Post by Admin on May 15, 2005 18:07:00 GMT
[glow=green,1,500]I got this from an IMDB message board, I'm not sure where they got it from but it was posted last month...
Duchovny's life changed dramatically in 1993 when he signed on to play Fox Mulder on "The X-Files." By the end of its first season, the series was regularly drawing 17 million viewers a week. "We became rock stars," he says. "I remember I couldn't believe I was on the cover of Rolling Stone. It was so hip. I'd never been that hip before in my life."
The success of "The X-Files" came with a price. Fourteen-hour days on the Vancouver set left Duchovny and co-star Gillian Anderson feeling perpetually burned out. Almost immediately, rumors began flying that the duo hated each other. "That was all overplayed," he says. "We had our differences but that happens with any two people who are thrown together for 14-hour days to work on a cultural phenomenon. We've spoken recently, and we're in touch by e-mail, because Gillian spends a lot of time in London these days."
Lately, Duchovny, who left the series before it went off the air in 2002, finds himself enjoying old episodes of "The X-Files" on late-night TV. "If I'm flipping channels and it comes on, I'll sit through it. The first time I did that, I remember thinking, 'God, these are really well-made and interesting and dramatic and funny.'
"One night, I actually called [series creator] Chris Carter late at night and said, 'Man, that show was really great! Did you know how good the show was?' And Chris said, 'Yeah.' Right then, I apologized for ever saying anything negative about the show."
Duchovny believes another "X-Files" movie might be ready to go as early as next year. "The willingness is there, on my part and Gillian's," he says of the follow-up to 1998's "The X-Files" movie. "Chris would direct it, probably."
Duchovny sounds excited about stepping back into Mulder's moody mind-set. "I'm looking forward to it," he says. "Doing the first movie nearly killed us because we were trying to keep up the quality of the TV show at the same time.
"After the show went off the air, it just made sense to wait to do another movie until people actually missed it. Now, I think that we all miss it."
Heh! ...So forgiven him yet Assy?
Just checked too and DD did his fair share of chat shows last month...even on Conan He likes those shows![/glow]
Duchovny's life changed dramatically in 1993 when he signed on to play Fox Mulder on "The X-Files." By the end of its first season, the series was regularly drawing 17 million viewers a week. "We became rock stars," he says. "I remember I couldn't believe I was on the cover of Rolling Stone. It was so hip. I'd never been that hip before in my life."
The success of "The X-Files" came with a price. Fourteen-hour days on the Vancouver set left Duchovny and co-star Gillian Anderson feeling perpetually burned out. Almost immediately, rumors began flying that the duo hated each other. "That was all overplayed," he says. "We had our differences but that happens with any two people who are thrown together for 14-hour days to work on a cultural phenomenon. We've spoken recently, and we're in touch by e-mail, because Gillian spends a lot of time in London these days."
Lately, Duchovny, who left the series before it went off the air in 2002, finds himself enjoying old episodes of "The X-Files" on late-night TV. "If I'm flipping channels and it comes on, I'll sit through it. The first time I did that, I remember thinking, 'God, these are really well-made and interesting and dramatic and funny.'
"One night, I actually called [series creator] Chris Carter late at night and said, 'Man, that show was really great! Did you know how good the show was?' And Chris said, 'Yeah.' Right then, I apologized for ever saying anything negative about the show."
Duchovny believes another "X-Files" movie might be ready to go as early as next year. "The willingness is there, on my part and Gillian's," he says of the follow-up to 1998's "The X-Files" movie. "Chris would direct it, probably."
Duchovny sounds excited about stepping back into Mulder's moody mind-set. "I'm looking forward to it," he says. "Doing the first movie nearly killed us because we were trying to keep up the quality of the TV show at the same time.
"After the show went off the air, it just made sense to wait to do another movie until people actually missed it. Now, I think that we all miss it."
Heh! ...So forgiven him yet Assy?
Just checked too and DD did his fair share of chat shows last month...even on Conan He likes those shows![/glow]