IMDb > "The X Files" Chinga (1998)
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"The X Files" Chinga (1998)



Overview

User Rating:
7.4/10   452 votes
Director:
Writers:
Chris Carter (creator)
Stephen King (written by) ...
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Contact:
View company contact information for Chinga on IMDbPro.
Original Air Date:
8 February 1998 (Season 5, Episode 10)
Plot:
Scully takes a much needed vacation in New England. When she arrives at a grocery store, Scully encounters... more | add synopsis
User Comments:
"do the hokey pokey..." more (5 total)

Cast

  (Episode Credited cast)

David Duchovny ... Fox Mulder

Gillian Anderson ... Dana Scully
Susannah Hoffmann ... Melissa Turner
Larry Musser ... Jack Bonsaint

William MacDonald ... Deputy Buddy Riggs
Jenny-Lynn Hutcheson ... Polly Turner
Henry Beckman ... Old Man
Carolyn Tweedle ... Jane Froelich

Dean Wray ... Rich Turner
Gordon Tipple ... Assistant Manager

Harrison Coe ... Dave the Butcher (as Harrison R. Coe)
Ian Robison ... Ranger
Elizabeth McCarthy ... The Shopper
Tracy Lively ... Clerk
Sean Benbow ... Customer
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Additional Details

Runtime:
Argentina:60 min
Country:
Language:
Aspect Ratio:
1.78 : 1 more
Certification:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Original name of this episode was Chinga - but it was rejected by Fox as it may have been an objectionable word in some Spanish speaking areas. The name 'Bunghoney' was substituted - a rude sounding but nonsensical term. more
Goofs:
Continuity: During the conversation between Agent Scully and Chief Bonsaint (at 9:30), Scully refers to him as "Captain Bonsaint". However, his name tag which is clearly visible in several scene shots says "Chief Bonsaint". more
Quotes:
Scully: No... I don't think it's witchcraft or sorcery. I've looked around and I don't see any evidence of anything that warrants that kind of suspicion.
Mulder: Well, maybe you don't know what you're looking for.
Scully: Like evidence of conjury or the black arts? Or shamanism, divination, Wicca, or any kind of pagan or neo-pagan practice? Charms, cards, familiars, blood-stones, or hex signs, or any kind of the ritual tableau associated with the occult; Santeria, Voudom, Macumba or any high or low magic...
Mulder: Scully?
Scully: Yes?
[...]
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Movie Connections:
References Child's Play (1988) more

FAQ

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16 out of 20 people found the following comment useful.
"do the hokey pokey...", 9 August 2006
7/10
Author: MisterWhiplash from United States

Chinga isn't one of the very best episodes from the X-Files, but as a piece co-written as the only one by Stephen King, it gives more than few obvious but quite entertaining moments. It's all predicated on something that has been in other King works- the girl who is more than a little 'off'. This time, however, her anger and hatred gets channeled- or just put into place- through a doll that was discovered by her (viciously made dead) father. It's also another in the crop of about 85-90% of King's work taking place in Maine, where Scully gets involved while- as she repeats to many- on vacation. The episode is basically for King fans like a short story not made into some overlong movie but a 45 minute film with lots of style trying to mingle with the very (not always necessarily) sly dialog and, of course, lots of violence.

In fact this might be one of the more violent ones in nature, as the special doll sometimes goes on cue based on the girl, or through a song "Do the hokey pokey", which in and of itself is kind of hokey too. Lots of harsh deaths involving clawing eyes out and ends met by witchcraft of some sort. While there aren't any scenes ala Child's Play with the doll running around doing the murders, there's still something sort of missing from other episodes that Chris Carter as co-writer doesn't quite get into it. If not for King's involvement it might've fared even less. But as it is I was glad I saw it, even out of order from watching all of the episodes now season to season, and there's some dry funny moments involving Mulder back at FBI headquarters with his theories and endless time to kill (I loved the little pencil gag at the end). Worth it for fans of the author, if only for the tongue-in-cheek bits, though X-Files fans thinking his name might mean brilliance might be disappointed.

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