The Host
- Episode aired Sep 23, 1994
- TV-14
- 45m
IMDb RATING
8.2/10
5.9K
YOUR RATING
Mulder pursues a humanoid, parasitic organism that uses sewage systems as its home.Mulder pursues a humanoid, parasitic organism that uses sewage systems as its home.Mulder pursues a humanoid, parasitic organism that uses sewage systems as its home.
Marc Baur
- Agt. Brisentine
- (as Marc Bauer)
Dmitri S. Boudrine
- Russian Engineer
- (as Dmitri Boudrine)
Raoul Ganeev
- Dmitri
- (as Raoul Ganee)
Benjamin Glenday
- Russian Sailor #2
- (uncredited)
Hrothgar Mathews
- Man on Phone
- (uncredited)
Steven Williams
- Mr. X
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe "Flukeman" suit dissolved in water, forcing special effects artist Toby Lindala to reconstruct the suit each day.
- GoofsAfter the tanker drives by agent Mulder (the morning at the park) there is a sequence that was clearly shot at night.
- Quotes
Dana Scully: Flatworms are what are known as obligate endoparasites. They live inside of the host, entering the body through the ingestion of larvae or eggs. They are not creatures that go around attacking people.
Fox Mulder: Well, that's good. I didn't want to have to tell Skinner that his murder suspect was a giant, blood-sucking worm.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Vulture's the 100 Best Episodes of the 1994-95 TV Season (2014)
- SoundtracksThe X-Files
Written by Mark Snow
Performed by John Beal
Featured review
One of the best
"The Host" is an amazing episode, and it comes as sort of a mild surprise that it is so great every time one watches it simply because it doesn't have the popularity and status of something like "Home" or "Bad Blood". It not only features one of the best, weirdest, most memorable and most gruesome monsters on the show (played by Darin Morgan, who would go on to write some of the show's best episodes), but is very interesting in terms of the continuing storyline of the X-Files being closed and the politics behind all that, Mulder & Scully's relationship, and in terms of character writing (which is related to the plot, of course). It's not just a great episode because it's got a great monster, it's a phenomenal script which accomplishes something in all different aspects of "The X-Files" as a series.
This script by Chris Carter was quite possibly his best up to this point. The idea itself is intriguing and well-executed, and this has to be just one of the most disgusting monsters on the show but also one of the most interesting and one of the best-developed. In addition to the quality of the monster and case, the episode is packed with witty banter, quirky guest characters, exceptionally well-done gross-out moments, stunning makeup work, a nasty end for the monster, and there's even interesting conversations between Skinner and Mulder and the introduction of Mr. X.
When it comes down to deciding which my favorite standalone episodes are I tend to go for the ones which are most inventive and different, as well as ones with exceptional writing for the characters and particularly notable dialogue. "The Host" actually manages to be all of those things with writing that extends beyond the case and characters into the overall mythology as well. Creepy, funny, intelligent, entertaining, and lots of fun, "The Host" is a real classic and one of the best episodes of not only season two but the whole series.
10/10
This script by Chris Carter was quite possibly his best up to this point. The idea itself is intriguing and well-executed, and this has to be just one of the most disgusting monsters on the show but also one of the most interesting and one of the best-developed. In addition to the quality of the monster and case, the episode is packed with witty banter, quirky guest characters, exceptionally well-done gross-out moments, stunning makeup work, a nasty end for the monster, and there's even interesting conversations between Skinner and Mulder and the introduction of Mr. X.
When it comes down to deciding which my favorite standalone episodes are I tend to go for the ones which are most inventive and different, as well as ones with exceptional writing for the characters and particularly notable dialogue. "The Host" actually manages to be all of those things with writing that extends beyond the case and characters into the overall mythology as well. Creepy, funny, intelligent, entertaining, and lots of fun, "The Host" is a real classic and one of the best episodes of not only season two but the whole series.
10/10
helpful•337
- ametaphysicalshark
- Oct 6, 2008
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