**Warning: spoilers ahead**
Darin Morgan's second offering for The X-Files is just as entertaining as season two's Humbug, arguably even more so. I think part of this is due to Peter Boyle's effortlessly brilliant performance as the title character. His interactions with the ever-dubious Scully are just wonderful. The dialogue between the police feels like something out of a cartoon at times, which adds to the outlandish atmosphere. Why is it that the best episodes are the ones that veer away from the classic X-Files formulas? Not that this is wildly different, as there is still a paranormal undercurrent within Boyle's psychic Bruckman. With striking images, quotable lines and unforgettable final scene, this would probably be in my top five episodes of the entire series.
731 (3x10)
While I quite enjoyed the preceding Nisei episode, it's after Mulder jumps onto the train (which Duchovny did himself apparently) that the action and suspense starts to build. I love the scenes between Mulder and Stephen McHattie's Red Haired Man. It reminds me of Sean Connery and Robert Shaw in the final act of From Russia With Love. The fact that X pulls his finger out and actually does something to help Mulder is pretty cool too.
PUSHER (3x17)
Written by Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan, this episode looks at Robert Patrick Modell, a man who can push his will onto others. Unfortunately for those he comes into contact with, this usually means death by their own hand. As Modell eludes capture, the cat and mouse game he plays with Mulder comes to a head with an emotional round of Russian roulette. You'll never look at cerulean blue the same way again. Suspenseful stuff!
JOSE CHUNG'S "FROM OUTER SPACE" (3x20)
The third script from Darin Morgan is another X-Files classic. It's told through the eyes of the title character as he puts together a book detailing the alleged alien abduction of two teenagers in Klass County. Each person he talks to has a different take on the events that occured, and some re-tellings are quite hilarious. One witness recounts Mulder's visit to a diner wherein he orders piece after piece of sweet potato pie. Another's description of the two agents paints Scully as angry and violent with red hair that is "a little TOO red". Jesse "The Body" Ventura guest stars as one of the mysterious Men In Black, and delivers an excellent monologue on how most people mistake the planet Venus for a UFO. This episode also has some clever editing and is highly entertaining. One of the best!
TALITHA CUMA (3x24)
The season finale introduces to Jeremiah Smith, a man who possess the ability to heal gunshot victims, among others. But is he human? As this essential mythology episode unravels we learn that Mulder's mother and the Cigarette Smoking Man have a history. The discovery of an alien stiletto weapon in the Mulders' old summer home gives us more questions about Mrs Mulder's past. This episode has two great scenes in it. The first being Jeremiah Smith's interrogation by the CSM, in which he morphs into characters from CSM's past, adding weight to his words. The second is the fight between Mulder and X which ends in the two of them drawing their guns on each other. While he has always been nervous and cautious, X's motives seem to be more about self-preservation than assisting Mulder. When X actually tries to help him in the season four opener Herrenvolk, it ends badly, justifying his paranoia. This is one of the best mythology episodes of the series, with a nice taut cliffhanger ending to boot. I really wanted to have Apocrypha in my five, purely for the scene of Krycek 'crying' the black oil out of his body before being locked in the silo, but it didn't quite make the cut.
HONOURABLE MENTIONS: Nisei, Apocrypha, War of The Coprophages and Syzygy.
STINKERS: Teso Dos Bichos, that's it. The only really awful episode of this season; and it's a doozy.