The Host" is the second episode of the second season of the science fiction television series The X-Files, premiering on the Fox network on September 23, 1994. It was written by Chris Carter, directed by Daniel Sackheim, and featured guest appearances by Darin Morgan. The episode is a "Monster-of-the-Week" story, unconnected to the series' wider mythology. "The Host" earned a Nielsen household rating of 9.8, being watched by 9.3 million households in its initial broadcast. The episode received positive reviews, praising the creepiness of the antagonist.
Carter claimed to have been inspired to write the episode based on three incidents; his dog having worms, his research into Chernobyl, and the extinction of species during the 1990s. The Flukeman character was portrayed by Darin Morgan, brother of executive producer Glen Morgan. Darin would become a staff writer for the show later in the second season. In addition, "The Host" also introduced the character of X, the successor of Mulder's former Syndicate informant Deep Throat.
On a Russian freighter off the coast of New Jersey, a crewman trying to fix the ship's toilets is pulled into the septic system. His half-eaten body appears in the sewers of Newark days later. Fox Mulder is assigned the case and visits with a Detective Norman in Newark, being shown the still-unidentified body. Mulder believes it is simply a case of gang-related murder, and angrily confronts Assistant Director Walter Skinner, feeling he has been given this "wild goose chase" as a form of punishment. That night, Mulder talks to Dana Scully, telling her that he is thinking of leaving the FBI. Scully performs the autopsy on the crewman's body, finding a Russian language tattoo on his arm and a flukeworm inside his liver.
In a Newark sewer, a city sanitation worker named Craig is rescued when an unseen creature pulls him underwater. Believing he was attacked by a python, he visits a doctor with Mulder observing. An examination of his back reveals an abnormal four-pointed wound. Shortly afterwards, Mulder receives a call from a mysterious man, telling him he has a friend at the FBI. Scully shows Mulder the flukeworm, whose mouth, though much smaller, matches the wound on Craig's back. That night, Craig dies in his shower after coughing up a flukeworm. Mulder visits a sewage processing plant and, along with a foreman named Ray, finds a large humanoid mutant with a fluke-like mouth.
At the FBI Academy, someone slips a newspaper article under Scully's door enabling her to identify the original body. Mulder and Scully meet at the processing plant and observe the "Flukeman". Skinner wants to prosecute the creature and subject it to a psychiatric evaluation, which Mulder thinks would be difficult. Skinner tells Mulder of Craig's death and admits that this should have been an X-file. Mulder insists that Craig's death could have been prevented if the X-files had remained open, but Skinner implies that the decision came from higher up the chain of command.
That night, as the Flukeman is being transported by van, it escapes its restraints and kills the driver. It hides in a portable toilet, is soon suctioned into a septic truck and is brought back to the sewage processing plant. Meanwhile, Mulder receives another call from the mysterious man, telling him that the X-files must be reopened. Scully tells Mulder that the flukeworm she discovered is a larva, revealing that the Flukeman is capable of asexual reproduction. Meanwhile at the plant, the Flukeman is spotted in a storm drain overflow pipe, with Mulder realising it is using the drain to make an escape back to the ocean. Mulder and Ray then investigate the overflow pipe, but Ray is pulled underwater by the Flukeman. Mulder saves him, bisecting the Flukeman at the waist with a sewer grate.
Scully concludes her investigation, hypothesising that the creature was brought to the U.S. by a Russian freighter that was hauling salvage material from the Chernobyl disaster, and that the creature was created in a "soup" of radioactive sewage. Elsewhere, in the drains beneath Newark, the Flukeman's remains open its eyes.[1][2]
In the 2013 comic continuation of The X-Files called Season 10, a two-issue story, "Hosts", continues the story almost twenty years later after the events of this episode. According to the comics, the Flukeman escaped to Martha's Vineyard and began to multiply, abducting multiple beach-goers.[3] The Flukeman and its offspring were nearly all killed, however, by a man revealed to be one of the Chernobyl liquidators. In addition, the story expanded upon the Flukeman's backstory, revealing that he was a liquidator named Gregory, who, after being locked in a sewage tanker truck at Chernobyl, gestated the mutated flukeworm that grew into the original Flukeman after he was exposed to irradiated cooling water from the still-burning nuclear reactor and to flatworms in the sewage tank.[4]
Chris Carter claimed to have been inspired to write the episode after his dog had worms, a situation he called "very disgusting".[5][6] He also had been reading about the Chernobyl disaster and the extinction of species at the time, blending all three of these concepts when writing the episode.[5] Carter described his mood while writing the episode: "I was in a funk when I wrote that episode. We were coming back from hiatus and I was trying to find something more interesting than just the Flukeman. I was irritated at the time and I brought my irritation to Mulder's attitude. Basically, he had become fed up with the FBI. They had given him what he felt was a low assignment, which was sending him into the city after a dead body. But lo and behold, he finds that this is a case that for all intents and purposes is an X-File. It's been given to him by a man he's never looked at as an ally, Skinner. So it's an interesting establishing of a relationship between them."[7] Producer J. P. Finn described the episode as a departure from Carter's usual work as it did not deal with an alien subject matter.[7]
The suit dissolved in water, forcing special effects artist Toby Lindala to reconstruct the suit each day.[11] Because the suit did not permit Morgan to breathe through his nose, he was unable to eat while wearing it.[11] Carter described the character as "the embodiment of everyone's sense of vulnerability, the idea of something that exists in the underworld of the sewer system and might in fact come to bite you in the least elegant of places". The original intention was showing even less of the Flukeman, but some angles and lighting ended up revealing more of the creature's design. Carter still felt it helped to "get more creepy", as the Flukeman is not shown fully until the final scenes.[12]
The sewer processing plant scenes were shot at Iona Island Sewage Treatment plant in Richmond, BC.[11] The sewer scenes were shot in a pit on the show's stage,[6][7] with Carter using his father, who worked as a construction worker, as a consultant on how to build it.[6][12] As no ship was available for filming the opening scenes in the Russian freighter, a hydro sub station in Surrey, British Columbia, was adapted into an engine room.[13]
Carter had to fight with the Fox network's broadcast standards department over the scene where a victim vomits up a flukeworm while in the shower.[8] James Wong described it as the grossest piece of television ever put on the air.[7] As Gillian Anderson's pregnancy was getting more apparent, the producers started to shoot Scully's scenes in a way it would be disguised, with "very fancy trick angles, trench coats, and scenes where she is seated rather than standing".[12]
"The Host" premiered on Fox on September 23, 1994.[14] This episode earned a Nielsen rating of 9.8, with a 17 share, meaning that roughly 9.8 percent of all television-equipped households, and seventeen percent of households watching television, were tuned in to the episode. It was viewed by 9.3 million households.[15]
When I thought about The X-Files before I started rewatching the whole series again recently, my mind was a jumble of feelings: nostalgia, fear, and a major crush on David Duchovny. One of those fearful memories was Season Two's "The Host" episode, which, if that name doesn't sound familiar is The One About The Giant Flukeman Living In The Sewer Tunnel.
Like "Tooms" and "Squeeze," it's one of the best Monster Of The Week episodes of The X-Files and easily one of my favorites. There are episodes of the show that are funny or weird, and those are good, too, but I tend to remember the ones that freaked me out and "The Host" is at the top of that list.
The episode opens inside a Russian submarine where some poor bastard has been dispatched to deal with overflowing toilets. Right away, it's incredibly gross and uncomfortable. Eugene Victor Tooms made nests out of bile and newspaper, but how often do you come across bile in the wild? Poop on the other hand... When the Russian guy goes to inspect the sewage tanks, he flinches from the smell.
So we're already squicked out within the first few minutes of "The Host," and it just keeps getting grosser, weirder, and creepier as the episode progresses. Poor Russian Bastard gets pulled into the sewage tank by something that's already in there and he doesn't make it out.
Meanwhile at the FBI, as happy as Fox Mulder is to be taken off of his current, mind-bogglingly boring wiretapping assignment, when he gets to Newark, New Jersey (surely Jon Stewart was laughing hysterically watching this episode back in the day), he's peeved to find that the case Skinner has assigned him to is a dead body discovered in a sewer tunnel. It's one of the few times Mulder looks truly uncool and not crush worthy while the jokes fly as fast as the droplets of stinky water: a close up of rubber boots next to a manhole cover, Mulder gagging and coughing, and when one of the men present tells him to watch himself, his response is "Yeah, I wouldn't want to step in anything". Then there's my favorite exchange in this scene:
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