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The End (The X-Files)

"The End" is the 20th and final episode of the fifth season, and 117th overall of the science fiction television series The X-Files. The episode first aired in the United States and Canada on May 17, 1998. "The End" subsequently aired in the United Kingdom on March 17, 1999, on BBC One. The episode was written by executive producer Chris Carter, and directed by R. W. Goodwin. "The End" earned a Nielsen household rating of 11.9, being watched by 18.76 million people in its initial broadcast. The episode received mixed to positive reviews from television critics.

Plot
In Vancouver, an international chess tournament is held at an arena between Anatole Klebanow, a Russian grandmaster, and Gibson Praise (Jeff Gulka), a young American prodigy. In the rafters, the Shooter, an assassin, prepares to fire at Gibson. However, Gibson senses the Shooter's presence and manages to discreetly dodge the shot, which kills Klebanow instead. Elsewhere in Canada, the Smoking Man (William B. Davis) is found by Alex Krycek (Nicholas Lea). At FBI Headquarters, Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi) reveals to Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) that Jeffrey Spender (Chris Owens) is leading the case investigating the shooting. Despite Spender's request that Mulder not be involved, he bursts into the briefing and offers the explanation that the assassin was firing at Gibson, not Klebanow. Attending the meeting is Diana Fowley (Mimi Rogers), an acquaintance from Mulder's past. The Smoking Man is reunited with members of the Syndicate, including the First Elder and the Well-Manicured Man, who want him to help them with the situation concerning Gibson. Fowley accompanies Mulder and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) when they visit Gibson in Gaithersburg, Maryland. Mulder believes that Gibson can read minds, hence his expertise at chess. Scully learns that Mulder and Fowley know each other from long ago. Mulder visits the Shooter, despite Spender's objections, offering immunity in exchange for testimony; the Shooter refuses. Gibson proves his abilities to a group of clinicians while Scully and Fowley watch. Meanwhile, a prison guard hands the Shooter a flattened Morley cigarette box, which conveys he's a dead man. Scully visits the Lone Gunmen, wanting them to analyze the data from Gibson. She asks them who Fowley is, and they tell her she worked closely with Mulder when he first discovered the X-files. The Smoking Man meets with Spender in the FBI parking lot but disappears when Mulder spots them talking. Scully and Mulder present to Skinner on Gibson, who displays extraordinary brain activities. Mulder believes that Gibson can unlock all the mysteries in the X-Files and wants to make a deal with the Shooter. Skinner and Fowley think this may result in adverse attention from the Attorney General, and that the X-Files could be closed down if things go wrong. Mulder dismisses the risk. Mulder meets with the Shooter again, who tells him that Gibson is a missing link. Mulder believes that Gibson has genes that are dormant in most humans. The Smoking Man dismisses the Well-Manicured Man's concerns about Mulder's actions. At the prison, the guard kills the Shooter. Fowley, protecting Gibson in a hotel room, is shot shortly afterwards, and Gibson is captured by the Men in Black. Skinner tells Mulder of the Shooter's death, and that a flattened Morley cigarette box was found in his cell. Mulder confronts Spender, accusing him of working with the Smoking Man. The Smoking Man turns Gibson over to the Well-Manicured Man. Scully is informed by Skinner that the Justice Department is seeking to have the X-files shut down. Mulder realizes that this was all part of a plan. The Smoking Man takes Samantha Mulder's X-file from Mulder's office, which sets on fire. As he leaves, he meets Spender and tells him that he's his father. By the time Mulder and Scully arrive, the X-files are completely destroyed. == Production ==
Production
File:ChessSet.jpg|200px|left|thumb|The episode contains a "chess motif" of The Smoking Man "play[ing] Mulder to a checkmate". Writing Originally, the fifth season of The X-Files was supposed to be its last, and "The End" would have segued the series into a movie franchise. David Duchovny explained, "We were saying, 'Okay, we're going to do five. We'll get out of here at five.' And then five came around, and no one was going anywhere." Near the beginning of the episode, Praise plays a Russian grandmaster at chess. The Complete X-Files notes that a "chess motif" is weaved throughout the episode, perhaps most symbolically in the way The Smoking Man "plays Mulder to a checkmate, using Jeffrey as a pawn." Chris Carter said that Fowley "was a character you were destined to hate because she was a competitor for Mulder's affection with Scully". ==Reception==
Reception
Ratings "The End" premiered on the Fox network on . The episode earned a Nielsen household rating of 11.9 with an 18 share, meaning that roughly of all television-equipped households, and of households watching television, were tuned in to the episode. The episode was later included on The X-Files Mythology, Volume 3 – Colonization, a DVD collection that contains episodes involved with the alien Colonist's plans to take over the earth. Reviews "The End" received mixed to positive reviews from critics. Lon Grahnke of Chicago Sun-Times reacted positively towards the episode, describing it as "pivotal". Paula Vitaris from Cinefantastique gave the episode a positive review and awarded it three stars out of four. She wrote that the episode "is an effective, sometimes even moving, conclusion to a scattershot season." Vitaris wrote that the entry was "far superior" to the season four finale "Gethsemane" and praised the various character introductions, most notably that of Gibson Praise and Diana Fowley. She did, however, criticize the reappearance of Krycek and the fact that The Smoking Man was again working for the Syndicate. Other reviews were more mixed. Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club gave the episode a mixed review and graded it C+. Handlen criticized the episode's lack of resolution, writing that "The show can feed our social paranoia […] but when it comes time to deliver on all this, to finally pull back the curtain and move on to the next stage, it fumbles things." Robert Shearman and Lars Pearson, in their book Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen, rated the episode three-and-a-half stars out of five. The two criticized the closing down of the X-Files division, due largely to the fact that "we've seen [it] before", a reference to the division's closing at the end of the first season. However, Shearman and Pearson wrote that The End' works in spite of itself", citing the arrival of Diana Fowley and the confrontation between The Smoking Man and Jeffrey Spender as positive points in the episode. == Footnotes ==
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