During Season 4 of “The X-Files,” the show aired what would be considered one of its most gruesome entries yet in “Home,” which centered on the Peacock family, who harbor many physical abnormalities due to decades of incest. While the episode was and continues to be praised among fans and critics alike, it created a stir of controversy after its airing. It was the only episode of the show to carry a TV-MA rating (per Fangoria), and it was banned from ever airing again at the time for being too dark.
Interestingly, the episode was partially based on an anecdote from Charlie Chaplin’s autobiography. While making the Season 4 documentary on YouTube, the co-writer of the episode, James Wong, explained this inspiration. “There was a biography of Charlie Chaplin that we read and he was in a small town and he was staying with this family,” Wong said. “And one night they said, ‘You know, Charlie we like you a lot and we want to show you something that we never show anyone.’ He went upstairs to this bare room. There’s only a cot … And from under the cot they pulled out this teenager who was only a torso and a head with no arms and no legs.”
The Chaplin story in question actually details someone who still has their arms, but regardless, it was still enough to stick with both Wong and his writing partner Glen Morgan. As mentioned before, the episode became somewhat infamous, but it also helped cement “The X-Files” as perhaps one of the scariest shows on television at the time. The fact that they used a Chaplin story to help inspire it is a fact that’s almost stranger than fiction.
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