“Home” is the second episode of the fourth season of the American science fiction television series The X-Files. It was written by Glen Morgan and James Wong and originally aired on October 11, 1996. The episode was the first to receive a viewer discretion warning for graphic content. It has been cited as a seminal episode by critics and crew members.
About Home (The X-Files) in brief

The initial broadcast had a Nielsen rating of 11. 9. Watched by 18. 85 million viewers, the initial broadcast was the only episode to carry a TV-MA rating upon broadcast and the first of a series of six episodes that aired on the Fox network in the fall of 1996. Critics were generally complimentary, and praised the disturbing nature of the plot; several made comparisons to the work of director Tobe Hooper. They attempted to make the episode as ambitious and shocking as possible and were inspired by real-life events, including the documentary Brother’s Keeper and a story from Charlie Chaplin’s autobiography about an encounter in a Welsh lodging. The episode marked the return of writers Morgan and Wong, who left the show following its second season to work on other television projects after the second season. The two writers had written many episodes of the series and were instrumental in the success of the show. Mulder suspects the brothers kidnapped and raped a woman to father the child, but they deny it. The baby suffocated by inhaling dirt, meaning it was buried alive. The family has been inbreeding since the war, and they are planning to start a new family. In retaliation, the brothers enter Sheriff Taylor’s house during the night and murder him and his wife, Barbara. Laboratory tests indicate the baby’s parents were members of the family.
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This page is based on the article Home (The X-Files) published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 17, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






