Gender Bender
- Episode aired Jan 21, 1994
- TV-14
- 45m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
6.6K
YOUR RATING
A religious sect becomes the prime suspect in a murder spree.A religious sect becomes the prime suspect in a murder spree.A religious sect becomes the prime suspect in a murder spree.
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Aundrea MacDonald
- Pretty Woman
- (as Aundrea Macdonald)
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This is a really interesting episode, I really loved the gender bender plot. Amish people were a really nice touch as well. This is the first episode I ever watched and it got me hooked to the show. It's definitely my favorite from season one.
This episode from the first season slightly edges towards controversy with the whole gender bending angle.I imagine there would have been a significant amount of editing before this was finished to appease censors.
The story itself is original and well written and the directing is complemented by the fine acting.(Nicholas Lea makes his X-Files debut though not as Agent Krycek but as a victim called Michael) I especially enjoyed the built up to and the ending itself.
Its different but enjoyable.Ignore any bad reviews you may hear.Watch it for yourself and make judgement then
The story itself is original and well written and the directing is complemented by the fine acting.(Nicholas Lea makes his X-Files debut though not as Agent Krycek but as a victim called Michael) I especially enjoyed the built up to and the ending itself.
Its different but enjoyable.Ignore any bad reviews you may hear.Watch it for yourself and make judgement then
10XweAponX
This is a freakish episode, I wish it had been revisited because it kind of fit into the mythos of the show. Who were these people? How are they able to move quickly, in the shadows? What were their secrets?
The interesting thing about this is that it shows ordinary looking people being able to cause a severe sexual reaction with the men or women that they interact with. In every case, the person that they target initially tries to tell them to get lost, but the power of attraction is so intense that they just drop whatever they're doing (and whatever they are wearing) and go with it. On the surface they are not even that attractive, especially the "woman". Neither of them, man or woman, were really anything to write home about, in terms of what people deem "attractive".
But these ordinary looking people were able to attract, first, Nicholas Lea (who would later become Alex Krycek), and then later Brent Hinkley (from Silence of the lambs) was able to get a reaction out of Skully.
In fact there was a whole town filled with Brent Hinkleys and Kate Twas (The actress who played the "woman"). Ordinary looking people who live in an Amish kind of community, who, as simple as they appear to be, are not what they appear.
Their abilities give rise to all kinds of questions: especially, how do they vanish? This is also the first time that we see the phenomenon known as a crop circle in the X-Files, but what does it represent here? And then there is also the relationship to a certain kind of mud, which appears to be part of this cult's religious practice.
For comparison's sake, in season nine we get to meet a bug woman and her bug child, who are able not only to control bugs but to spin webs- but they are at least partially explained. In my mind these cult people are even weirder than the bug family. Especially since no attempt was ever made to explain who they were, where they came from, where they went to. But this episode grabs your interest because those are questions that we want answered. They should have been answered. It drives us bugsputz because it was never resolved, not really.
I think part of the point of this episode was to show that even with communities of people that repress themselves in order to stay away from things like bars and sex and booze and Playboy magazines, and collect themselves into communities where there is no electricity or cars, as far away from the temptations of the world you would think that living like that would bring you, those temptations are still there and given an opportunity will sprout into activity. No matter how much they protest to Mulder and Skully that they want nothing to do with the world, they still can't deny that one of their members definitely wanted something to do with the world- and left the community in order to explore that world.
The only solution this cult could think of was to move even further away from the world in general. That's where the speculation comes in, because where they went to, was it out of this world completely? We don't know, because this episode basically dead ends, leaving Mulder and Skully again with nothing to show for it, except for possibly a few flakes of skin from their scalps as they scratched their heads in bewilderment (and not just Mulder and Skully, us as well).
Which was another reason why I loved season one...
The interesting thing about this is that it shows ordinary looking people being able to cause a severe sexual reaction with the men or women that they interact with. In every case, the person that they target initially tries to tell them to get lost, but the power of attraction is so intense that they just drop whatever they're doing (and whatever they are wearing) and go with it. On the surface they are not even that attractive, especially the "woman". Neither of them, man or woman, were really anything to write home about, in terms of what people deem "attractive".
But these ordinary looking people were able to attract, first, Nicholas Lea (who would later become Alex Krycek), and then later Brent Hinkley (from Silence of the lambs) was able to get a reaction out of Skully.
In fact there was a whole town filled with Brent Hinkleys and Kate Twas (The actress who played the "woman"). Ordinary looking people who live in an Amish kind of community, who, as simple as they appear to be, are not what they appear.
Their abilities give rise to all kinds of questions: especially, how do they vanish? This is also the first time that we see the phenomenon known as a crop circle in the X-Files, but what does it represent here? And then there is also the relationship to a certain kind of mud, which appears to be part of this cult's religious practice.
For comparison's sake, in season nine we get to meet a bug woman and her bug child, who are able not only to control bugs but to spin webs- but they are at least partially explained. In my mind these cult people are even weirder than the bug family. Especially since no attempt was ever made to explain who they were, where they came from, where they went to. But this episode grabs your interest because those are questions that we want answered. They should have been answered. It drives us bugsputz because it was never resolved, not really.
I think part of the point of this episode was to show that even with communities of people that repress themselves in order to stay away from things like bars and sex and booze and Playboy magazines, and collect themselves into communities where there is no electricity or cars, as far away from the temptations of the world you would think that living like that would bring you, those temptations are still there and given an opportunity will sprout into activity. No matter how much they protest to Mulder and Skully that they want nothing to do with the world, they still can't deny that one of their members definitely wanted something to do with the world- and left the community in order to explore that world.
The only solution this cult could think of was to move even further away from the world in general. That's where the speculation comes in, because where they went to, was it out of this world completely? We don't know, because this episode basically dead ends, leaving Mulder and Skully again with nothing to show for it, except for possibly a few flakes of skin from their scalps as they scratched their heads in bewilderment (and not just Mulder and Skully, us as well).
Which was another reason why I loved season one...
"Gender Bender", the only X-Files script ever written by Paul and Larry Barber, is a mildly interesting mediocrity. There's some cheesy scenes and a silly plot, but it never becomes aggravatingly annoying as several season one episodes do. That doesn't mean it's particularly good either. The script is bland and flat, but I simply do not see what so many people hate about this episode, outside of the overused 'dangerous succubus' angle. The ending doesn't work as we learned more about extraterrestrial life later on in the series, but it worked at the time as a sort of Twilight Zone twist on things.
This episode is notable for two reasons: Nicholas Lea makes his debut, not as Krycek, but it's still the first episode he was in, and frequent X-Files director Rob Bowman makes his debut. One of the reasons this episode gets a 5/10 from me instead of a 4/10 is Bowman's work. It's always good, and it was the start of a working relationship hugely beneficial to Bowman's career and to The X-Files' visual aesthetic.
5/10
This episode is notable for two reasons: Nicholas Lea makes his debut, not as Krycek, but it's still the first episode he was in, and frequent X-Files director Rob Bowman makes his debut. One of the reasons this episode gets a 5/10 from me instead of a 4/10 is Bowman's work. It's always good, and it was the start of a working relationship hugely beneficial to Bowman's career and to The X-Files' visual aesthetic.
5/10
Why are healthy young men dying after having random sex with an attractive young woman, who has a touch to die for?
You really have to hand it to the whole team, this first series is the exact opposite of formulaic, there is a breadth of story, and originality of idea, unmatched to this day in any other show.
There have been psychological thrillers, horrors, dramas, and good old fashioned science fiction, I'm not quite sure which bracket this one falls into, but who cares, Gender bender is daringly different, it combines club life, sci fi and a aerial killer all into one story, it is very well put together.
I'm surprised by some of the negativity surrounding this one, it scores highly for originality. 7/10.
You really have to hand it to the whole team, this first series is the exact opposite of formulaic, there is a breadth of story, and originality of idea, unmatched to this day in any other show.
There have been psychological thrillers, horrors, dramas, and good old fashioned science fiction, I'm not quite sure which bracket this one falls into, but who cares, Gender bender is daringly different, it combines club life, sci fi and a aerial killer all into one story, it is very well put together.
I'm surprised by some of the negativity surrounding this one, it scores highly for originality. 7/10.
Did you know
- TriviaThe first X-Files appearance of Nicholas Lea before taking on the role of Alex Krycek.
- GoofsMale Marty is seen in the left hand corner after female Marty exits the car for the officer.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Gone Home (2013)
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