![]() In the end, “Musings of a Cigarette Smoking Man” becomes a little bit of a cop out as the Smoking Man is unable to kill the Lone Gunman, an event that would have hindered any spin-off plans they apparently had. Yes, we’ve seen instances of his life that, I suspect, were designed to provide that data, but I only have more questions than answers. After all of this, I’m not all that certain we learned a great deal about what makes this man tick. And here is a man who wanted to be so much more (a writer) but was far more successful as a conspiratorial power player. Here is a man who did what his country told him to but lost his soul along the way. Here is a man who envied Bill Mulder’s family life, a fact that apparently plagued him for several years. Here is the man who gave up a personal life to his career. The revisionist history segments are interesting and go a long way toward illustrating the path the Cigarette Smoking Man took to becoming the hardened man we’ve grown to know. There isn’t much to say about this episode. In the end, the Smoking Man decides not to assassinate one of the Lone Gunmen, citing the final line from his novel: “I can kill you whenever I please, but not today.” He rips up the resignation letter, leading to the classic monologue about life above. The publication – Roman a Clef – is a trashy magazine, and he will obviously go nowhere with his writing. In the mid-90s after overhearing Mulder and Scully meet, he finally succeeds in attracting a publisher who agrees to print the Cigarette Smoking Man’s work in serial form, and he types up his resignation letter. Through all 30 years these sections cover, he attempts to write and publish a novel, which is consistently rejected by multiple publishers. They discuss the alien’s fate and flip a coin to determine that Deep Throat will shoot the man. ![]() Later, Deep Throat contacts the Smoking Man and reveals the recovery of a UFO and a live alien. The third sequence is more comic in tone as it alludes to the Smoking Man’s wide-reaching conspiratorial reach from the Anita Hill controversy to the Rodney King trial to the winner of the Super Bowl and to the Oscars. Martin Luther King despite admiring his philosophy. The second sequence involves the Smoking Man assassinating Dr. The first sequence happens in the early 60s when the young Army Smoking Man is asked by a collection of men to assassinate JFK in Dallas, Texas, and select Lee Harvey Oswald as a patsy. This scene is employed as a framing device for various flashbacks into the Smoking Man’s past. They discuss information about the Smoking Man’s past as he prepares to assassinate someone. ![]() The episode begins as an off-screen Mulder and Scully meet with the Lone Gunmen, observed by the Smoking Man with surveillance equipment and a sniper rifle. And if you’re desperate enough to eat those, all you got left is an empty box filled with useless brown paper wrappers. So, you end up with nothing but broken bits filled with hardened jelly and teeth-shattering nuts. But they’re gone too fast and the taste is… fleeting. Sure, once in a while there’s a peanut butter cup or an English toffee. So you’re stuck with this undefinable whipped mint crap that you mindlessly wolf down when there’s nothing else left to eat. Unreturnable because all you get back is another box of chocolates. A cheap, thoughtless, perfunctory gift that nobody ever asks for. Davis) at the end of the episode made it all worthwhile: Still, this monologue recited by Smoking Man (William B. Fans likely wanted to know more about the man, and, even after this episode, I doubt many questions were answered. The episode is interesting enough, compelling enough, and humorous enough to make it an effective contribution to the overall mythology of the series. The X-Files again takes a break from the supernatural and looks back into the past to build a character around its most unfamiliar evil force, the Smoking Man/Cigarette Smoking Man/Cancer Man.
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