Dexter

(series)
  • Australia Dexter
Trailer 2
Crime / Drama / Mystery / Thriller
USA, (2006–2022), 93 h 29 min (Length: 44–59 min)

Based on:

Jeff Lindsay (book)

Cast:

Michael C. Hall, Jennifer Carpenter, David Zayas, James Remar, C.S. Lee, Luna Lauren Velez, Desmond Harrington, Julie Benz, Christina Robinson, Geoff Pierson (more)
(more professions)

Seasons(9) / Episodes(106)

Plots(1)

American drama about a Miami police forensics expert who kills those he believes have escaped justice. Dexter (Michael C. Hall) was orphaned at the age of three after the murder of his mother, an incident which appears to have implanted in him a fierce desire to punish those who commit criminal acts. While avoiding suspicion with a genial and helpful professional facade by day, when off-duty Dexter remorselessly hunts down those he believes have escaped the justice of the law and takes his vengeance. (Paramount Home Entertainment)

(more)

Videos (84)

Trailer 2

Reviews (11)

Lima 

all reviews of this user

English The first episodes were slightly above average, but over time it turned out to be an affair to which it’s not difficult to develop an addiction. There’s simply no other series as good, with such a sophisticated psychology and at the same time so masterfully strumming the dark side of the human soul. Review of the final season: it should be said that this is the weakest season. The screenplay is clueless, clumsy, with nonsensical random situations, with even more nonsensical plot twists, and with a logic that has more holes than a Swiss cheese. But then came the final episode, which at least partially corrected the dull impression, when the resolution of Dexter's and Debra's fate got a fantastically emotional charge and was the most logical and only right one (although if I were in the creators' shoes, I would’ve been even more uncompromising). It's admirable how believable the psychological development of Dexter was throughout the series, which has maintained (with some rare exceptions) a continuous quality that many competing TV series could only envy. ()

Malarkey 

all reviews of this user

English Dexter definitely isn’t like the classical crime shows there were so many around at the time when it aired. Of course, it isn’t, it was supposed to be different and it was. And that was the very reason why I started watching it. However, I stopped after season three because I was no longer enjoying it and it took another five years before the series was over, which forced me to get back to it and finish watching it, so that I could post an objective review here. I have to admit that I was really excited about Dexter. Finally, there was a show that was original and unconventional. It doesn’t happen often that you would root for a serial killer, but so be it. But as time went on, I kept noticing the show was pretty repetitive. It was no longer original. In the end, I have to say that the series ended quite well. I’ve seen better, but also much worse series finales. And this will definitely be one of those I will never forget, which is good. You can clearly see that everybody has only one karma. I don’t want to spoil it for you so I will leave it at this. I think that a four-star rating is pretty appropriate. If it was a bit shorter, I wouldn’t mind at all, but it’s clear that the authors were forced to drag it on a bit. ()

Ads

Quint 

all reviews of this user

English Dexter immediately captivates with its original premise of a “good” serial killer who works on the police, murdering evil serial killers while leading a normal family life, and entertains with its take on silly soap operas as the main character tries to balance his dual life as a killer and family man. Most of the ironic humor rests on Dexter's memorable internal monologues, which he uses to sarcastically crash any melodramatic situations. Personally, I'm not a fan of voiceovers, but I can't imagine Dexter without them. Without them, the inner contradiction of a character who has no emotions and tries to pretend he's just like everyone else could never work. Dexter also amusingly satirizes the usually serious forensic investigations of procedural crime shows like CSI. However, from about halfway through (after the departure of the original showrunner) it starts to suffer from what a lot of long-running shows suffer from: the proliferation of side plots from the lives of minor characters that nobody cares about, as well as the unintentionally comical pathetic moments that the series initially made such a mockery of. The story becomes less and less believable and, as a result, less and less suspenseful. In later episodes, Dexter doesn't adhere so strictly to the strict code that helped him not get caught. He's getting more and more lax, but he still gets away with it. Some major events don't even have the expected serious consequences and are brushed off too quickly. And if that wasn't enough, this is one of the worst endings of any series ever. I don't know anyone who wasn't upset by it. But don't let that put you off, the first four seasons are top-notch. ()

gudaulin 

all reviews of this user

English Dexter is a series that relies on a charismatic character, and we have not seen this type of interesting serial killer with such a well-constructed and audience-appealing nature since the days of Doctor Lecter. The series has everything - tension, crimes, intrigues, passions, perversions, well-written typified characters, and a series of unexpected twists. It's a top-notch, cleverly structured commercial product that earns points primarily due to the atmosphere and Dexter's internally detached ironic commentary. Do you like cool entertainment, provocation, and deviation from the mainstream, but at the same time nothing that is profound and hard to digest? Give Dexter a watch. That is, assuming you don't mind the moral relativization that goes very far in the series. To understand, Dexter is a psychopath and a serial killer who is fortunate enough to work as a forensic investigator for the Miami police, and from his position, he has a unique opportunity to hide his tracks, regardless of his intimate knowledge of police methods. Apart from the two mentioned minor flaws, Dexter is a nice guy with good manners and a carefully maintained appearance, who sincerely serves the purpose of becoming normal, starting a family, and overcoming his handicap. At least he still adheres to the code - torturing and killing exclusively those who deserve it, i.e., criminals and immoral people. To make it even easier for the viewer, they are generally unsympathetic people, additionally shown in unfavorable situations - simply characters that you won't miss and won't sympathize with. Dexter's battles with underworld opponents are as thrilling as the knowledge that Dexter is treading on dangerous ground within the police district, and the screenwriter occasionally exposes him to dangerous tests. Granted, from a psychological standpoint, the concept of the character is absolutely nonsensical, and the resolution of the first season is insultingly stupid, or as if it was something out of a crazy parody. The successful plot is constantly recycled in all the seasons, and the series ends in the most banal way just when the audience is tired of it and its ratings are declining. Overall impression: 60%. ()

novoten 

all reviews of this user (in this series)

English Season 1 – 85% – At its core, a small, pleasantly escalating case where too many personal coincidences happen around the main character. And in the bigger picture, it's the first step of a sympathetically sophisticated series that intoxicates viewers with a sweet feeling of knowing more than everyone around the central character, while still being led by the footsteps of an unknown killer. In the end, it's a relaxed and gradual spectacle that once introduced me to the world of cable TV and gave me a criminally minded character with purely logical thinking and somewhat noble intentions. However, nothing is black and white, and there are many twists yet to come. Season 2 – 90% – Cold logic starts to crack due to an animalistic force in the form of a seductive stranger, sympathy is increasingly stolen by the uncompromising Debra, and the deserving place in the spotlight belongs to the charming Julie Benz as Rita, who is unnecessarily scorned by viewers. In this season, the creators found the ideal balance that guaranteed the show's position for a few more years, a show that everyone watches (or at least plans to start watching at any moment). And it must be said, deservedly so, because the dynamics of relationships between Dexter-Doakes, Dexter-Lila, or Debra-Lundy can captivate viewers. Season 3 – 70% – Surprisingly stumbling at a time when all storylines should gain strength. Laguerta, despite occasionally emphasizing her importance too much, fails to impress, and she can't compete with the consistent performances of Deb or Rita. Dexter himself battles with an almost anonymous enemy and embarks on further endeavors with a rather problematic sidekick, Miguel. Here, in the third year of his Miami escapades, I got the feeling that the script can waver dangerously and, in the wrong hands, could lead the entire series into unexpectedly murky waters. Fortunately, that didn't happen, and the Skinner case was concluded with aplomb, leaving only the anticipation for a more nourishing prey, which didn't take long to arrive. Season 4 – 100% – The pinnacle of the whole bloody show, which cannot be surpassed in terms of uncompromisingness, nerves, or breathlessness due to unexpected twists. The Trinity Killer became a symbol for Dexter, the epitome of a first-class villain whom everyone that follows will strive to match – and they will never succeed. When the storylines around Batista and Joey Quinn finally work perfectly, the outcome is determined. It's a a royal ride with a breathtaking thriller of a finale, and arguably Showtime's most popular viewer trophy-winning showcase. Season 5 – 100% – A change of central creator for the first time and a straight-up hit. Chip Johannessen may have tried out for the role of leader for a single year, but it's the season helmed by him that is my favorite of the entire series. The charming Lumen, the manic Jordan Chase, and the pleasantly intertwining relationships of the various main and supporting characters have simply pieced together an unbreakable whole for me, led by the increasingly humanized title character. A heartbreaking period that unfortunately couldn't last forever. Season 6 – 80% – A change of central creator for the second time and the beginning of the end. It was from the arrival of Scott Buck as showrunner that some promising storylines never reached their zeniths, and in Dexter himself, that original unreadable hero was sometimes hard to recognize. Fortunately, the tension and the gradation of individual twists still work perfectly, and the religious subtext also fell on unexpectedly fertile ground. The rating is thus not lowered by the almost unbearable Maria Laguerta (nothing against the fitting Lauren Vélez by any means), nor by the feeling that some of the material should not be subjected to too many rewrites. Season 7 – 80% – New key characters like clockwork and occasionally a lot of question marks over the actions of the old ones. Some explicitly annoy (Louis, Nadia), some delight (the unflappable Yvonne Strahovski as Hannah) and some, somewhat surprisingly, steal every episode (Ray Stevenson and his rhino-like freshness in the skin of mobster Sirk). As a whole, I'm still enjoying it so much that I'm not only sitting on the edge of my seat in suspense, but almost on the back of it at times, but the final impressions, like last year, are perhaps a little lost. While the first seasons had a more meandering pace but lingered in the mind for months, the more recent seasons – despite heartbreaking or absolutely pivotal events – simply fail to impress. This leaves one single but all the more crucial unknown, the quality of the final batch of blood, evidence, and monologues. For it is with Dexter, perhaps more than any other series, that the quality of the finale itself is depended upon to support or detract from the previous season. Season 8 – 60% – Pleasant flashbacks, surprising explanations, and a slowly collapsing house of cards. But what at the beginning seems like a paraphrase of earlier themes (Dexter as both mentor and pupil) eventually degenerates into a rather dull plot due to dysfunctional supporting characters (Elway and the Marshal) and, worst of all, a chase with the absolute worst villain. That this particular amateurishly-acting individual would slam Dex, Deb, and everyone present in such a manner is what I consider to be a regular screenwriting misstep. Ironically, instead of feeling like a culmination, the final season just feels like a series episode and is therefore a considerable disappointment. After all, even an unconcluded season seven would have felt a bit more fateful as a finale, as it at least somehow gradually arrived at its climaxes. Eight, on the other hand, just works around the new characters, tries to close everything that needs to be closed in the last two episodes – and leaves the rest lying around. No catharsis for the secondary characters or answers to the burning questions of the last few years. Thus, the top ratings that have been slowly grinding away for some time now are rightfully fading into irreversibility, making the end of a viewer cult an unnecessarily bitter bite. To make us wait years for redress after the worst episode ever was maddening. But all is forgiven in the winter of 2021. New Blood – 75% – This surprisingly self-contained project, cut off like this by many years, works a little better than it would have as a possible ninth season. And for how long the creators have been treading around its creation, they're a bit like elephants in china now, standing still the moment they're supposed to step up and rushing forward when it would be convenient to wait, so fast that I don't even have time to look around before the plot is somewhere else. However, what remains the same is the atmosphere, which even without the sun and Miami beaches brings back that paranoid spectacle of the protagonist spinning thrilling wheels in all directions. The much-praised and hated finale is certainly not the best episode, but thankfully it's not the worst either, easily undoing the damage done by the last episode nearly a decade earlier. It's just a shame that it's where the rush is by far the most frantic, because by that point the viewer already has an inkling of how the whole series might end, and is just guessing who's going to kill who, who's going to stay where and with whom, and just throwing figures around in such equations. But because the creators leave the viewer groping for a very long time, it is still possible to fit almost any composition into such a conundrum some twenty minutes before the end, and then when it finally comes to breaking bread, it loses in emotion the weight that the nine previous episodes tried to soak up. As a result, New Blood doesn't rank among the best seasons, but it reaches somewhere to the level of the third, sixth, or seventh, the ones that are good enough and solidly watchable, with surprising ease. Without the blatant logical shortcuts, where a lot of things are made implausibly easy for the main characters (see the very convenient conference or the increasingly rapid putting two and two together), I would still be a class above satisfied, but the main goal is met. A series that I still considered one of the best (at least of the ones running at the time) after its fifth season, I suddenly stopped caring about at its first ending because I felt like the creators were making a fool of me. Now I certainly do care, and my memories of Dexter as a whole have finally been properly brightened again. () (less) (more)

Gallery (1,419)