Warning: Slight spoilers!
http://movies.ign.com/articles/864/864969p1.html?RSSwhen2008-04-07_135600&RSSid=\
864969
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While still not offering specifics, Spotnitz did tell
us this about the film: "It's scary. It's about Mulder
and Scully, very much. It's about them and their
relationship and who they are and it's a personal and
emotional movie too, in a way that the series rarely
could be, because we're not doing 24 episodes - we're
just doing this one standalone movie. And it's
designed to reward fans. It certainly touches upon
things that fans alone will appreciate. But [it's also
designed] to work for people who never saw The X-Files
- who were too young. That's what's most exciting,
honestly, is the chance to introduce these characters
to a new generation."
The show ended with Mulder and Scully's legal status
in a highly problematic place, and Spotnitz promised
that would not be ignored in the film. "We had to and
we wanted to address everything that a fan would say
'Well, what about that?' I think we've done that
without excluding anybody who never saw the show,"
Spotnitz explained, adding, "If you remember, in the
first movie there was a scene in a bar where Mulder
sort of drunkenly explains who he is. We've done it in
a very different way this time around, but I think
we've managed to make it work both for people who are
familiar and who are unfamiliar."
...
So might this be the beginning of a new series of
X-Files movies? When asked that question, Spotnitz
replied "Hopefully! That would be nice. We had such a
good time doing it, it would be nice to keep going."
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