Yeah...getting Joel Ransom (the original director of photography) back was definitely a coup for continuity. It had a nice modern sheen (which, to be, the recent HD released on digital and Blu-ray don't look dated at all, minus Scully's shoulder pads) while still fitting comfortably in the show's milieu. Certainly glossier than their previous Vancouver years (the move to shooting in California in season 6 changed things a bit visually, and this looks almost like a continuation of that, despite the revival being in Vancouver), but pretty identifiably X-Files.
From what I've read, tonight's episode is even better, and the third episode is a classic (it's the return of scribe Darin Morgan, who previously gifted us with Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose, Humbug, War of the Coprophages and Jose Chung's 'From Outer Space').
The future is uncertain; Carter, Duchovny and company have said they didn't bring it back just to kill it, so future runs depend on critical and audience success. Everyone has said there's no chance of returning to full seasons, but it seems everyone is interested in continuing these short-run jags. I'm happy with that. I mean, yeah, I'd be happy with anything, but if that kind of focus means the bar for scripts is higher and more focused, all the better.
I've gotta rewatch the JFK-esque Muldersplaining scene again...ol' Spooky seemed to have done a speedball before launching into that diatribe, and I'm pretty sure my congested head wasn't following at the same rate.
Also, I'm maybe a tiny bit sad at no new credits (aside from the inclusion of Pileggi). The nostalgia rocked, but I dunno. I kind of hated the season 8 hybrid credits sequence (particularly that crappy "Mulder falling into an eyeball" shot), but I rather adored the season 9 (I seem to be alone in this, and my initial reaction in 2001 was negative, but I now appreciate them as being a very well-designed update and modernization of the classic X-Files sequence, though I'm not keen on the CGI kiddo at the end).
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