smoke and mirrors, it was difficult for them to take anything at face value. Unless Scully is working at a Catholic hospital (and that is a real possibility with her background), then the stained glass back there would back up such a storyline. And it fits with that new I Want to Believe title, doesn't it?
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wahh.. lama dh aku menantikan saat2 nih |
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Sunday, 20 April 2008
Source: Empire Magazine
Empire Magazine Reveals Scully's Work Location
Empire Magazine's June 2008 issue has a spoiler or two included. Here's a snippet:
If the next location we're escorted to is any indication, 'creepy' is an understatement. It's an ancient-looking building in downtown Vancouver which was a mental hospital before it was abandoned 15 years ago, and boasts a ghost lodging on the third floor. Fortunately, tonight's action is being shot only one level up, where the corridors have been dressed with crucifixes, stained-glass windows and statues of weeping saints. This, in the film, will be Our Lady Of Sorrows Hospital, the Catholic infirmary where Dana Scully works as a doctor.
During a scene she's shooting, which involves Scully, a bed-ridden boy and a vulture-like priest, Gillian Anderson wanders over to explain how it feels to play the flame-haired icon again. "It was odd at first, as I'd consciously chosen a lot of parts that were different from Scully. Now, coming back to her, sometimes my brain fights that and I have to struggle to do things I'd programmed myself not to do. But it's great working with David again. We put on our costumes again for the firt time, looked at each other and went, 'Oh! It's Mulder and Scully!' And we love chatting nonsense together. Last night there was a conversation between David and Chris and I about the degree to which you get bloated after you eat sushi..." |
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SciFi.com : 17/4/08
X-Files Secrets Hinted On Set
Now that the title of The X-Files: I Want to Believe has been released, it can be revealed that SCI FI Wire and a group of journalists visited the movie's set in Vancouver, Canada, in February and saw that the source of that title will appear in a key scene: when Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) reunites with her former FBI partner, Fox Mulder (David Duchovny).
Mulder has been living in a house in the woods outside Washington, D.C., since 2002, the year the Fox TV series ended. Six years will have elapsed since the end of the show and the film sequel, set to open in July.
Mulder "was a fugitive, as you know at the end of the series," co-writer/producer Frank Spotnitz said during a tour of the set. "So there was really very little continuity, but there is this."
He points to the office, now in the old house, a loving re-creation of Mulder's FBI basement space.
"And there's the poster," Spotnitz said: a flying saucer over the words "I want to believe."
Spotnitz added: "I don't actually know where the ... set department got this poster from, whether it was one of the original Vancouver or L.A. posters. But it is one of the originals."
The house actually sits in a soundstage built from a converted ice rink in an abandoned amusement park in this Canadian city (the house set doubles one in a nearby town that was used for exterior shots).
The house has an office with features that will seem very familiar to X-philes: A bulletin board crowded with news clippings and a drawing of the creature from "Post-Modern Prometheus," sunflower seeds in a bowl on the old wooden desk, pencils stuck in the ceiling, a photo of Samantha on the desk and a basketball. There's even a fishtank in another room.
The office is the location of a scene being shot this day, in which Scully, dressed in a long camel coat with her red hair grown long, shows up at Mulder's house. He's facing away from her, sitting at his desk, clipping something from a newspaper. He stands, turns to face her and walks as he speaks over to the wall, where the poster comes into frame.
Spotnitz and X-Files creator Chris Carter remain coy about the movie's storyline, saying only that it picks up the characters in real time and will stand on its own rather than pick up the show's arcane mythology.
"I'd say we're trying to scare the pants off of you, like a really good episode of X-Files," Carter says during a break in filming. "It's not a mythology episode, but it [deals with] the characters' lives, what they've been through, their relationship and the arc of the show." The X-Files: I Want to Believe opens July 25. --Patrick Lee, News Editor |
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New York Post Article
Written by XFN Team
Monday, 21 April 2008
Source: New York Post
So what if it's been a decade since "The X-Files: Fight the Future" graced the silver screen and six years since the hit paranormal investigation series went off the air? All that time, X-Philes have been fidgeting with excitement over the day when they'd finally see iconic FBI agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) back in action. Now, the truth is out there. The wait is almost over.
"The X-Files: I Want to Believe" is scheduled to land on July 25, and it's destined to make a believer out of you. Fresh off the movie's four-month shoot in and around Vancouver, Duchovny, a recent Golden Globe winner for his portrayal of a cynical, oversexed writer in Showtime's "Californication," hints at what we can expect to see in the sequel, why there was such a big delay between flicks and what makes him feel like a "sissy."
What took you guys so long to make this sequel?
It seems like forever, but it's not that long for any of us who were actually making it. After 200-and-some-odd episodes, everybody was very excited to go off and find the next phase of their career, discover their life, raise their children, whatever it was. It took a couple years to get everybody back on the same page, but now here we are and we've done it.
What's with all the secrecy shrouding "The X-Files: I Want to Believe" plot?
Much like "The Sixth Sense" or some other movies that have simple, yet beautiful plot turns, there's a core idea that's much better left unsaid before the movie comes out. That's the inspiration for keeping it all secret, not that it's in the tradition of "The X-Files" or a conspiracy and all that.
Speaking of conspiracies, should we expect to see more government cover-ups, creepy aliens or killer viruses in this movie?
It's a stand-alone movie in the tradition of our stand-alone episodes, so it doesn't center on what came to be called the 'mythology of the show' or the alien conspiracy or whatever you want to call it. It really harkens back to the first three years [of the series], where a thriller, horror movie-style idea sustained an hour of television. Leaving the mythology out makes it accessible to people who have never seen "The X-Files."
Guess that means you didn't have to go back and watch "X-Files" DVDs to brush up on all that mythology then.
I never knew what was going on anyway, it became very ornate by the end. As an actor, you go into the scene with your emotional truth, rarely did we need informational brush-ups or fact checks. Sometimes, even in the episodes that weren't conspiracy oriented, you'd go, 'What the hell am I referring to?' But that's just the nature of series television.
A lot of fans thought they'd never see Mulder again. Any truth to rumors you were totally over the role?
I never felt like I didn't want to play Mulder. The only thing that got to me was the network television schedule of shooting 22 to 25 episodes a year, which took 10 months. I was always very hopeful of taking the series into a movie incarnation and, in fact, when I was leaving the show, that was really an express concern that I had with [series creator] Chris [Carter]: Let's make sure that we don't run the television show into the ground and not make it possible for us to continue into movies.
How does "The X-Files: I Want to Believe" compare to other summer blockbusters?
Chris is making a movie that's more in the thriller tradition than an explosives-filled, CGI, summer blockbuster. It's probably a headier experience than just sitting back and watching things blow up.
No gratuitous explosions? What about stunts, will we get a lot of those?
Sure, stunts are cheap. It's cheap to put your lead actor up in a harness somewhere and dangle him over something. One stunt I had to do was climb a pretty vertical, icy rock face and I have no experience doing that, I actually didn't think that anybody could do that, but the stuntman did a pretty good job. I started it off, got about 10 or 15 feet up the rock face, and then he took over and went up pretty far. I felt like a big sissy.
"I miss walking, I miss New York all the time. I think we are going to move back in September."
"I'm a Yankees fan, but I'll root for the Mets if the Yankees are out of it. I'm also a Knicks fan. I'm trying to stay with them through their time of need."
"There's a certain area in the Village, where if I get stopped, it's usually about my mother [a retired NYC private school teacher]. They'll make it very clear: "I'm not talking to you because of what you do, I just want you to know that my cousin was taught by your mother and she's a fantastic teacher.' "
"We shot about a third of ["The X-Files" movie sequel] north of Whistler [in British Columbia]. The movie's beautiful looking because it's shot on a white landscape of frozen ice, it's kind of majestic - I've never seen landscape like that, it's one of the most beautiful areas of the world I've ever seen. My family came when we were up in Whistler and that was really the sweetest part of the shoot for me, because my kids were enjoying learning how to ski, and being on this beautiful mountain. I'd go off to work and come back and they were just blissfully exhausted."
On finishing his English Literature doctoral studies at Yale, where he was ABD (All but Dissertation): "I have immense desire to do so and no capability of ever actually achieving it. It's like brain surgery once you've forgotten how to do it, you have to go back to school all over again to figure it out."
"I play basketball every once in a while, but I play more in New York than I do here [in Malibu]. There are guys that I know that rent an hour a week at a gym and have 12 guys that rotate around and play." |
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Reply #59 baduglyu's post
nice.............. |
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