"The X-Files" Syzygy (TV Episode 1996) Poster

(TV Series)

(1996)

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8/10
Sure. Fine. Whatever.
Muldernscully26 June 2006
Syzygy was written by the creator of the X-Files, Chris Carter. At times, he sure can come up with some unique and interesting takes on the x-files. Syzygy is one of those for sure. Mulder and Scully go to a small town where satanic killings are supposedly taking place. The entire town is in a frenzy. The funny thing is, Mulder and Scully get taken up in it. They start behaving very oddly toward each other. Granted, they do disagree about cases quite frequently, but it's rare that they are mean to each other. In Syzygy, Mulder and Scully become quite rude with each other, giving you the idea that something is not quite right in this town. And that's what made this episode so interesting, seeing Mulder and Scully in a different light. I found it to be a very creative episode. Seeing Mulder drink or Scully smoke, and many other things out of character. Chris Carter assembles a mob in this episode, an element he uses two seasons later in The Post-Modern Prometheus. One of my favorite lines in the episode is when Mulder is defending Scully to Detective White when Scully is being abnormally abrasive; "She tends to be rather rigid, but rigid in a wonderful way, not like she was today." The tension in Syzygy between Mulder and Scully may be a bit unnerving at first, but it does give you a different insight into their characters, which I liked.
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9/10
Kind of creepy while at the same time absolutely hilarious
Al_Scarface_Capone16 August 2010
While considered a "comedy" episode, unlike most of the comedy episodes it also can be very creepy at times. The comedy of the episode comes from a look at the Mulder/Scully dynamic that is almost spoof-like in nature. This comedy is well presented in great bits of dialog. The dialog and the comedy flows naturally the plot and theme of people acting strangely due to the alignment of the planets, however, what makes it work is the fact that every funny line and out of character action comes from the vision normally presented of the characters. For instance, while he never drinks, it seems with in the basic boundaries of the Mulder character to chug vodka. It should be noted though that unlike the other comedy episodes, the comedy tends to be less laugh out loud funny, and more smooth and witty, although there are a few of the laugh out loud moments in this episode.

Now for the other side of the episode, and that is the fact that it is downright creepy and surreal. Going into this episode knowing nothing about it, when things begin to get really weird, I started to think I might be dreaming or something. This comes not just from the dialog, but from the mood and tense atmosphere created by the solid art direction and typically excellent music and cinematography.

In conclusion, unlike most of the comedy episodes, Syzygy is not an episode to show to those new to The X-Files. It is twisted and creepy, and delves deep into the Mulder Scully dynamic.
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9/10
Sure. Fine. Whatever.
SleepTight66628 September 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Two comedies in a row? Sure. Fine. Whatever. While the previous episode was a lot ickier, this one was a lot darker.

It wasn't exactly creepy, but it did have that 90's B-horror slasher flick atmosphere. The only difference is that it had a very clever and fun script. There were a huge amount of memorable lines, some of them were easily some of the best X-Files dialog moments. ever.

What I loved most about this episode was that both Mulder and Scully got to play a different character. Especially Scully, who was rude and loud all the way through. She might have been a little irritating at first, but it was fitting and she had the best lines for once.

The only minor bad points was the teen cast, none of them were very talented and delivered some lines badly. But that can easily be overlooked.

I'm gonna give this episode FOUR stars, yet another strong Season 3 episode.
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10/10
one of my favourites
eulchen521 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This episode means a lot to me personally. I remember when this aired here in 1996, I was a 17 year old girl, a little insecure and a huge fan of the series already. I had some kind of "trauma", because my birthday, which is shortly after Christmas was often forgotten by many people.

Apart from this episode being written fantastically funny and I found (and still find) it very exciting I was really flabbergasted when in the show they said that this very special important star constellation was on January 12th, 1979. As this is my birthday I remember feeling like I was even part of the show. And it felt like my birthday was something special after all. So, still a nice memory and still one of my favourite episodes!
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10/10
Solving the mystery of the horny beast
Sanpaco1310 April 2007
Syzygy the Limerick:

A lady whose surname is White

Whose town wasn't feeling quite right

The planets aligning

And teen girls maligning

Spark Mulder and Scully to fighting.

Syzygy is defined as a kind of unity, especially through coordination or alignment, most commonly used in the astronomical and/or astrological sense. This episode uses this definition both literally and loosely with double meaning. The double meaning is seen best to me with Scully's comment after the mob digs up the dead dog Mr. Tippy's bones.

SCULLY: This is called 'rumor panic'. It's when XXX that links up with a popular satanic cult myth and an increase of attention in a community. A villain or villains are singled out as the focus of the community's confusion and angst about unexplained events, like the death of the high school boys. There have been at least twenty incidents since 1983 from upstate New York to Reno, Nevada and not one of them has turned up a single shred of evidence to support the wild allegations.

So in this sense the "syzygy" is the unity of the town against the "satanists". Other types of syzygy seen throughout the show are the repetition of lines, the matching up of the girls stories both in the beginning about the cultists and then at the end when they are implicating each other. They cut scenes back and forth between them saying the exact same thing.

Another characteristic of this episode is how everyone is acting completely out of character. Examples are the obvious Scully and Mulder fighting. At first it seems like they probably are just a little sick of each other but it turns into outright hostility. It all starts with the bickering in the car about directions at the beginning. From there it just goes into Scully being completely unwilling to accept any evidence, and Mulder acts pretty much clueless about anything that is going on. Detective White is another example. I mean a detective would normally not take eyewitness accounts as enough to go on but anytime Scully asks for evidence to support the claims or if they have even looked for the evidence Detective White acts like she had never even thought to do that. Then of course we have other small examples such as the dog mating with the gas grill, the school principal becoming a mob leader, and the pediatrician wearing high heels and make up.

This leads into my favorite scene. The hotel scene. We see more uncharacteristic traits here. Mulder is drinking and Scully is smoking. Interestingly though there are still things that each does that is characteristic of them. Such as Mulder being determined to watch something on TV even though it is the same Sabre Dance movie on every channel where as Scully just turns it off. But then of course we are right back to the strange when Detective White shows up and starts making out with Mulder. The scene is quite comical to me because Mulder is so drunk and knows that something weird is going on but doesn't really seem to care.

Another great element to this show is the astrologist. I love how she milks everything she can out of Mulder money-wise instead of giving him information. She even maxes out his business credit card and then Mulder is seen writing her a check so obviously the $300 he was good for wasn't enough. She has some witty lines too which I enjoyed.

Finally I enjoyed the soundtrack to this episode. We hear "Hand of Death (Burn Baby Burn)" by Rob Zombie, "All Over You" by Live, and "Deep" by Danzig. The most notable song for the X-Files I think is "Hands of Death". This song is used in a number of The X-Files episodes as well as other Chris Carter shows.

So in conclusion this episode had a lot of things that made it wonderful for me. There are a number of other things that I enjoyed that I will not mention but I will just conclude by saying that this was a wonderfully written comical episode about people acting strangely and blaming that strangeness on Satan instead of taking responsibility for their own actions. I give the episode a 10/10.
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brilliant comedy
hoornstram12 December 2016
Sometimes I think that part of the brilliance of the X Files is that it knows how to salvage a flimsy plot idea. When you think about episodes like Syzygy, War of the Caprophages, and especially Bad Blood, Carter seems to know when an episode might tank if a half baked plot were taken too seriously. Instead of plunging headlong into a weak idea and forcing the drama to work, Carter side steps the weaknesses with comedy. If you look at Syzygy (or the other episodes mentioned) the plot has holes in it, and you might not enjoy it if you scrutinize it too closely. But that's the beauty of Syzygy. We are too busy laughing at Mulder and Scully nitpicking each other to death to care about details. Typically Mulder and Scully speculate on all sorts of science and pseudo-science, but in this episode it is enjoyable that they seem blissfully unaware that they are acting like immature teens. They seem too preoccupied swapping wonderful jabs at each other to swap scientific theories. The comedy episodes are some of my favorites and this one ranks up there as well crafted.
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9/10
A very imaginative stand alone episode.
Sleepin_Dragon19 August 2021
The planets have realigned, leading to some very strange goings on in the town of Comity, ever present are Terri and Margi.

At times Syzygy as funny, other times it's incredibly bleak, it really is an incredibly well mixed story. You can see the quality from writer Chris Carter, he knew full well how to present something very different.

Some great scenes, and very nasty one, best of all the one at the gym, that really was grim.

My only real issue is the dynamic between Mulder and Scully, sure all people fall out and snap at one another, but there seems to be some real resentment between the two characters here, and not just the whole driving thing. Some of the dumb locals are perhaps a little over the top.

Look out for dreamboat Ryan Reynolds.

9/10.
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9/10
Mulder: No, no, no. Be my guest. I know how much you like snapping on the latex.
bombersflyup6 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Syzygy is about two teenage girls committing murder with telekinetic powers, midst a rare alignment of the planets.

I find this episode funnier than the previous more popular one, a real hoot. The school principal leading the mob to have the guilty party's head, then finding the two completely innocent the next. Scully at the end of her tether. The story again flimsy though.
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8/10
"I was hoping you could help me solve the mystery of the horny beast."
classicsoncall10 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Scully's jealousy broke out big time in the prior episode, 'War of the Coprophages", and it revs up a notch in this story when the FBI team is brought in to work a local case along side Detective Angela White (Dana Wheeler-Nicholson). I guess it didn't help things when Scully barged into Mulder's hotel room and found White mauling Mulder with a full court body press. To Mulder's credit, he did offer to get her a separate room.

I'm almost starting to sound like a broken record here with my third season episode reviews. After the first half dozen or so were out of the way, they began taking on titles that made you run for a dictionary to find out what they meant. The writers for the X-Files played it cagey as well, it was generally explained what the titles stood for but without making it obvious. In this one for example,'syzygy' relates to the straight line alignment of three celestial bodies, in this case, the sun, earth and moon. How it affected the principal players here is what the story is all about.

With a couple of unrelated high school girls sharing the same birthday virtually within seconds of each other, their combined mental power begins to display in strange and mysterious ways, not the least of which are the multiple deaths of fellow classmates. This leads to their school principal going off the deep end and turning his fellow citizens into a modern day lynch mob. It's not until the near-twins have a falling out over a guy that their combined powers neutralize each other and things return to normal. Or at least what might be considered normal after a slew of deaths and paranormal events like dead birds falling out of the sky.

So maybe that accounted for the weird behavior Scully and Mulder exhibited toward each other, which may or may not have been exacerbated by the presence of Agent White. Personally, I think Scully might have overreacted a bit. Yeah, right, whatever.
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10/10
Sure fine whatever
devonbrown-906491 May 2023
Warning: Spoilers
One of my favourite episodes so far. A very whitty and entertaining episode that explores two psychotic girls who were born on the same day in a time of planetary alignment. That are wreaking havoc under the guise of Satanism. The panic multiplies as the murders happened on another numerogoglically significant day.

I really loved this episode. It really highlighted to me about how the planetary bodies can influence multiple things and how the masses need something to focus their pain and confusion on.

Also it was interesting to see how the unprofessional side of mulder and scullys relationship is developing. After a few seasons I was wondering when they'd let their hair down. The last two episodes have been showing them in a different light.

Scully's subtle jealously and mulders teasing makes the dialogue in this episode really good and funny.
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Cosmic Keystone
chaos-rampant22 July 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This falls with the more tongue-in-cheek episodes like Coprophages and Clyde Bruckmann, though it is not on that level. The story is really trite at first glance, the upteenth time that we're bothering with satanists and some demon compelling the slaughter of innocents. The small-town setting is fine, I prefer this batch of Twin Peaksesque episodes to the ones taking place in nature or the city. Red Museum is a good one.

But in actuality this is self-aware spoof on sexual tension.

You'll see this in suddenly this rivalry between Mulder and Scully, triggered by jealousy. It isn't the first time we've seen something of the sort, but the first time it's so pronounced and catty. The episode starts (and ends) with our pair lost in countryside streets and arguing about directions.

In the paranormal plot, this is reflected in two high-school best friends, girls, who suddenly fight with each other, causing havoc with mysterious powers, killing boys. Mulder gets drunk. Scully smokes. As the local spiritualist reveals, a rare alignment of planets is causing cosmic disturbances, and get this, especially to people born a certain year! Horrendously silly but knows it.

Knowingly pokes fun. Never more obvious than in the climax inside a police station with guns shooting by themselves which is mirrored in a Keystone Kops slapstick that comes on TV.
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9/10
A young Ryan Reynolds before Deadpool made him very famous.
promiserofdeath12 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Honestly I don't understand why the two girls were crying at the end of the episode they were in complete control and knew right from wrong and yet chose to kill. "With great power comes great responsibility." They abused the Powers they gained for evil purposes I just hope they are spending life in a padded cell Prison for murder and also separated from each other.
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Another future stat found in an X-Files bit part
twohundredproof27 May 2010
Hidden away in this whimsical episode was Ryan Reynolds.

He was a bit fat. Suddenly his character in Just Friends seemed even better.

While the episode itself was yet another well titled, in fact its title is an esoteric word that at first glance appears invented by Chris Carter, episode, and the plot at times seemed all too familiar, the repeated clichés were turned into great wit, and their use fantastic.

Add to the fact that Mulder and Sculley both were pulled into the teenage fervor, being short, coy and all around immature "sure, fine, whatever," and it was a great episode.
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