Written
by Vince Gilligan and directed by Rob Bowman, “Pusher” is one of those so-called
“signature episodes” of The
X-Files that I discussed a little bit last week, in my review of “Syzygy.”
No
matter how many times you’ve seen this third season installment a re-watch immediately
draws you in, and you find yourself glued to the television through the
nail-biting final act.
Part
of the reason this episode succeeds so splendidly is because it establishes a
nasty psychic assassin, Robert Patrick Modell (Robert Wisden) as a dark reflection
of the Mulder character. Indeed, the
character of Modell desires, more than anything, a “worthy adversary.” He finds
that in Mulder, in his opposite.
In
particular, Modell and Mulder are both widely known by nicknames (“Pusher” and “Spooky,”
respectively), and even their last names suggest a subconscious connection. “Modell” and “Mulder” possess the same number of letters (six each) and
both start with “M,” but “Modell” switches the positioning of the “l” and “d”
in “Mulder.” The episode thus goes to
some length -- right down to surnames -- to suggest that these arch-nemeses bear
some kind of relationship or symbiosis.
Even
more dramatically, “Pusher” works splendidly and artistically in terms of its
imagery and color scheme. The bravura
trailer visually primes the audiences for its brutal punctuation (a car
accident involving a very large truck…) by repeatedly turning aspects of the
world blue, as if the episode itself
is working on our psyches, as Modell works on the psyches of his victim with
the repetition of the phrase “Cerulean Blue.”
A
man named Robert Patrick Modell (Robert Wisden) fancies himself a “ronin” (a Samurai without a master…),
and possess the telepathic ability to place thoughts and suggestions into the
minds of others. He has used this talent
to “push” his will on others, and has committed murder-for-hire some fourteen
times. But he has always escaped capture,
or even notice…
After
“Pusher” telepathically forces a police officer to drive into an oncoming
truck, Mulder (David Duchovny) and Scully (Gillian Anderson) begin to hunt down
this unusual assassin. They learn that
his powers originate from a brain tumor that Modell has willfully allowed to go
untreated.
An
F.B.I. sting goes awry when Pusher suggests that a capturing agent immolate
himself, but Modell is captured nonetheless.
He escapes from justice by using his ability to influence the presiding
judge at court, leaving Mulder no choice but to face this Svengali in a Russian
roulette showdown…
Throughout
The
X-Files, Mulder and Scully often tangle with monsters-of-the-week and secretive
conspirators, but “Pusher” suggests an unusual, symbiotic relationship between
Fox and the villain of the week, the aforementioned psychic assassin,
Modell.
To
describe the relationship, specifically, it is necessary to consider the
characters and their individual natures.
Mulder is a rational, Oxford-educated behavioral psychologist. He is a man of reason and science, and of
education.
Yet
despite these incredible achievements, he longs only to believe…to be shown something that is not of what we
might term the rational world. Although
Mulder is clearly a genius, he is derided and mocked by his peers because of
his choice to pursue tales of aliens, ghosts, and monsters. He has become not what he knows or has
learned, but what he hunts – “Spooky”
Mulder.
By
contrast Modell is a man who has failed at every attempt to achieve anything special
in his life. He had a middling military
career after being rejected by the Marines, and he was later rejected from the
F.B.I.
A
physical condition – a brain tumor -- however, grants Modell the very “psychic”
power that Mulder has always wished to quantify. Without trying, without education or science,
Modell has achieved, in some sense, what Mulder has never been able to achieve
for himself: explicit and personal knowledge
of an “extreme possibility.”
Like Mulder, Modell is known for his behavior…for
pushing his will on others. He is not a
great assassin or Samurai, but, rather, merely “Pusher.”
So
on one hand you have a man of reason and achievement longing to validate the
mysteries of the world, and on the other you have man who is, in fact, one of
those mysteries, who has failed to achieve, under his own auspices, any kind of
positive legacy.
No
other person besides Mulder -- who combines rationality and desire (the will to
believe) -- could sense what Pusher actually is, and that is why he proves
himself Pusher’s nemesis, or “worthy adversary.”
Accordingly,
the two men meet on the field of battle -- or
Russian roulette -- and determine which of them is superior. Ironically,
Mulder succeeds and proves victorious in this contest not only because of his
own particular skill-set or mind-set, but because he has one advantage Modell
lacks: Agent Dana Scully.
The X-Factor: Scully. |
At
a critical moment, Scully is there to help Mulder, and her quick-thinking frees
Fox from Modell’s grip.
This is the
decisive move in a game of chess: the shattering of a dead-lock between the
Mulder/Modell connection.
The
idea that Scully intervenes to save Mulder also harks back to a key through-line
of the entire series: the notion that we all require more than one
philosophical viewpoint if we are to see the world in anything approaching
objectivity or accuracy. Mulder needs Scully to help him overcome his deficiencies
in perception, and she needs him for the same reason. Here, the stalemate between Mulder and his
twisted reflection, Modell, can’t be broken until Scully – Mulder’s other set of eyes – acts decisively.
The
final moments of “Pusher” involve a tense game of Russian roulette and work so
brilliantly -- even though we know, rationally
speaking that Mulder must survive to continue the series -- because this X-Files
episode crafts some powerful imagery
And that imagery suggests that Modell is in control.
This
control or power is most plain, visually, in the episode’s teaser. After one viewing, we know the punctuation: Modell engineers his break from custody by
making it so that the police driver of his car cannot see an oncoming truck from
“Cerulean Hauling.”
In
other words, Cerulean Blue is effectively blotted out from that unlucky man’s visual
landscape. Leading up to that moment,
however, shades of blue are actually ubiquitous-- and suspiciously so -- in Modell’s world. In the Loudon, Va. grocery store we see blue
shopping baskets. Modell also wears blue.
The policemen don blue jackets.
Even the world -- as seen outside the grocery store -- boasts a blue
tint.
Cerulean Blue shopping basket? |
Cerulean Blue car, and color tint? |
Cerulean Blue Truck |
The
subconscious impression, then, is that this is Modell’s world, and that he is
entirely in control of it. Blue suggests
that he, not the police, are in command.
After
seeing Modell “give” a detective, Frank Burst, a heart-attack during a telephone
conversation, Modell’s power is established to an even more powerful degree. So by the time we get to the final one-on-one
battle between Modell and Mulder, it hardly seems like a fair fight. Mulder is outmatched, and to prove it, the episode
even features footage of Paul Wegener as Svengali from the 1927 film of the
same name. Although the name Svengali
originates from the 1894 novel Trilby by George du Maurier, today
we all recognize the character as an archetype or boogeyman: one who can
control the will of others. Svengali is thus another visual symbol representing
Pusher’s impossible-to-deny abilities.
Modell returned in another X-Files
episode, “Kitsunegari” in 1998, and involve the character’s revenge upon
Mulder, his worthy adversary.
Next
week: “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space”
Love this episode, easily one of my favorites. Wisden's performance as Modell works perfectly, and is a large part of why you believe he can be a real threat to our characters. This was the first episode of the series that I caught as it aired (my wife was a fan before I was). The episode captured my attention and is responsible for making me tune in regularly and go back to VHS episodes to see what I missed.
ReplyDelete