Jul 24, 2008 - Since most sites were hosted on home connections or shared hosting. The first torrent file – “X-Files [1×01] – Pilot” – was uploaded July 24,. Jul 25, 2017 - The X-Files are on the television series Peabody, Golden Globe and Emmy, created by Chris Carter, which first appeared in the air on.
. 1337x is a website that provides a directory of torrent files and magnet links used for peer-to-peer file sharing through the BitTorrent protocol. 1337x was founded in 2007 and gained popularity in 2018 right after the other competitor went down. 1337x was the sixth most popular torrent website as of Jul 2015.
Can't access 1337x? 1337x.to is blocked in many countries.
Try one of the 1337x proxy sites below for full 1337x access. 1337x proxy are tested every hour for availability and sorted by speed and status. A list of all unblocked 1337x proxy sites.
In these articles, we’ll outline routes through popular TV shows focusing on particular characters, story arcs or episode types. Are you really into the Klingon episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation? Do you want to get the overall gist of the aliens arc on The X-Files? Or perhaps you’d rather avoid aliens and watch the highlights of their Monsters of the Week?
Do you just want to know who that guy dressed like Constantine is? In these articles, we’ll provide you with a series of routes through long-running shows designed for new viewers so that you can tailor your journey through the very best TV has to offer.
While skipping most of season one. It gets better. Since part of the aim of these articles is to encourage new viewers, spoilers will be kept to a minimum. However, be aware that due to the nature of the piece, certain elements of world-building, bad guy-revelation, late character arrivals etc. Will be spoiled, and looking at the details of one suggested ‘route’ may spoil another. We probably don’t need to tell you that The X-Files was a phenomenon.
Its fandom are credited with originating the terms ‘shipping’ and ‘Monster of the Week’, it brought genre television to the mainstream at a time when most people outside of fandom said the words “ Star Trek” with a level of disdain usually reserved for low alcohol beer or decaffeinated coffee, and is made stars of David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson. And now, it seems, there’s just a chance that it’s going to come back. While we approach this news with tentative excitement, we’re also horribly aware that the show we remember so fondly is now 22 years old. Chances are, there’s a whole generation of fans wondering what all the fuss is about (plus an enormous number of people who watched it at the time but gave up somewhere around Season Six). Besides, we’ve already done roadmaps to and, so it seems only fair to offer a guide to the original – and here it is, your beginners’ guide to The X-Files. Route 1: The Conspiracy Whether or not you’ve watched much of The X-Files, you’re probably already aware that it had an ongoing arc plot relating to aliens and UFOs that started out compelling and gradually became well, take your pick between “less compelling”, “rather muddled” and “utter nonsense which no one could keep track of and which had become so incomprehensible by the end that the two-part series finale was just a summary of the arc plot for everyone who’d forgotten what it was all about in the first place”. With that established, if you want to watch all the arc plot episodes and skip all the Monsters of the Week, this is the route for you.
Honestly, we wouldn’t particularly recommend it (certainly not past season six or maybe early season seven), and many of the best episodes of The X-Files were Monsters of the Week. But for all you arc-plot junkies, here it is. Season One: Pilot Deep Throat Fallen Angel E.B.E. The Erlenmeyer Flask The X-Files is the exception that proves the rule that Season One is always a bit iffy – in fact, Season One is one of the strongest seasons of the show. Its Pilot is a quality episode in itself, as well as doing the introductory job of all pilots, and back in Season One the arc plot was still mysterious enough to be truly intriguing. Season Two: Little Green Men Duane Barry Ascension One Breath Red Museum Colony End Game Anasazi Duane Barry is one of the series’ best episodes overall, and kicks off one of the most compelling strands of the alien conspiracy arc – a happy accident brought about by real life actor availability. The follow-ups, Ascension and One Breath are also excellent, and Colony and End Game benefit from being early enough in the series that we’re not fed up of their themes or misdirects yet.
Season Three: The Blessing Way Paper Clip Nisei 731 Piper Maru Apocrypha Wetwired Talitha Cumi Season Three introduced new elements that would be ongoing parts of the arc plot for years to come, as well as stepping up the action (and the body count). Wetwired is probably the least essential of these episodes, but worth a look anyway for some quality Mulder/Scully interaction.
Season Four: Herrenvolk Musings Of A Cigarette-Smoking Man Tunguska Terma Memento Mori Tempus Fugit Max Zero Sum Demons Gethsemene We can’t trust anything we see or hear in Cancer Man’s Day in the Limelight, Musings Of A Cigarette-Smoking Man, but it’s a great episode, so it’s a must-watch anyway. Elsewhere, the arc plot continues to be extremely personal for Scully and traumatic for both leads. Add Leonard Betts for a reveal connected to the ongoing arc plot. Demons is more focused on character development than plot specifics, so can be skipped if you’re in a hurry. Season Five: Redux Parts 1&2 Christmas Carol Emily Patient X The Red And The Black The End The arc plot was scaled back a little in Season Five, to make way for major developments in the movie that comes between Seasons Five and Six, but it ramped up in scale and drama towards the end of the season. Add Unusual Suspects for background on some of the main characters and a possible explanation for Mulder’s entire interest in the paranormal.
The X-Files Movie Season Six: The Beginning S.R. 819 Two Fathers One Son Biogenesis Like Season Five, Season Six focused mainly on Monster of the Week episodes rather than the increasingly unwieldy arc plot, but continued to return to the overall story for premieres, finales and sweeps episodes. Add Three Of A Kind for a sequel to Unusual Suspects.
Season Seven: The Sixth Extinction Parts 1&2 Sein Und Zeit Closure En Ami Requiem With elements of the ongoing plot starting to drag a little and the show’s future in doubt, Season Seven closed off some threads even as it opened up others. Closure and its Part 1, Sein Und Zeit, are especially moving and Closure does what it says on the tin, closing a chapter of the arc plot in an emotionally satisfying (if slightly cheesy) way. Add Millennium for the finale to Chris Carter’s cancelled series, Millennium. Everyone was very excited about the concept of a millennium back in the late 1990s. Season Eight: Within Without The Gift Per Manum This Is Not Happening Deadalive Three Words Vienen Essence Existence With changes in the main cast to accommodate for the first time, Season Eight returned to the arc plot in a big way, working around actor commitments as well as the demands of the story. Add Invocation and Empedocles for new main character John Doggett’s personal ongoing story arc.
Season Nine: Nothing Important Happened Today Parts 1&2 Trust No 1 Provenance Providence William The Truth Parts 1&2 Season Nine started out with an effort to add new elements to the story, but as it became clear that this would be the show’s last season, those were later dropped in favour of wrapping up various characters’ arcs, if not the main conspiracy plot. Add Jump The Shark for the finale to cancelled spin-off series The Lone Gunmen (and for the last appearance of these significant characters on the show).
Add Release for the conclusion of Doggett’s ongoing arc. Route 2: Top Monsters of the Week. The X-Files was a two-person led show for most of its run, but it did eventually start to add a few more regular characters, and by Season Nine, had worked its way up to four leads (Scully, Doggett, Reyes and Skinner). These are the episodes that focus primarily on Skinner, Doggett, Reyes and/or recurring characters the Lone Gunmen. Seasons One and Two focus almost exclusively on Mulder and Scully, but watch Tooms for Skinner’s first, rather ambiguous, appearance, One Breath for the beginning of a closer relationship between Skinner and our heroes, and Colony/End Game for an early story in which he works closely with the lead pair.
Season Three: Avatar The first specifically written ‘Skinner episode’, and a good one, particularly for its subtle homage to Don’t Look Now. Season Four: Zero Sum Another Day in the Limelight for Skinner. Add Musings Of A Cigarette-Smoking Man for the series’ most important and oddly beloved recurring villain’s moment in the sun. Season Five: Unusual Suspects The Pine Bluff Variant Unusual Suspects is the first episode to focus primarily on the Lone Gunmen. The Pine Bluff Variant is primarily a Mulder episode, but heavily features Skinner. Season Six: S.R.
819 Three Of A Kind More Skinner in S.R. 819, and more Lone Gunmen in Three Of A Kind. Add Triangle for a story that has fun with Skinner, as well as Mulder and Scully. Season Seven: Brand X Brand X is another Skinner story. Add Hollywood AD for another bit of fun for the whole team.
Season Eight: Within Invocation Empedocles David Duchovny appears in only about half of Season Eight, so naturally other characters start to come to the fore. John Doggett is introduced as Mulder’s/Duchovny’s replacement in Within (and its sequel Without) and there’s a lot more Skinner in general. Invocation and Empedocles focus on Doggett’s personal ongoing story arc. Add Existence for an especially important moment for Skinner, and add This Is Not Happening for the introduction of Monica Reyes. Season Nine: John Doe (Doggett) Hellbound (Reyes) Audrey Pauley (Reyes) Underneath (Doggett) Jump The Shark (The Lone Gunmen) Release (Doggett) In Season Nine, both Skinner and Reyes became main characters while Gillian Anderson stepped back a little, so of course, this season heavily features Skinner, Reyes and Doggett in the majority of its episodes. Add The Truth Parts 1&2 for goodbyes to everybody. Add Provenance and Providence for the return of the Lone Gunmen to the show after a sojurn in their own spin-off.
Skinner fans should also be sure to check out the 2008 movie The X-Files: I Want To Believe. Route 5: Format-bending and meta episodes. For its first few years, while The X-Files surprised audiences with the nature of its monsters or the developments in its arc plot, the format of the show remained broadly stable. However, as the years went by, the creative team became more and more willing to play around with that format, producing a variety of weird, sometimes very meta, and occasionally wonderful episodes.
In order to bend a show’s format, you have to have an established format in the first place, so there aren’t any particularly notable format-bending episodes in Seasons One and Two. Various stories, both relating to the Conspiracy arc and Monster of the Week stories, try out different things (such as One Breath, designed primarily to allow new mother Gillian Anderson to spend most of it in bed, or Irresistible, which gives us a different sort of bad guy), but nothing really out there. Season Three: Jose Chung’s From Outer Space One of Darin Morgan’s two all-time classic episodes, and the first to really overtly play with the series’ format and episode structure. Also features that classic feature of meta-fictional episodes, bleeped-out or otherwise disguised swearing, taking advantage of the opportunity to get some semblance of swearing past the networks. Season Four: Musings Of A Cigarette-Smoking Man Can we believe anything we see or hear in this episode? Probably not. Is it brilliant?
Season Five: The Post-Modern Prometheus Bad Blood The Post-Modern Prometheus is what it says on the tin – a post-modernist take on Frankenstein and similar stories – while Bad Blood echoes some of the themes and of Jose Chung’s From Outer Space, but with an even more broadly comedic tone. Add Unusual Suspects for the show’s 100 th episode, which provides some background to the themes of paranoia and conspiracy theorising that have run throughout the show, and might just make you question everything you thought you knew about Mulder. Season Six: Triangle The Unnatural Triangle is set in and around the Bermuda Triangle and is just as weird and mysterious as that sounds like it should be. It’s also filmed and edited to appear as if it consists of a series of single takes, uses side swipes to move between scenes, and takes place in real time.
The Unnatural, the first episode written by David Duchovny, is positively normal by comparison, but its story, set mainly in flashback, and fairy-tale vibe make it stand out. Add Monday for a standard but particularly well done time loop episode. Season Seven: X-Cops Hollywood AD X-Cops is the show’s mockumentary episode, a crossover episode, and works far better than you might think from that description. Hollywood AD, Duchovny’s second script, is the ‘show-within-a-show’ episode featuring Hollywood’s take on Mulder and Scully’s story, and is loads of fun, if slightly silly. Season Eight: Redrum Alone Redrum is the backwards-episode, a fairly standard story but pulled of well. Alone features the introduction of FBI agent and Mulder and Scully super-fan Leyla Harrison, an obvious audience counterpart named after a real X-Files fan who died of cancer in 2001.
Season Nine: Scary Monsters Sunshine Days Scary Monsters sees the return of meta-fictional in-show super-fan Leyla Harrison, complete with her observations on the changing nature of the team. Sunshine Days is the show’s 200 th episode, its penultimate story, and seriously weird. Perhaps us Brits don’t get the love for The Brady Bunch? Still, it does provide an opportunity to address Scully’s changing attitude to the craziness happening around her, and is certainly an offbeat way to end the series’ extraordinary run of Monster of the Week stories.