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"Fearful Symmetry" The X-Files episode Ganesha on the loose. Episode no. Season 2 Episode 18 Written by Steve De Jarnatt Directed by James Whitmore Jr. Production no. 2X18 Guest stars Jayne Atkinson as Willa Ambrose Lance Guest as Kyle Lang Jack Rader as Ed Meecham Charles André as Ray Floyd Tom Braidwood as Melvin Frohike Bruce Harwood as John Fitzgerald Byers Lenno Britos as Janitor #1 Garvin Cross as Red Head Kid Tom Glass as Trucker Jody St. Michael as Sophie Episode chronology ← Previous Next → "End Game" "Død Kalm" "Fearful Symmetry" was the eighteenth episode of the second season of The X-Files science-fiction television series created by Chris Carter, and deals with alien abduction. This episode won an EMA Award for its environmental message.[1] Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 3 Reception 4 Footnotes 5 External links // Plot In Fairfield, Idaho, two janitors watch an invisible being storm down the street, causing disaster in its wake. A road worker is later killed by the entity on the highway. The next day the entity is revealed to be a dying elephant, over forty miles away from its zoo. Agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) investigate, finding a bruise similar to an elephant's foot on the worker's chest. They speak to Ed Meecham, head of Operations at the Fairfield Zoo, who tells them the elephant has died. Its cage was locked and his boss, a naturalist named Willa Ambrose was the only other person who could have opened it. Ambrose tells the agents that because the zoo will soon be closing they still use cages, something causing outcry from the local activist group Wild Again Organization ("WAO"). The agents visit Kyle Lang from the WAO, who denies that he let the elephant go. Lang claims Ambrose is being sued by the Malawi government over a gorilla she took from their country ten years prior. Mulder speaks with Lone Gunmen Frohike and Byers, who claim that Fairfield is known for animal disappearances and UFOs have been frequently sighted nearby. Scully follows a WAO activist as he sneaks into the zoo. Meacham meets her inside. There is a flash of light and the activist is suddenly killed by an invisible tiger. Ambrose claims that her gorilla, Sophie, has been making the signs for "Light. Afraid". Scully performs an autopsy on the elephant, revealing it to be pregnant. The tiger reappears at Blake Towers Construction site and is shot dead by Meecham when it charges at Ambrose. The zoo is shut down the next day due to a lack of funding. Mulder tells Ambrose that the tiger was also pregnant. Mulder tells Ambrose of his theory that aliens are involved, which she laughs at. Mulder thinks Sophie is pregnant and afraid of being abducted. Sophie makes the signs for "Baby. Go. Fly. Light." Deputies order Ambrose to release Sophie into protective custody. Ambrose seeks help from Lang, but he says she should be released into the wild. Later, Lang goes to the see Ambrose at a warehouse where Sophie is being prepped for shipping. Sophie's cage is empty and the invisible gorilla attacks him. A crate strikes him, killing him. Scully thinks Ambrose is to blame, Ambrose claims that Meecham did it when Lang surprised him. Mulder goes to see Meecham, who pushes Mulder into Sophie's cage. A bright light appears and Sophie vanishes. Mulder claims Sophie was making the sign "Man. Save. Man" to him. Sophie appears miles away and is struck by a car, killing her. Ambrose and Meecham are charged with manslaughter for Lang's death. Mulder believes alien conservationists were behind what happened.[2][3] Production Co-Producer J.P. Finn claimed the hardest part of the episode was getting the elephant, which required a permit to pass the border into Vancouver.[4] He claims the elephant used for the episode, named "Bubbles" was fantastic to work with.[4] There was initially concern from the producers that the elephant wouldn't run towards the truck for the episode's teaser, but the elephant instead loved the truck and the producers had difficulty getting it away from it.[5] The episode's title comes from a line in the William Blake poem "The Tyger".[5] The site where the tiger appears, Blake Towers, is named after the poet.[5] The elephant's name, "Ganesha" is named after the Hindu God.[3] Reception This episode earned a Nielsen household rating of 10.1, with a 17 share and was viewed by 9.6 million households.[6] Author William Gibson, who later wrote two episodes for the show called the episode one of his favorites of the series.[7] Footnotes ^ "IMDB". http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106179/awards. Retrieved 2007-07-08.  ^ Lowry,Brian (1995). The Truth is Out There: The Official Guide to the X-Files. Harper Prism. pp. 205–206.  ^ a b Lovece, Frank (1996). The x-Files Declassified. Citadel press. pp. 158–159.  ^ a b Edwards, Ted (1996). X-Files Confidential. Little, Brown and Company. pp. 111–118.  ^ a b c Lowry,Brian (1995). The Truth is Out There: The Official Guide to the X-Files. Harper Prism. p. 206.  ^ Lowry,Brian (1995). The Truth is Out There: The Official Guide to the X-Files. Harper Prism. p. 249.  ^ Hurwitz, Matt, Knowles, Chris (2008). The Complete X-Files. Insight Editions. p. 62.  External links Fearful Symmetry on The X-Files Wiki, an external wiki Fearful Symmetry at the Internet Movie Database Fearful Symmetry at TV.com v • d • e The X-Files episodes Season 1 "Pilot" · "Deep Throat" · "Squeeze" · "Conduit" · "The Jersey Devil" · "Shadows" · "Ghost in the Machine" · "Ice" · "Space" · "Fallen Angel" · "Eve" · "Fire" · "Beyond the Sea" · "Gender Bender" · "Lazarus" · "Young at Heart" · "E.B.E." · "Miracle Man" · "Shapes" · "Darkness Falls" · "Tooms" · "Born Again" · "Roland" · "The Erlenmeyer Flask" Season 2 "Little Green Men" · "The Host" · "Blood" · "Sleepless" · "Duane Barry" · "Ascension" · "3" · "One Breath" · "Firewalker" · "Red Museum" · "Excelsis Dei" · "Aubrey" · "Irresistible" · "Die Hand Die Verletzt" · "Fresh Bones" · "Colony" · "End Game" · "Fearful Symmetry" · "Død Kalm" · "Humbug" · "The Calusari" · "F. Emasculata" · "Soft Light" · "Our Town" · "Anasazi" Season 3 "The Blessing Way" · "Paper Clip" · "D.P.O." · "Clyde Bruckman's Final Repose" · "The List" · "2Shy" · "The Walk" · "Oubliette" · "Nisei" · "731" · "Revelations" · "War of the Coprophages" · "Syzygy" · "Grotesque" · "Piper Maru" · "Apocrypha" · "Pusher" · "Teso Dos Bichos" · "Hell Money" · "Jose Chung's From Outer Space" · "Avatar" · "Quagmire" · "Wetwired" · "Talitha Cumi" Season 4 "Herrenvolk" · "Home" · "Teliko" · "Unruhe" · "The Field Where I Died" · "Sanguinarium" · "Musings of a Cigarette Smoking Man" · "Tunguska" · "Terma" · "Paper Hearts" · "El Mundo Gira" · "Leonard Betts" · "Never Again" · "Memento Mori" · "Kaddish" · "Unrequited" · "Tempus Fugit" · "Max" · "Synchrony" · "Small Potatoes" · "Zero Sum" · "Elegy" · "Demons" · "Gethsemane" Season 5 "Redux" · "Redux II" · "Unusual Suspects" · "Detour" · "The Post-Modern Prometheus" · "Christmas Carol" · "Emily" · "Kitsunegari" · "Schizogeny" · "Chinga" · "Kill Switch" · "Bad Blood" · "Patient X" · "The Red and the Black" · "Travelers" · "Mind’s Eye" · "All Souls" · "The Pine Bluff Variant" · "Folie a Deux" · "The End" Season 6 "The Beginning" · "Drive" · "Triangle" · "Dreamland" · "Dreamland II" · "How the Ghosts Stole Christmas" · "Terms of Endearment" · "The Rain King" · "S.R. 819" · "Tithonus" · "Two Fathers" · "One Son" · "Agua Mala" · "Monday" · "Arcadia" · "Alpha" · "Trevor" · "Milagro" · "The Unnatural" · "Three of a Kind" · "Field Trip" · "Biogenesis" Season 7 "The Sixth Extinction" · "The Sixth Extinction II: Amor Fati" · "Hungry" · "Millennium" · "Rush" · "The Goldberg Variation" · "Orison" · "The Amazing Maleeni" · "Signs & Wonders" · "Sein Und Zeit" · "Closure" · "X-Cops" · "First Person Shooter" · "Theef" · "En Ami" · "Chimera" · "all things" · "Brand X" · "Hollywood A.D." · "Fight Club" · "Je Souhaite" · "Requiem" Season 8 "Within" · "Without" · "Patience" · "Roadrunners" · "Invocation" · "Redrum" · "Via Negativa" · "Surekill" · "Salvage"  · "Badlaa" · "The Gift" · "Medusa" · "Per Manum" · "This Is Not Happening" · "Deadalive" · "Three Words" · "Empedocles" · "Vienen" · "Alone" · "Essence" · "Existence" Season 9 "Nothing Important Happened Today" · "Nothing Important Happened Today II" · "Dæmonicus" · "4-D" · "Lord of the Flies" · "Trust No 1" · "John Doe" · "Hellbound" · "Provenance" · "Providence" · "Audrey Pauley" · "Underneath" · "Improbable" · "Scary Monsters" · "Jump the Shark" · "William" · "Release" · "Sunshine Days" · "The Truth" · "The Truth II"