"The X-Files" Paper Clip (TV Episode 1995) Poster

(TV Series)

(1995)

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9/10
Best X Files Episodes Fitting Conclusion
AudioFileZ27 July 2012
When The X Files originally aired I wasn't exactly a fan. I didn't watch it on broadcast TV or time-shift on the technology of the day, the lowly VCR. That wasn't a slam and it has proved to be a good thing as I get to watch the pristinely presented episodes taken from the DVDs. I get the luxury of not having to pause through endless interruptions so I can fully take in the show. Sure, there's chaff among the wheat, but even so I have waded through 2 seasons with plenty of gems unearthed. None more so than the triple-episode story that started with season two's finale and ended with "Paper Clip" which is the second episode of season three.

Paper Clip finishes what,up until now, is undoubtedly the best story line of the entire series. It is, basically, an X File movie when you have the ability to watch all three in succession. Far superior, in fact, to the two later-day X Files movies released in theaters. All of the things that make X Files compelling are here. The focus is entirely on the myth-arc and much is revealed as well as left for future episodes. Everything gels, especially the Navajo tie-in which adds so much richness to the story. It's devoid of comedy, even with the appearance of "The Lone Gunmen". Comic relief would just water things down. This is a definite high water-mark for the entire series.
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10/10
Watch Out For Your Clock Flashing 12:00!
Muldernscully20 May 2006
Where The Blessing Way slacked in action, Paper Clip picks up that slack and gets the story up and running again. Mulder is fully recovered from his blessing way healing and teams up with Scully to find out more about his father's past. Because of the incriminating DAT cassette tape, Mulder and Scully's lives are in danger. Skinner attempts to broker a deal with the Cigarette Smoking Man(CSM) for their reinstatement and for their lives. Very interesting discoveries are made by Mulder and Scully at an abandoned mine. Skinner and CSM have two awesome confrontations over the digital tape. Krycek gangs up on Skinner in the hospital to steal the tape and then subsequently almost gets himself blown up. It's a good thing he knows that a flashing 12:00 on a car clock means that a bomb is about to blow up. Overall, this trilogy of Anasazi/The Blessing Way/Paper Clip is one of the best in the X-Files. It lags just a tiny bit in the middle, but the drama, suspense, intensity & action makes for an awesome thrill ride of a trilogy.
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10/10
An extremely satisfying ending to this wonderful little arc
SleepTight66620 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Watching the X-Files all over again has been a blast. I've come to realize how bad this show could get at times ("Space", "Fearful Symmetry") but then there are episodes like Paper Clip that make me forgive the weaker episodes.

It's an extremely satisfying ending to this wonderful little arc. Both Mulder and Scully are excellent in this. Poor Scully looses his sister, but at least she is reunited with her Prince. I also came to love the Skinner character, it was really awesome how he stood up against CSM.

My favorite scene of the entire episode was when Mulder saw that UFO launch, it was beautifully done and it looked extremely epic. They also answered some questions for once instead of going out the easy way and taking away all evidence.

I'm giving this episode FIVE stars. I think it's the best episode yet.
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10/10
Lots of files. Lots and lots of files
Sanpaco133 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Paper Clip the Limerick:

Mulder returns to a showdown

Scully's sister's in a hospital gown

In danger their lives

Then Melissa dies

And the tape is returned with a frown

Paper Clip is a great finale to the three parter that began with Anasazi at the end of Season 2. The end of the last episode "The Blessing Way" left us with Scully and Skinner at Mulder's apartment, both pointing their weapons at each other while some unknown is at the door. We are immediately launched right back into the action in this episode almost as if we were only gone for a commercial break instead of a whole week. Oh and I checked. This weren't no two hour special on the same night like 24 and Lost have begun to do so often. This is probably one of my favorite scenes of the show and probably one of my favorite Skinner moments. The poor guy is still in the middle of deciding whose side to be on and for this, Mulder and Scully still don't trust him. As both of them have their guns on him he pulls off the frightened animal stuck in a corner and running on pure adrenaline look perfectly. He finally gives up his weapon and things settle down as Skinner reveals that he is in possession of the digital tape that has caused this whole mess and insists that he is on the agents' side.

Mulder and Scully take off to the Lone Gunmen's lair with a picture that Mulder found in his dad's old stuff to determine who the men are that are in the picture. Now I just have to say that this is one of the worst photoshop jobs I have ever seen. I understand that there wasn't actually any such program as photoshop back then, or if there was then it was pretty new, but man it looks like they just cut out their heads from a yearbook and gluesticked them on there. Anyway, I'm not being critical I just think its hilarious to see how primitive technology was just 13 years ago. It reminds me of being in 8th grade Multimedia Arts class.

Anyway back to the story. So they find out that the syndicate including Bill Mulder were working with a bunch of Nazi doctor's back in Operation Paper Clip doing genetic testing. This was supposedly shut down but Mulder is doubtful. At this point Scully finds out that her sister was shot at her apartment. Mulder keeps her from going to the hospital by telling her that if she's the intended target then that's the most obvious place to find her. Instead they decide to plunge into investigation trying to expose the human testing. They pay a visit to Victor Klempert and he tells them where the picture was taken.

They go to the vault and break in using Napier's Constant as a code on the keypad. Not sure where they got this number as the code but oh well. They find a huge vault of files cataloging smallpox vaccinations and other things. Samantha's and Scully's files are there. Mulder then sees a UFO, Scully sees a bunch of greys, and the CIA show up to kill them all. They escape through a back door and meetup with Skinner at a restaurant in the middle of nowhere. Skinner and Scully make the decision to cut a deal with the syndicate, the tape for Mulder and Scully's safety. Mulder is not happy about this deal but instead of arguing he leaves the decision up to the other two.

All this while, Cigarette Smoking Man has been playing the syndicate for fool's telling them that Mulder is dead even though he's alive and telling them that he has found the tape even though he hasn't. The syndicate are very unhappy with the handling of matters. Krycek has his moment of redemption from having killed Melissa instead of Scully by jumping Skinner along with two other cronies and taking the tape back. Poor Skinner is always getting beat up and screwed with. No wonder he hardly hesitates to shoot Krycek right between the eyes in Season 8 after all the crap Krycek has put him through. Anyway, CSM isn't quite as please with Krycek's redemption however as he orders the tape and Krycek destroyed by a car bomb. Krycek escapes with seconds to spare.

There are some wonderful CSM moments in this episode. I love watching his temper tantrum in Skinner's office. "Do you have the damn tape!" I love his reaction to Krycek when he calls to tell him that he's still alive and is coming after him. "Good good! Where are you?" Hehe like he's gonna tell. And finally I love the scene in Skinner's office where he thinks Skinner is bluffing about the tape and then Skinner brings out Albert Hosteen and tells CSM to pucker up and kiss his ass. Yeah baby! Stick it to em! Unfortunately, Melissa Scully dies during surgery and now Scully and Mulder both have lost someone to this charade. Well Manicured Man has given them answers but none that can be fully trusted and now the agents have lost the battle, but through the fight, they have grown closer than they ever were before. Paper Clip gets a 10 from me my friends.
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9/10
Loved it.
Sleepin_Dragon10 October 2020
Mulder and Scully stumble upon something monumental, only the powers that be want to shut the pair down.

This was a terrific ending to what has been a terrific trilogy story. This is a very political story, with those at the very top pulling the strings from a safe distance. Intensely intriguing, fast paced, it raises a hell of a lot of questions. Smoking Man has a true gripe now with Mulder.

We learned more about Skinner, he is as complex a character as anyone.

What I am now wondering is whether Scully will have lost her scepticism here on in.

Wonderful to see Lea back as Krycek, I'm not sure what they have in store for him next, or if he does indeed return, but he is now a man scorned. Is it me, it is he getting dishier each time.

Very satisfying, 9/10.
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10/10
Back to the beginning
thomas-schroers12 January 2017
I'm watching the X-Files for the first time. The end of Season 2 and start of Season 3 really kicked the series into high gear. We kind of get some answers and this continues in this episode. At this point the last couple of episodes were X-Files at their best. A lot happens and Mulder, Scully and their boss are tested in ways, that we didn't see before. In fact, what we see in this episode is a should be a game changer for the series, as we now tend to not only believe, but know. Mulder always believed, but now he has actually seen stuff, that does not turn out to be false. At least it hasn't yet. The same holds for Scully. She has found evidence, found truth, which she didn't expect before. As I said, I never saw the X-Files when they were on. I don't know how important the character developments were for Carter & Co. But our leading characters have been through a lot during the last episode. And I'm excited to see, how this will effect them. Now and in the long run. I shall see.
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10/10
"I was a dead man. Now I'm back."
classicsoncall6 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Can there be any better X-Files moment than Skinner telling the Cancer Man to 'pucker up' and kiss his posterior? Watching the entire three episode story arc that began with 'Anasazi' at the end of the Second Season was worth it just to see the look on Cancer Man's face when Albert Hosteen (Floyd 'Red Crow' Westerman) came out and Skinner revealed that the Navajo elder narrated the oral history documented on the secret digital tape to twenty members of his tribe. It was even better than Cancer Man getting called on the carpet by the Consortium to produce the tape. It was good to see him sweat a little, although he was good at thinking on his feet, you have to give him that.

So this episode comes at you with so much information it could almost survive as a stand alone story on it's own. It opens with that tense confrontation between Scully and Skinner from the end of 'The Blessing Way', with Mulder showing up, again just in the nick of time, to help his partner out of a tight spot. The story proceeds to make more revelations about the role of Mulder's father in a government cover up of alien/human experimentation, and the existence of a huge storage facility where millions of Americans with smallpox vaccinations had their records stored. When I thought about that, I had to figure mine were someplace down there, because the time frame involved would have covered my vaccinations as a kid in the Fifties. (Just kidding on that folks, I know it's just a TV show)

Anyway, if there weren't enough kickers in the story, the idea that Krycek was targeted for assassination showed that the enigmatic Smoking Man was adept at covering his mistakes in keeping a step ahead of the Consortium. But then it all fell apart for him during that showdown with Skinner. The most poignant scene in this episode occurred when Mulder went back to see his Mom (Sheila Larken), and prevailed upon her to confront the fact of her husband's choice between Mulder or his sister as insurance against revealing the alien/human hybrid project. That had to be very little comfort for Mulder, left to sort out the details of his Dad's sordid history with the State Department and the diabolical Smoking Man.
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This is where you pucker up and kiss my ass.
alexandercappelli30 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"This is where you pucker up and kiss my ass." - Assistant Director Skinner.

Episode 2, 'Paper Clip', original air date September 29th, 1995. Written by Chris Carter, directed by Rob Bowman. Mythology episode count, 15. The conclusion to the three part story arc that began with 'Anasazi' is possibly the most significant mythology episode to date, in that it reveals key information that lays the groundwork for the stories that will span across several seasons. The more noteworthy components of this story are the revelation that Mulder's father not only played a role in the abduction of his sister but also worked alongside Nazi scientists in the 1970's who were performing secret genetic experiments in an attempt to create human-alien hybrids. This is in preparation for a post apocalyptic landscape following some unknown world changing event. Skinner's allegiance is firmly settled once and for all and we learn that Cancer Man has superiors that he must answer to who have concerns about his capacity to carry out the responsibilities of his position. He himself appears to exaggerate his own importance within the group, flaunting his power over people like A.D. Skinner yet seemingly unable to handle the situation effectively in regards to the retrieval of the DAT tape.

Following on from the cliffhanger ending of 'The Blessing Way', Skinner and Scully are at a standoff when Mulder, back from the dead, enters the room and evens out the odds forcing Skinner to holster his gun and produce the DAT tape he had claimed to be in possession of. He insists that he hold on to it so they may use it as leverage against the Syndicate. Mulder has a photograph of his father and a group of men from the 70's. The Lone Gunmen provide the agents with the identity of one of these figures, Victor Klemper (Walter Gotell), a Nazi scientist who escaped the Nuremberg trials, thanks to Operation Paperclip, and continued to practice illegal and top-secret genetic experiments in the United States. Mulder's father was involved in this but protested against the human experiments. Mulder and Scully visit the former mining facility which was the backdrop to the photo and discover cavernous tunnels containing a complex system of medical records, among them are files on both Scully and Samantha Mulder. Mulder discovers that his sister's file was original his. While Skinner is visiting Melissa Scully in hospital he is attacked by Krycek and two other men, who steal the DAT tape. Krycek is then double crossed by Cancer Man in an attempting car bombing which he narrowly escapes. Speaking to the syndicate he claims that the tape and Scully's would-be assassin where killed. He meets with Skinner, who says that if Mulder or Scully are ever harmed Albert Hosteen will recite the contents of the tape word for word, forcing Cancer Man to back off.

Mulder's discovery of the file, originally meant for him, is a significant plot point that is explored further in later episodes. In retrospect we can see that this episode infers much of what is later confirmed throughout the series. At this point it's a good idea to try and clarify what is being set up in this story. As we know, it will be revealed in subsequent episodes that when the Syndicate was formed in 1973 each of them offered a family member in exchange for an alien fetus, seen in 'The Erlenmeyer Flask', whose genetic material would be used in the hybrid experiments. Bill Mulder chose his son first and that decision was then changed to Samantha. It is revealed later that Cancer Man offered up his wife, Cassandra Spender, whom we have yet to meet. These family members were eventually returned, some of which were abducted many more times. Samantha went to live under the care of Cancer Man with his son Jeffrey Spender and was subject to cloning experiments. It is one of these clones that Mulder met in the season 2 episode, 'Colony'.

Cancer Man is being pressured by the Syndicate to produce results. He claims to have retrieved the DAT tape, though this in in fact a lie since Skinner is shown to have it at the beginning of the episode. It's interesting to see Cancer Man having to answer to someone, he's not quite the all powerful figure we believed him to be. His methods and approach to handling situations is evidently at odds with the other group members who are beginning to distrust him and lose confidence in his abilities. He is desperate to get the tape back from Skinner as he screams at him, almost pleading, while at the same making sure that it's known that he does not bargain with anyone. He is really a rogue figure, despite belonging to this group he appears to act on his own, without their authorization and with no loyalty to anyone. We know this because he attempts to have Krycek killed and blatantly lies to the Syndicate. This can also be seen as the catalyst for Krycek venturing out on his own. The character will become very much a lone wolf, simultaneously forging new alliances while cutting ties with others, basically aligning himself with whomever or whatever will benefit him the most.

The conclusion of this story arc has shown Mulder and Scully that their work is important, certainly important enough to kill for and therefore providing them with even more motivation to continue with their investigations. Both of them have now sacrificed too much to give up and have witnessed the global implications of this alien conspiracy. For Scully in particular whether she 'believes' or not, she can certainly see that there are a group of people, governmental or otherwise, who are depriving citizens of their civil liberties and they must be held accountable. For Mulder it's the most information he's ever had regarding his sisters disappearance and conformation that the X-Files investigations will provide him with the answers he seeks.
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10/10
Is that answer worth your life?
devonbrown-9064924 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Great episode exposing the truth of nazi scientists working on creating a alien human hybrid. So amazing how they catergorised every American alongside samples which they collected from small pox vaccines somehow. Was unexplained why the kempler gave them the information? Why there was aliens fleeing scene? And how can so many agents miss shots and let mulder and scully escape lol

The global consortium of special interest seem to growing weary with cancer man. His hubris and machinations are making him the perfect antagonist. I'm happy khycheck came to his senses after he car bomb explosion. Wonder what he will do with the tape.

Was happy to see skinner grow some balls and confront him twice. Event without the tape as leverage He found a way to save mulders and scullys career twice now.

Great to see now mulder is closest the to the truth than he ever has been. I guess now the pair are reinstated as FBI agents and will continue to work the X files.
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10/10
Paper Clip
lassegalsgaard19 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
There is a clear advantage in doing something like "The X-Files" on television and not having it be an epic film series. This show is able to do a lot of big things on a very small scale; the passing of a huge alien spacecraft over the heads of our heroes followed by a raid on an old military installation is only one of those great examples. The show is big in its scope, but it never veers away from being a personal show that is focused on giving you something to care for in these characters. They're up against something that is much bigger themselves, but they're able to handle it on a human level and actually go toe-to-toe with something that is much larger than them. It works well for a show that is all set up about being the little guy versus the big power in control. They're up against a mass conspiracy that is meant to cloud the world from knowing the truth about what is actually out there and what they're doing to their fellow human beings. This show's conspiracy element has always been really fascinating, but they continue to up the ante with each season, and this is no different. This episode takes the conspiracy to insurmountable levels and gives our protagonists a huge disadvantage from the start, but it still works flawlessly in providing us with a great narrative that is accomplished through quite visceral and effective storytelling with heads budding and a lot of epic line deliveries.

This episode is a great capper for this three-episode arc that has been unfolding, and it does by revealing a lot of things that will be important for our perception of the show going forward. The alien threat is very real, and it's sold with a great sense of dread and certainty here. A lot of things have happened in real-life that we can't explain, and it makes sense for this show to include those things and tie in an alien element to them, truly selling the horrific idea that something is indeed out and ready to strike down whenever.

There are plenty of iconic and great moments to go around in this episode, with the entire second act at the mining facility being one. The idea of presenting the scope of this issue through a file storage is very subtle, yet the perfect way for this show to go about it. It does a smart move by still keeping Scully at an arms' length from the truth, while Mulder is facing it straight-on, a move that stays true to the characters that we originally fell in love with, although one can't help but to truly question Scully's skepticism now.

There's a continuation in terms of the development of these characters, and even three seasons in, there is still new ground that they have yet to explore. Duchovny continues to vividly impress this season with a very deep conversation with his mother, while Anderson has her most devastating blow yet, and the pain in her eyes when she has to keep cool about it is so evident. They don't even know how to react to everything that they are seeing here and it could easily be that they won't know how to deal with it when it actually comes time to.

The episode does feature some aspects that could be questioned, but it manages to put a lot of those problems aside by just providing an incredibly intense hour of television. There are questions that we still have about the conspiracy and where it's actually going, but the show is probably going to give us some of those answers as we go along. And there are definitely some answers that it won't, but everything we can get at this point would be great, because it's so vast that it feels like anything we hear could potentially be really good news.

"Paper Clip" succeeds in providing an explosion of questions and showing how vast the conspiracy is, adding a lot of possibilities for the coming future. It's an instantly iconic episode with some of the show's best scenes, and some of the greatest performances we've seen so far from the show's leads.
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5/10
The Tedious Conclusion of Mulder's Peyote Trip
frankelee15 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Binging The X-Files I speculated that the mythos episodes would actually work much better, the overall storyline going by much quicker, formerly spaced apart episodes now watchable before the memory of the last one had faded. This is not really the case.

In this episode Mulder continues to try and do something. He never gives a concrete verb to describe what that something is. It involves truth and justice and a conspiracy PERPETRATED ON THE AMERICAN PUBLIC. He had files, but we don't know what was in them. Even though the main characters had them and could read them. There was some smallpox vaccine testing, and some collection of DNA, but we don't know why, and The X-Files writers' tenuous grasp on microbiology leaves one with little faith that they have a reasonably intelligent idea secretly in mind.

It's all spinning wheels and dodging government assassins who can find your location anywhere in the country within minutes, but can't actually kill you with 100 armed men shooting directly at you from 20 paces away. And they definitely can't chase after you and try again.

I'm not sure if Chris Carter's ultimate alien plot really doubles back on itself and gives contradictory plots, as many have claimed, but I look forward to finding out as I continue to binge. Ultimately though, the problem with these early soap opera plots about aliens is they just didn't understand that the journey had to be as important as the destination. We tread water, escape assassins, discover contextless information that means nothing to the viewer and doesn't get explained, and then the episodes end. Even here in season 3, where I know the alien plot is significantly less tedious than it gets in future seasons (because I watched the show starting with the first episode as it actually aired), it's still surprisingly tedious.
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Meridian
chaos-rampant29 June 2013
It may be the Anasazi - Blessed Way - Paperclip trifecta is the best X- file run up to this point. The season 1 finale was fine, but the Little Green Men followup was a generic restatement of intentions, not worth the time. Duane Barry and Ascension are the only other contenders, but One Breath is a letdown, hitting against the show's hard limits so far as exploring character. Colony is pure jumping the shark, as ridiculous as a Dolph Lungren film.

But this X-file stretch is fine: it centers on the childlike apprehension of a nefarious conspiracy, stressing hallucinated urges.

Blessed Way is below average, to get this out of the way. The pedantic prolonging of Mulder's re-emerging just grates as useless, the spiritual connection in dreams is unimaginative, and the episode is my new example of worst use of voice-over in a film, previous being the 60s version of The Haunting.

This is much better.. What we learn solidifies earlier notions, chiefly that Mulder's father was among the engineers, that Mulder may have been guided within limits of his revelations, that the engineered project is on a vast scope.

But the best part for me is how the makers of the show imagined the vault where 'secret' archives are hidden. It is literally a dark, abandoned place lined with rows of cabinet files - watching Mulder and Scully run up and down with their flashlights, uncovering barely corners of a portentous masterplan, Mulder's revelation of the departing ship, then being chased and fired at by 'agents' and making that miraculous escape..

It's all so dreamy in a childlike way, a scenario a son whose father is doing important business for the government, whose sister has disappeared, would imagine around him.
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4/10
My God; you presume to make us believe that you can simply fix it with enough bullets?
bombersflyup24 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Paper Clip is the final part of the trilogy and much of it weak.

I'm not sold on it at all, perhaps the worst episode of the series thus far. It's a bailout, their lives are in danger because they have the tape and anytime they're on to something in the future, their lives will be in danger too. They get Albert to decode it and then don't even find out what's on it. Their family members died and for what? Hello? Skinner makes such poor decisions here, why did he argue that he must have the tape and immediately want to trade it and then just carry it around in his coat pocket... People died for this! Mulder says "Come on, Scully, let's go. There are truths out there that aren't on that tape." The most ridiculous line of the series, yeah who cares about the tape, what I just almost died for and my father died for and your sister died for and Scully's just in a state of wooed shock. There's plenty of poor dialogue in here. Scully's seen the Bounty Hunter in person, so that ship's sailed too.
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