With Mulder gone, 8x10 highlights Dana Scully’s evolving role. Ironically, as the "new Mulder," she is the one forced to consider the impossible while Doggett remains anchored in traditional forensics. The episode’s climax, where Scully is forced to fire on a villain disguised as a child, serves as a dark precursor to the anxieties of her own pregnancy—a major thematic arc for the rest of Season 8.
is often cited as one of the most unsettling and controversial "Monster-of-the-Week" episodes in The X-Files history. Airing on January 21, 2001, it features Agents Scully and Doggett investigating a series of gruesome deaths linked to a paraplegic Indian beggar with the disturbing ability to physically "hitch a ride" inside his victims' bodies. The "Butt-Crawler" Legacy: Why 8x10 Still Haunts X-Philes The X-Files 8x10
Many critics and fans find the episode "xenophobic" or overly reliant on "toilet humor" levels of grossness. With Mulder gone, 8x10 highlights Dana Scully’s evolving