"The X-Files" Oubliette (TV Episode 1995) Poster

(TV Series)

(1995)

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9/10
Chilling, empathetic Mulder-driven episode.
lnvicta14 July 2015
Many X Files episodes focus on the supernatural, paranormal, or government conspiracies. This episode focuses on Mulder more than anything, with a supernatural twist on a deadly serious plot: child abduction. It's about a 15 year old girl taken captive by a crazed school photographer who keeps her locked in a basement, or more aptly, an oubliette. Meanwhile a previous abductee, Lucy, who was kidnapped by the same man many years before, is somehow able to experience everything the little girl is as its happening. This makes Lucy the only person who can help find the little girl. Mulder is naturally sympathetic to the case because of what happened to his sister. Scully thinks that his emotions are clouding his judgement, and that only furthers Mulder's determination of finding her. It's hard seeing Mulder dealing with these emotions on his own, especially without support from Scully, and David Duchovny's performance is suitably heartbreaking.

Another thing that sets Oubliette apart is its use of a non-supernatural killer. The creepy photographer is nothing more than a sick, depraved man with no moral compass. He kept Lucy locked up with hardly any light for 5 years before her escape, and though it isn't stated, it's heavily implied that she was molested or raped numerous times. He's one of the most deplorable villains on the show if only because of how real he is - an average guy with an average job and a hellish secret, and there are enough of those to be afraid of in the real world.

This is an overlooked X Files episode with one of Duchovny's greatest performances, great writing, and great acting all around. Though it's not necessarily the most memorable episode of the series, it's among the few that taps into realistic human fears through delicate subject matter, and deserves recognition for so successfully pulling it off.
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8/10
N'oubliez pas "Oubliette."
DWilliams108911 July 2010
"Oubliette" is a solid, emotionally engaging episode that sometimes gets forgotten amidst all the show-stoppers that aired in Season 3. This is lamentable, as it features a gripping storyline, superb guest cast, and some great tender moments from David Duchovny. On ink and pad the basic premise - a psychophysical connection between two strangers that allows one to feel the others pain - sounds too far-fetched to be taken seriously. Duchovny and Tracey Ellis, as the fragile Lucy Householder, make it work. The incredulity of the plot becomes smothered by the viewer's sympathy for Lucy, who, having been abducted and held captive by a man named Carl Wade many years earlier, is once again a prisoner - trapped by the demons of her past via the young Amy Jacobs (Jewel Staite), who has also been kidnapped by Wade. Michael Chieffo is so convincing in his role as a psychopath he could make the Flukeman seem like Santa Claus. It is nice that the mythology arc is brought in somewhat with the connection to Samantha Mulder, one that is obvious even before it is mentioned.

"Oubliette" is a great Season 3 episode that deserves more recognition. Though it ends on a somber note, it is a beautifully written script whose success rests solely on the strength of its actors. The depth of this caliber would become scarcer and scarcer to find in subsequent years and as such it remains a classic X-File. 9 out of 10.
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8/10
Mulder's Connection
Muldernscully29 May 2006
Oubliette follows the story of a girl who was abducted and a woman across town who collapsed and muttered the exact same words the abductor says at the exact time of the abduction. Mulder and Scully investigate this bizarre connection. A poignant line towards the beginning of the episode is when Mulder is talking to the mother of the abducted girl, Amy. Mulder says, "I know you must be feeling..." When the mother interrupts Mulder and exclaims, "I'm sorry … but how could you really know how I feel?" Mulder says nothing in reply. It's powerful because Mulder does know the feeling of having someone close to him abducted. Mulder separates the events of his sister's abduction from this case and manages to make a connection with Lucy, the woman who has the bizarre connection to Amy. However, when the police and Scully suspect that Lucy was involved in the abduction, Scully accuses Mulder of allowing his sister's abduction to cloud his judgement. Mulder responds by telling Scully, "And not everything I do, say, think, and feel goes back to my sister." And this is what made this episode special to me, Mulder's emotional connection to Lucy. He truly wanted to help Amy AND Lucy to "escape". Scully finally realizes this at the end. "Mulder, whatever there was between them, you were part of that connection." David Duchovny gives a great performance that you shouldn't miss.
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9/10
The best serious x-files episode
grnhair200127 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
While I am a fan mostly of the funny or serio-comic X-files episodes (Jose Chung, Je Souhaite, Clyde Bruckman, Dreamland, the lone gunmen episodes, Bad Blood are among my favorites), I do have two favorites in deadly serious episodes, this and "Drive." This episode is about a pair of girls kidnapped and assaulted by the same man, years apart, who share an unwanted psychic connection. Mulder connects deeply with the older, flawed woman, and the two actors (the woman is played by Tracey Ellis) play beautifully off each other.

** Spoilers coming now ** What appeals to me about this, and what was missing in 1997 from most TV, was how complex and, on the surface, unlikeable Lucy is. She's a drug addict. She lies. She works at a fast food joint and lives in a group home. She is a person most of us would cross the street to avoid. She refuses to help Mulder at first. What she is too is this: damaged beyond repair from years of molestation. And so, at the end, her sacrifice is not only moving, but it seems inevitable. She was never going to have anything approaching normal life (and this is the horrible tragedy for the handful of people who survive such an ordeal IRL), and her life did not feel, from the inside, worth living anymore. It isn't that she was being heroic so much, but that it didn't matter one way or the other to her if she lived. Duchovny's acting of concern and finally grief at the end, for her more than the little girl everyone else would be rooting for, touched me. You could read it all in his eyes: what a waste, what a waste, I couldn't do a thing, all past redeeming. It did and does still move me deeply.
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9/10
"Oubliette"
mppie25 August 2013
I was so proud of myself when I saw the title of this episode and said, "I know what that word means!" I wanted to write a review to tell you guys because I find it so ironic that the episode is called this, but the word is never even mentioned nor explained. But it completely fits the episode!

"Oubliette" is French for 'dungeon' and can also be connected to another French word, "Oublier," which means 'forget.' In other words...forgotten dungeon. An Oubliette was a Medieval torture chamber in which prisoners were thrown into a room below the floor. This room had no windows and the only way out was by a door high in the ceiling, the very door in which they were cast into. The prisoners in there were then intentionally forgotten about and many of them died from starvation or from going mad.

I love that the writers did their research and I absolutely LOVE this episode! A wonderful Mulder-centered episode and if that wasn't enough, it is also beautifully written.

(PS: I'm sorry if I got some of the French definitions wrong. I don't speak French, but I know all of that through research)
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8/10
An excellent, gritty case.
Sleepin_Dragon25 October 2020
How on Earth can someone feel the exact feelings experienced by a kidnap victim?

This is very good, it's a chilling episode, it holds up well in this very strong third series. Nice to see the human side of Mulder, Scully is very matter of fact, he is showing a very nurturing side, great episode for Duchovny.

Scenes worthy of a great thriller/horror movie, this was a real change in direction for this series.

Michael Chieffo is very, very good as Cark Wade, menacing in a very human, disturbing way.

Very good, 8/10.
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9/10
Mulder's personal touch
antholly26 July 2008
I recently bought Season 3 on DVD and am currently working my way through the episodes, enjoying every minute so far. However, none of them has affected me as much as this one. Whether it's because the subject matter of child abduction is made all the more poignant due to recent news items, I'm not sure, but I think part of it is down to the connection between Mulder's character and his own personal experience with the disappearance of his sister. David Duchovny gives a very good performance here, and his character's sympathetic approach to handling the troubled soul of Lucy is at times very touching. The abductor Carl Wade is suitably creepy, and the scenes between him and Amy Jacobs are sometimes difficult to watch, but then, this is always likely when you're handling topics such as this.

For Firefly fans (such as me) there's the added bonus in that the present-day abductee is played by none other than a young Jewel Staite!
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8/10
An excellent Mulder-centric episode
SleepTight66629 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Although flawed and at times slow-paced. It still succeeds are being emotional and even a tad disturbing.

Let's start with the bad. I really dislike the way Scully is written in episodes like these, all she does is be skeptic. Same goes for all the other investigators. I don't think they add anything to the episode except for frustration.

Then the good, the casting for the Lucy character was amazing. Tracey Ellis is one of the best guest stars on the show. Jewel Staite was just adorable. And the guy playing the child abuser was incredibly creepy and disturbing. What made him so creepy is that he wasn't a rational human being. He was just insane.

I loved the way it played out, and how Lucy turned out saving the little girl from drowning. Her 'drowning' scene was realistic even though you can't drown when you're not in the water. Also, in the intro where she had her nose bleed was very memorable and disturbing.

I'm giving this episode FOUR stars. An excellent Mulder-centric episode.
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5/10
Mid-Tier Filler
frankelee18 July 2023
The episode starts with a school photographer taking pictures during school class day. As a girl walks away after getting her picture taken, the photographer's assistant leers at her, licking his lips.

"Keep your eyes off the girls, Lenny," says the photographer, the hint of violence in his voice. "Now go get me another bucket of film and keep your mind on your work before I smack you one." As the assistant hobbles away he can't help but look back once more at the girl.

This is an episode about a kidnapping, and then another former kidnapping victim can experience what she's going through, but she refuses to help because she doesn't want to.

Mulder pleads with her, I think I counted 8 or 9 times, but she's like, "No, I hope that girl dies, and I hope you die!"

The episode is hammy, overdone, there's a supernatural plot, but they don't really do anything with it because they don't want to and it probably sounded like hard work at the time. It's just a psychic thing happened and then old fashioned police work and luck actually did all the work. And otherwise it's a bad SVU episode about a fat guy torturing Kaylee from Firefly. I managed to get through it by playing it at 150% speed.
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10/10
Great emotional episode
thomas_hengeveld26 August 2021
Currently watching all x files episodes for the first time. This was the first episode that made me cry.

Great acting, especially the character Lucy. Don't understand why this episode dousnt have 9 stars.
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8/10
"I hate to say this Mulder, but I think you just ran out of credibility."
classicsoncall8 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The writers for these X-Files stories can sometimes be a bunch of merry pranksters; just check out the title for this one. In a way that's a good thing, because it forces you to do some legwork to find out the meaning of a word like 'oubliette'. Turns out it's a French name for a dungeon where the only opening used for entrance or exit is available through the ceiling above it. The story itself had a variable thrown in with the abducted girl Amy Rogers (Jewel Staite) clawing her way through a boarded up window, but the basic idea was there.

This was a pretty fine showing with Mulder at the center of a case involving some sort of empathic transference between a recent abduction victim and another one who suffered the same trauma at the hands of the same perpetrator some seventeen years earlier. All throughout, Mulder's emotions are tested relative to the abduction experience of his own sister when they were both just kids, and Scully suspects that the issue is clouding his judgment. A unique twist in the episode involves Mulder finding the deranged abductor's forest cabin, and the person he finds in the oubliette is Lucy Householder (Tracey Ellis), the earlier victim of Carl Wade (Michael Chieffo), and not the high school teen the local authorities are looking for.

The local detective on the case naturally assumes Lucy was a partner in the abduction scheme of Amy, but as she comes around to trust Mulder, his instincts tell him to follow up on the empathic link between the two women to solve the case. Had the women been inexorably linked, It would have made sense that Lucy would have survived the ordeal, but as Mulder reasonably concluded, her death was a means of escaping whatever hold the evil Carl Wade maintained over his prior victim, thereby finally finding some peace.
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10/10
She bled Amy Jacobs' blood?
bombersflyup8 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Oubliette is about a young girl who is kidnapped in the present day and a woman who has a psychic connection to the girl, having been kidnapped by the same man.

This episode isn't quite in the upper echelon, but it shouldn't be understated. It's better than mostly everything and brilliant as well. It's resonating and character defining for Mulder, his empathy actually makes Scully seem cold. Duchovny's amazing. It's held back by the other two main characters. The kidnapper Carl Wade and his lack of depth. Why's he doing the things he's doing? And Lucy Householder, yeah she's the embodiment of what that character would be, but without Mulder's input in the scenes with her it would be rather stale viewing.

Best moment of the episode, Scully telling Mulder that his personal attachment to Lucy because of his sister is affecting his judgment. That he has dismissed all possibility that she could be responsible or in league with the kidnapper despite all the evidence, Mulder tells her that she's so very wrong.
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9/10
I feel you Mulder
devonbrown-9064929 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Mulder always knows right. This episode was really moving emotionally. You can see mulders pain and concern for both victims. I've personally never seen mulder manifest empathy in this way.

Poetic justice that the old victim saved the new victims life. You really understand the pain these dark maniacs inflict on their victim in this episode too.

I enjoyed being taken on the emotional journey of this episode and glad mulder was the conduit for the empathic connections between the audience and the two victims.

I wish they could have kept Wade alive somehow to do a psychological screening. Would have loved to know why he did what he did.
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10/10
Impactful, Deep, Heavy Topic
Aegelis19 October 2023
A concept is only one part of the story. In addition to the premise, there is the well-known tense action, but most powerful piece to me was the crucially important topic. We see on the news about kidnappings, rape, and murder, but this episode brings all three right in front of our faces in a very real way.

The supernatural element is weaved throughout to fit right into the X-Files, but even without the ethereal fiction, the tale stands strong on its own. A lot to consider, contemplate, and absorb about the evil nature present in predators. At the end, a plot twist tells us a lot about self-sacrifice and finding peace.
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9/10
Nobody's going to spoil us
Sanpaco1312 October 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I actually quite enjoy this episode. There is only one thing about it that bugs me but we'll talk about that last. I like how the story has almost nothing paranormal about it. It is almost like watching an episode of Criminal Minds. The bad guy is extremely creepy and well played. Mulder's connection to the episode I thought was well done as well. I really like the scene where Mulder tells Scully off for assuming that his judgment is affected because of his relating to the case.

MULDER: What don't I see? SCULLY: The extreme rationalization that's going on. Your personal identification with the victim, or in this case, the suspect. You're becoming an empath yourself, Mulder. You are so sympathetic to Lucy as a victim like *your sister* that you can't see her as a person who's capable of committing this crime.

MULDER: (hurt and angry) You don't think I've thought of that? I have. And not everything I do, say, think, and feel goes back to my sister. You, of all people should realize that sometimes motivations for behavior can be more complex and mysterious than tracing them back to one single childhood experience.

YEAH! Tell her Mulder! Anyway, as I said there was one thing that always bugs me about the episode. The actress that plays Lucy. As hard as I try, I can't get past how absolutely hideous her face is. I'm sorry I know that probably sounds really insensitive. But there it is. Other than that I really like the episode. 9 out of 10.
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