Scary files




















Mulder and Scully investigate what he thinks is a case of someone using witchcraft to curse doctors or patients, but that's not entirely the case. Instead, the implication is that a plastic surgeon, on the quest for eternal youth, has somehow found it by making some of his patients his victims.

It's also left open-ended as he evades the FBI agents on his trail. Yes, it features a Monster of the Week in the form of a worm that may or may not be extraterrestrial, but the fear builds in the episode because of isolation and a lack of trust. Mulder and Scully have to investigate an isolated group of researchers in Alaska. Everyone turns on one another, suspecting they're infected by the parasite in question, as they wait for a storm to pass. This would always lead to bad things, and in this case, it was a case that Mulder was called in to look at involving a man arrested for murder who was drawing gargoyles.

Mulder starts to question his own sanity as the FBI profiler constantly dismisses his ideas, and then the episode shows what happens when a person becomes the monsters that they hunt. The fourth season episode "Leonard Betts" was scary for more than one reason. First up, there is the villain, Leonard Betts. He was a decapitated corpse that got up and walked out of the morgue without his head.

He then went home and regrew it, meaning he could change his look and remain free. However, outside of the fear from the monster itself was his revelation. He stays alive by feeding on cancerous tumors and will rip them out of his victims. When he tells Scully she has cancer, the fears become more than just about the monster.

There might not be anything scarier than creepy kids, and "Eve" has that terror doubled. This is an episode about genetic testing and cloning, and the clones here are the two twin girls, Teena and Cindy. This episode dealt with the Litchfield Project and creating super-soldiers, but these two girls are a frightening result.

They have telepathic abilities and possess murderous urges. Just imagine if the terrifying twins from The Shining grew up and became killers. It is the only episode that carried a viewer discretion warning. Despite this, fans were still overly disturbed, and Fox received several complaints from viewers and pulled it from the rotation for a time. The most disturbing thing is the woman who delivers birth at the start of the episode.

The woman had no arms or legs, is kept under the bed, and the baby met a terrible fate too. The family that perpetuates these acts even lives to see another day, escaping at the end of the episode. The Season 4 episode "Unruhe" is an episode that uses a trope that has been used in movies and TV shows for years.

However, The X-Files episode is still frightening despite the familiarity. The episode is about a person who can influence a photograph using their mind, and they are performing lobotomies of their victims. Scully is kidnapped in this episode, and the final terror in this episode comes in the fact that the killer used a dentist's chair when he lobotomized his victims. The scares from the fifth season episode "Detour" comes from the humanity vs.

There is a seemingly invisible attacker killing people in a National Forest. Having a creature killing that no one can see or understand makes it much scarier than actually seeing a giant monster. The murderous creature just had red eyes, but there is nothing else there to see. The scariest thing is that Scully shoots the creature, but it disappears, helping make the ending unforgettably scary.

The X-Files episode "Chinga" offers up one of the things that scare many people — dolls. This episode has a little girl with a very disturbing doll that actually can say two things, including "Let's have fun" and "I want to play.

When Chinga speaks, people nearby mutilate their own faces. With the creepy doll, the little girl, and the carnage that Scully finds, there is a lot in this episode to scare just about any viewer. This was bound to be a scary X-Files episode since Stephen King wrote it.

The scariest villain in X-Files history is a human serial killer named Donnie Pfaster. He is mostly scary because, in his first appearance, he is a killer that looked normal but was terrifying. Scully said that Pfaster was the look of true evil, and she said this after seeing supernatural monsters. Like a girl singing lullaby.

I got so scared so i ran to my mom and I told her what I heard but she said that I was probably just imagining it so i decided to sleep early. I woke up at am and my stomach ached so i needed to go to the bathroom But i remembered that there was a creepy sound so i decided to sleep again until the sun had risen.

When i open the shower i was shocked to see there was a faceless boy talking! Wiki Content. Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? Scary Files. Edit source History Talk 0. Background [ ] Here K-Zoners can submit their scary experiences that happened in their life. Some stories here are just invented but most are fake Ghost in the Bathroom One night i just got home from my school and i was so tired.



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