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The X-Files. The Complete 7th Season, Disc 5

ILL - 2006 None on shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 5 out of 5

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Originally broadcast as individual episodes on television.
All things / written by Gillian Anderson ; directed by Gillian Anderson -- Brand x / written by Steven Maeda & Greg Walker ; directed by Kim Manners -- Hollywood A.D. / written and directed by David Duchovny -- Fight club / written by Chris Carter ; directed by Paul Shapiro.
David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson.
"FBI agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) investigate the unsolved and often unexplainable cases of the X-files."--Container.
DVD, NTSC, region 1, anamorphic widescreen (1.78:1) presentation; Dolby surround.

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

A funny episode?! submitted by manz on June 18, 2012, 8:21am Hollywood A.D. is on this disc, and it's one of my favorite X-Files episodes. I LOVE the show, and have many favorite episodes, but this particular one is so dang funny and quirky, and I could watch it all the time. Gary Shandling and Tea Leoni play the movie version of Mulder and Scully! Ha.

Episode Details submitted by Ilyjtwya on July 22, 2014, 12:39am "all things"
While Mulder is away in England, Scully is led by coincidences, chance, fate and possibly a higher power to a married man with whom she had an affair during medical school, and a look at the life she didn’t choose, forcing her to make choices about her future.

"Brand X"
While protecting a man due to testify against the Morley cigarette company, Skinner is horrified when the witness dies mysteriously. What the agents soon discover is that a new brand of cigarette has a dangerous secret.

"Hollywood A.D."
An entrepreneurial Hollywood producer and college friend of Skinner picks up the idea for a film based on the X-Files division, however the agents find that the level of realism in their fictional portrayal is somewhat questionable.

"Fight Club"
Mulder and Scully cross paths with a pair of doppelgangers whose close proximity yields unlimited mayhem. Splitting up in two, the agent tries to find out "why" and "what" they are doing.