X-Files Animated Spinoff Must Be Funny, Says Chris Carter

Series creator Chris Carter talks about spinning off The X-Files into the animated TV world.

recently said he was “sorry” for how the series ended with a string of cliffhangers that may never get resolved. 

The good news for X-Files diehards is that any franchise worth, well, anything in Hollywood these days never dies. Carter embodies this wholeheartedly and has been quietly working on the next iteration of The X-Files, which is an animated spinoff series script recently ordered by Fox. The series, titled The X-Files: Albuquerque, centers on “an office of misfit agents who investigate cases too wacky, ridiculous or dopey for Scully and Mulder,” according to THR.

Given the success of a similar project in Star Trek: Lower Decks, Fox’s animated history, and the X-Files’ popular monster-of-the-week format, Albuquerque is a logical next step for the franchise. In a recent interview with a Danish X-Files podcast called Sammensværgelsen (which translates in English to “The Conspiracy Podcast”), Carter gave his first comments on the X-Files animated series since the project was announced. 

“Right now, it’s still in the development stage,” Carter said. “I haven’t read a script. And so it’s really hard for me to say what my involvement will be, but I know this, it needs to be funny.”

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The project is Carter’s first crack at an animated series, although Mulder and Scully did make an appearance in The Simpsons. For the project, The X-Files creator is teaming up with animated comedy veterans Rocky Russo and Jeremy Sosenko, the creatives behind Comedy Central’s Brickleberry and Netflix’s Paradise PD. Carter and X-Files alum Gabe Rotter are executive producing the series under Carter’s Ten Thirteen Productions banner. 

“[The] animated approach to the X-Files really came as a result of COVID 19, and a way of putting some people to work,” Carter told host Daniel Hartvig Nielsen. “I’ve always wanted to do an animated project and this seemed like an interesting opportunity.” 

The X-Files debuted in 1993 and ended its original run in 2002. It returned in 2016 for season 10 and 2018 for season 11, and ran for a total of 218 episodes. The X-Files one-off comedic episodes, including a handful written by Darin Morgan, are fan favorites and amongst the series’ most critically acclaimed installments. 

We’ll have more on The X-Files: Albuquerque as the project develops. In the meantime, we wrote a guide on how to keep your X-Files fandom alive. You can listen to Carter’s full podcast interview below.