It’s the year 2001.
A jet liner leaves on a journey, one of whose terminii is Boston’s Logan Airport.
It’s filled with passengers.
Shortly after takeoff, it’s hijacked.
The goal of the hijackers?
Slam it into the World Trade Center and spark a war.
I’m talking about 9/11, right?
Wrong!
I’m talking about the pilot episode (no pun intended!) of The Lone Gunmen.
The Lone Gunmen, as you may know, were three conspiracy buff/lovable loser types who first appeared on The X-Files as a kind of background think-tank, research group on which Mulder (and later Scully) could draw.
The three provided not only impossible insights on cases Mulder and Scully were trying to crack, they also provided priceless comic relief, and in the end they proved so popular that they got their own series!
But it only lasted 13 episodes and ended with a cliffhanger that had to be tied up back on The X-Files (not entirely satisfactorily, to my mind).
In the first episode of their series, they faced a situation that was eerily prescient of 9/11, just as Futilility–or–The Wreck Of The Titan was eerily prescient of the Titanic disaster (that was scary coincidence #1, btw).
When 9/11 happened, I went "Oh, wow! This is just like the pilot episode of The Lone Gunmen!"
Except, of course, that in the TV show they managed at the last second to avert the plane so that it didn’t hit the World Trade Center (except for knocking over an antenna on the roof).
Also on the show, the event was engineered by a rougue group within the government rather than Osama bin Laden. (Though Daily Kos readers may think that is real life for all I know.)
The Lone Gunmen just came out on DVD, giving me the chance to re-watch the pilot episode and the rest (including the X-Files episode tying everything up, which is also included in the set).
Too bad it didn’t last longer.
Incidentally, something seemed to be buzzing around the collective Hollywood intellect about 9/11 in the year before it happened. Joe Michael Straczynski, creator of Babylon 5, had been working on a series tentatively called World On Fire, which was so similar in content to 9/11 and the events that followed that he scrapped the whole thing after those events unfolded. What he planned to be a dynamic, daring television series had now become the nightly news. (Maybe that was scary coincidence #3.)
yeah, now THIS one i miss. techno-thriller plots without sci-fi delusions of granduer.
I don’t know anything about that show — don’t have cable. Is it possible that Osama got the idea for 9/11 from that Lone Gunmen episode??
By the way they are looking into doing another X-Files movie.