THE X-FILES: I WANT TO BELIEVE Is Getting a Director’s Cut; Chris Carter Says It’ll Finally Be “The Scary Movie I Always Intended”
The X-Files has always had its high points with its great performances, unforgettable monsters, UFO conspiracy storytelling, and that relentless hunt for the truth that made Mulder and Scully pop culture staples.
But when fans talk about the franchise’s cinematic outings, it’s usually Fight the Future from 1998 that gets the spotlight. The follow-up film, I Want to Believe (2008), didn’t land with the same force. It was pretty divisive. But now, nearly two decades later, creator Chris Carter is getting a second shot to show fans the version he always wanted to make.
On a recent episode of Fail Better with David Duchovny, Carter dropped the news that he’s officially working on a director’s cut of I Want to Believe.
“I just got the go ahead to do a director’s cut of I Want to Believe. I can’t tell you how excited I am about this.”
Duchovny said: “You took shit for that movie.” Carter didn’t deny it:
“Oh, big time. I made it too scary, basically, and I was told so by the brass at Fox, and they wanted a PG-13 movie. So we cut it back… and [the ratings board] said ‘No, it’s not a PG-13 yet, you’ve got to cut it back even farther.’
“I can tell you that you can do more on network television… [the censors] are more permissive than they are for the movies. Now I have a chance to go back and make the scary movie that I always intended to make.”
Unlike Fight the Future, which leaned into the show’s alien conspiracy mythology, I Want to Believe was a more grounded, horror-tinged mystery, more Monster of the Week than myth arc. It felt like a long, cold, bleak episode, and that tone threw people.
But hearing Carter describe what he wanted versus what ended up on screen sheds new light on the film’s vibe.
“It’s not just doing a director’s cut to do a director’s cut. It’s really kind of bringing to life something that for me was on the page but never got to the screen.”
Carter’s comments put the film in a different light, especially for fans who loved the show’s darker, more psychological stories. If this new cut leans fully into that unnerving horror, it might finally connect with the viewers who were hoping for something more intense the first time around.
As of now, Carter hasn’t shared when the director’s cut will drop. If he only recently got the green light, it may still be a ways off. But with the film now streaming on Hulu, this might be the perfect time for fans to revisit it, maybe with a new lens.
It’s not often a creator gets to reclaim a film nearly twenty years later and make it the story they meant to tell. If Carter’s version turns out to be the nightmare he originally planned? That sounds like The X-Files in its purest form. I can’t wait to watch it!