Dexter (TV series):
Dexter is an American television drama series based on the novel Darkly Dreaming Dexter by Jeff Lindsay and adapted for television by Emmy Award-winning screenwriter James Manos, Jr., who wrote the pilot episode. Set in Miami, the series centers on Dexter Morgan (Michael C. Hall), a serial killer who works for the Miami Metro Police Department as a blood splatter analyst.
The main creative forces behind the series (showrunners) are executive producers Daniel Cerone and Clyde Phillips; Cerone left the show after its second season. The series premiered on the premium cable network Showtime on October 1, 2006. Dexter has received considerable critical acclaim and has won two Emmys in technical categories, and has also generated public controversies concerning its content and promotion. An edited version of the series began airing on CBS on February 17, 2008 to make up for the shortage of new content caused by the 2007-08 Writers Guild of America strike. Canada's CTV simulcasts episodes along with CBS, and is also airing the edited version in order to follow Canadian cable simultaneous substitution rules.[1]
-
[edit] Season 1
Orphaned at the age of three and harboring a traumatic secret, Dexter (Michael C. Hall, Six Feet Under) was adopted by a Miami police officer named Harry Morgan (James Remar), who recognized Dexter's sociopathic tendencies and taught him to channel his gruesome passion for killing by giving it a constructive direction: killing people who deserve it. Most have slipped through the justice system, due to loopholes and technicalities in the law or were never apprehended.
To satisfy his interest in blood and to erase his own crimes, Dexter works as a blood splatter analyst for the Miami Metro Police Department. Although his drive to kill is unflinching (otherwise overcome by a feeling of "emptiness") Dexter is, through extensive instruction from Harry, able to fake normal emotions and keep up his appearance as a socially-responsible human being. Flashbacks throughout the series show how Harry instructs Dexter on the art of appearing normal, and he follows Harry's instructions as a sacred "Code of Harry." In accordance with this code, all of Dexter's victims must be killers themselves who have killed multiple times with no remorse, and Dexter must have proof that they are definitely guilty before he takes action.
Dexter has a girlfriend, Rita Bennett (Julie Benz), whom he dates in order to appear normal. Rita is psychologically damaged from an abusive ex-husband, a violent felon, and is too distraught to want sex. Dexter is unable to fake emotional closeness, something that his girlfriends discover post sex and is inevitably the reason the relationship ends. Dexter hopes to keep up the facade of normalcy by never engaging in sex with Rita. Dexter does have genuine affection for and feels comfortable with Rita and her two children, Astor and Cody.
The first season focuses mostly on "The Ice Truck Killer" - a serial killer eluding the Miami PD who is communicating with Dexter through his crime scenes. Dexter's adoptive sister Debra (Jennifer Carpenter) begins dating Rudy, who is revealed to the audience to be the Ice Truck Killer. At the end of the season, Rudy attempts to kill Debra, but is stopped by Dexter. Rudy reveals that he is really Dexter's brother, Brian Moser. Dexter has no choice but to kill him in order to save Debra; he makes Brian's death look like a suicide.
Dexter uses his calculated charm to become well-liked by all of his colleagues, with the exception of Sgt. James Doakes (Erik King), who repeatedly calls him a freak and openly accuses him of being up to something, although he is never sure what it is exactly. The tension between the two is an ongoing plot motif.
Doakes senses a connection between Dexter and the Ice Truck Killer, but is not sure what it is. He starts tailing Dexter because of his personal suspicions. Rita's ex-husband, set up by Dexter for a felony parole violation, is back in prison proclaiming his innocence, and points Rita to a clue to the truth about Dexter. The season ends with Dexter and his sister entering a crime scene, with Dexter imagining a tickertape parade for himself, complete with confetti and airplane fly-over, and the crowd praising him for his fine work "taking out the garbage" (i.e. killing those who prey on the weak and vulnerable).
The complete first season of Dexter was released in a four-disc DVD package on August 21, 2007 in the U.S.
[edit] Season 2
Dexter begins the season unable to satisfy his urges for over a month, due to the constant surveillance by Sgt. Doakes. When the opportunity to kill arises, he has problems executing his victims after killing his brother at the end of season 1.
To further complicate matters, treasure hunters discover Dexter's underwater dumping ground for his victims. As the police extract body after body from the ocean, the media dubs the killer the "Bay Harbor Butcher", and FBI Special Agent Lundy (played by Keith Carradine) is brought in to catch the "Butcher."
A cult following begins to form behind the "Butcher" when it is discovered that his victims were themselves responsible for deaths.[2] Dexter even finds that a comic-book character, "The Dark Defender", was created in his honor where he comically states as he looks at the poster, "Nah, it's too hot to wear all that leather in Miami".
Rita's relationship with Dexter becomes more tense as she and her children are dealing with the death of her ex-husband Paul in a prison fight. Paul's suggestion that Dexter was to blame for his imprisonment eats at Rita's conscience and eventually Rita accuses Dexter of setting up her ex-husband. Dexter admits to setting up Paul, but Rita refuses to believe that Dexter premeditated the crime. She assumes that Dexter is a heroin addict. He acquiesces to "having an addiction", though he characteristically allows her misinterpretation to go without clarification; in return, she vows to stay with him while he goes through the Narcotics Anonymous program. In this way, Dexter avoids responsibility for Paul's death (though he set the process in motion) and consequently maintains the rationalization that he only (directly) kills people who are murderers. Doakes pursues Dexter until he encounters Dexter leaving a NA meeting. Doakes seems satisfied that Dexter's odd behavior and apparent drug use can be explained by traumatic experiences as a career police officer.
Debra continues to struggle with the trauma of her experience with the Ice Truck Killer combined with all the people recognizing her as the "Ice Truck Killer's" girl. For a sense of safety and comfort, she stays with her brother, another new source of stress in Dexter's life.
New cast members for this season include Jaime Murray as Lila, an artist that is a former meth addict and arsonist who becomes Dexter’s sponsor and later on his lover,[3] Keith Carradine as FBI Special Agent Frank Lundy and JoBeth Williams as Rita's mother Gail. The role of Rita's son Cody was re-cast, and in Season 2 was played by child actor Preston Bailey.
Season 2 premiered on September 30, 2007. On July 17, the first two episodes of the season were leaked on the internet, and on December 4, the last two episodes were also leaked.[4] On November 4th, 2007, the Writer’s Guild of America started a strike, but writer Daniel Cerone stated in the L.A. Times that Season 2 had already been completed in anticipation of the WGA’s action.[5]
Throughout Season 2, Dexter is pursued by Special Agent Lundy, while Debra's affection for Lundy and her confidence in her own detective skills both grow. Doakes revives his suspicions about Dexter, and ultimately discovers Dexter's collection of glass slides, containing blood sample souvenirs from all of his victims. The possibility of matching the slides hidden in Dexter's air conditioner with the bodies of the Butcher's victims sets up a climactic episode in which Doakes confronts Dexter. Dexter overpowers him and keeps him locked in the cage of a drug dealer's remote cabin, while he begins to frame Doakes as the Butcher. Lieutenant LaGuerta, Doakes' former partner, is the only one who believes in Doakes' innocence. She finds evidence of Doakes' innocence and takes it to Lundy, but he tells her that the evidence is tainted by her previous failure to report Doakes' telephone conversation to the investigation team. Lundy rejects LaGuerta's case files, though he believes she may be correct about Doakes' innocence.
Near the end of the season, Doakes escapes from the cage temporarily and is recaptured by Dexter after being threatened by two drug dealers. Dexter struggles with his life as a serial killer, thanks to revelations throughout the season regarding Harry Morgan, his foster father. Dexter learns that Harry was sleeping with Dexter's biological mother before she died and that Harry took his own life after walking in on Dexter in the middle of a murder, unable to deal with the reality of the monster he had created. With his confidence in the Code of Harry and himself destroyed, and exhausted from having to maintain his "mask" for so long, Dexter plays out the possible resulting scenarios in his head of turning himself in. Dexter's events on his last day of freedom include having Deb review his will, having a final dinner with her, and taking Rita and the kids out on the boat. During the "last meal" with Deb, he realizes how much she depended on him to resolve her feelings about the murder attempt by the Ice Truck Killer and decides to continue with his original plan of framing Doakes as the "Bay Harbor Butcher."
In the season finale, Lila causes an explosion at the cabin where Doakes was imprisoned, blowing up both Doakes and the corpse of one of Dexter's victims, preventing Dexter from being named as a serial killer. Lila then meets with Dexter, expecting him to accept her love now that she knows his dark secret. She catches him preparing to kill her and seeks revenge by trying to kill Rita's children and Dexter. Dexter manages to save the children and escape and then gets his own revenge on her after she has fled to Paris. In the closing scenes, Doakes' memorial service goes largely unattended, with the exception of LaGuerta, Dexter, and Doakes' immediate family. Expressing the logic of Dexter's mental world, the final words in the series are a voice-over of his thoughts on the recent events. We hear that he now considers himself the master of the techniques his father taught him. Dexter believes this combined with the fact that Harry knew himself to be wrong about the code gives Dexter the right to rewrite that code and to live his life the way he wishes. He also states that he now needs those relationships that he originally cultivated as disguises in order to fit into society, even though they make him vulnerable. He considers himself, "An idea transcended into life."
The complete second season of Dexter was released on August 19, 2008, in USA/Canada, and August 21, 2008, in Australia/New Zealand.
[edit] Season 3
Miguel Prado (played by Jimmy Smits) is an assistant district attorney who works with Dexter to solve the case of the murder of Oscar Prado, Miguel's' youngest brother. Dexter killed Oscar in self-defense while attempting to stalk a murderous drug dealer named "Freebo"; and soon Miguel confides in Dexter and grows to trust him. Miguel, upon following up on a lead as to Freebo's whereabouts, witnesses Dexter with the weapon he used to kill Freebo (also the same weapon that killed Oscar Prado), but instead of reprimanding him, he hugs and thanks him, thinking that his brother is finally avenged.
Meanwhile, Rita (Dexter's girlfriend) finds out she is pregnant and Dexter finds it hard to choose when she asks whether she should keep the baby or not. After some consideration, Rita informs Dexter that she will keep the baby, and raise him either with or without his help. It also takes some time for Dexter himself to cope with the idea of actually having a child (an acceptance helped by the fact that he now sees Astor and Cody as his children and therefore to be protected), and he ends up proposing marriage to Rita, which she happily accepts.
Throughout Season 3, Debra starts working more seriously in order to earn her detective shield, but due to an untimely commentary on her part she is cut off from the Freebo case and starts working with a new partner named Joey Quinn to investigate a serial murder with the habit of skinning his victims while alive (labeled "The Skinner"). She also starts a relationship with Anton, one of Quinn's confidential informants who starts working with her. However, Yuki Amado, a female Internal Affairs officer, starts pressuring Debra to give her information on Quinn, promising to help her become a detective in return, but Debra refuses to cooperate, despite Yuki's claims that Quinn can not be trusted.
A notable change from previous seasons is the increased use of fantasy scenes with Harry, Dexter's father. Harry offers guidance, ideas, and guilt. This differs from the earlier seasons' use of flashbacks to illustrate Dex's past.
As Dexter and Miguel cooperate to conceal Freebo's true demise from everyone else, the duo end up becoming close friends, as do Rita and Miguel's wife Sylvia. While the Prados assist Rita during a medical emergency, Miguel searches for Dexter, who was on a cruise ship killing a victim suggested by Miguel, who realizes that Dexter committed the murder. Miguel praises Dexter for killing another murderer and offers his aid in the future. Trying to discourage Miguel, Dexter proposes a risky operation to free an infamous Neo-Nazi leader who continues to commit crimes while inside prison, in order to kill him. Miguel agrees with the idea, and despite the alarm sounding during the escape, the plan succeeds, and Dexter starts to recognize Miguel as his first, and only true friend, to the point of inviting him to be his best man at his wedding.
Camilla Figg, an old friend of Dexter and his family, is dying of terminal lung cancer, and asks for him to end her suffering, which he, who never had purposely killed an innocent before, reluctantly agrees to do. On the occasion, Camilla reveals to Dexter that she knew that his brother was the Ice Truck Killer, and congratulates him when he confesses to her that he was the one who killed him.
Miguel and Dexter's partnership takes a new step when Miguel offers himself to dispose of their next target, a former football player turned gambler who, in order to pay his bookie, commit murders on his behalf. With some reluctance, Dexter accepts, and after preparing the trap and teaching him the basics of his "code", he witnesses Miguel killing the victim without hesitation. However, on the next day, Dexter finds that Ellen Wolf, a defense attorney and old enemy of Miguel's, was also killed by him. After some investigation, Dexter also discovers that Miguel never trusted him at all, and has been manipulating him since the beginning.
Dexter and Miguel then begin to dance around in a game of who has leverage over whom as the police investigate the death of Ellen Wolf. This game of leverage ends with Dexter deciding to kill Miguel and Miguel helping the Skinner escape police custody in return for the Skinner killing Dexter.
[edit] Future
On October 21, 2008, Showtime renewed the series for a fourth and a fifth season. Each of them will consist of 12 episodes and will go into production in the spring and will presumably air in the same fall slot the series has occupied each year.[6]
[edit] Controversies
[edit] U.S. broadcast controversy
When CBS announced in December 2007 it was considering Dexter for broadcast over the public airwaves, Parents Television Council (PTC), publicly protested the decision.[7][8]
In preparation for the broadcast premiere of Dexter on CBS, on January 29, 2008 the network posted promotional videos on YouTube.[9] The next day, the PTC for a second time called upon CBS to withdraw plans to broadcast the show. PTC President Timothy F. Winter issued a news release stating "We are formally asking CBS to cancel its plan to air the first season of Dexter on its television network. This show is not suitable for airing on broadcast television; it should remain on a premium subscription cable network. The biggest problem with the series is something that no amount of editing can get around: the series compels viewers to empathize with a serial killer, to root for him to prevail, to hope he doesn’t get discovered." Winter went on to quote CBS President Leslie Moonves' post-Columbine comment: ‘Anyone who thinks the media has nothing to do with [increasing violence in society] is an idiot.’ Winter called on the public to demand local affiliates pre-empt Dexter, and warned advertisers the PTC would take action against any that sponsored the show.[10]
Following Winter's release, CBS added Parental Discretion advisories to its broadcast (but not the YouTube) promotions. CBS rated Dexter TV-14 for broadcast.[11] The show premiered on February 17, 2008 with minor edits, primarily for language, and with scenes involving dismemberment of live victims cut away.[12] Scenes involving sex were also taken out of the broadcasts. The PTC has also objected to CBS broadcasting the final two episodes of the season in a two-hour block starting at 9:00 P.M. (Eastern/Pacific Time Zones), which translates to 8 P.M. at the Mountain and Central Time Zones, a time it is concerned about a high likelihood of children watching the show.[13]
[edit] Viral marketing controversy
In preparation for the UK launch of the series, FX (UK) experimented with an SMS-based viral marketing campaign. Unsuspecting mobile phone owners received unsolicited SMS messages identified as being from "Dexter," with no other identification or originating phone number. The SMS messages contain the following text, referring to the phone owner by name:
- "Hello (name). I'm heading to the UK sooner than you might think. Dexter."
Some time later, an email is received directing the user to an online video "news report" about a recent spree of killings. Using on-the-fly video manipulation, the user's name and a personalized message are worked into the report – the former written in blood on a wall by the crime scene, the latter added to a note in an evidence bag carried past the camera.
While the marketing campaign had succeeded in raising the profile of the show, it proved unpopular with many mobile owners who saw this as spam advertising aimed at mobile phones. In response to complaints about the SMS element of the campaign, FX issued the following statement:
- "The text message you received was part of an internet viral campaign for our newest show Dexter. However it was not us who sent you the text but one of your friends. We do not have a database of viewer phone numbers. The text message went along with a piece on the net that you can then send on to other people you know. If you go to www.icetruck.tv you will see the page that one of your friends has filled in to send you that message. Therefore I suggest you have a word with anyone who knows your mobile number and see who sent you this message. For the record we did not make a record of any phone numbers used in this campaign."[14]"
[edit] Missing person case
Connections have been suggested between the TV show Dexter and an ongoing missing person investigation in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Mark Twitchell, has been charged with first degree murder in the disappearance of 38 year old John Altinger in what appears to be similar to Dexter's clandestine murders. Det. Mark Anstey of the Edmonton Police Service was quoted as saying "We have a lot of information to suggest he definitely idolizes Dexter." Three months prior to the murder of Altinger, Twitchell had posted on his Facebook status that he claimed to have a lot in common with Dexter Morgan.[15]
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[edit] Dexter's kill count
| Episode |
Kills |
Victim |
Slide |
Method |
Reason |
| 101 |
2 |
Mike Donovan |
X |
Jigsaw |
Killed 3 Boys |
|
|
Jamie Jaworski |
X |
Meat clever |
Jane Saunders in a snuff film |
| 102 |
1 |
Matt Chambers |
X |
Knife to the Heart |
Repeated Fatality Drunk Driver |
| 103 |
1 |
Nurse Mary |
- |
Knife to the Heart |
Overdoses Patients |
| 104 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 105 |
2 |
Jorge Castillo |
X |
Knife |
Drowns illegal Cuban immigrants |
|
|
Valerie Castillo |
X |
Knife to Carotid Artery |
Jorge Accomplice |
| 106 |
3 |
Alex Timmons |
X |
Cut to pieces by chainsaw |
Sniper |
|
|
Gene Marshall |
X |
unknown |
Arsonist |
|
|
Cindy Landon |
X |
unknown |
Black Widow |
| 107 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 108 |
1 |
Dr. Emmett Meridian |
X |
Jigsaw |
Encourages Suicide |
| 109 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 110 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 111 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 112 |
1 |
Brian Moser |
- |
Knife to the Throat |
Ice Truck Killer |
| 201 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 202 |
1 |
Little Chino |
X |
Knife to the Heart |
Gang Hitman |
| 203 |
1 |
Roger Hicks |
X |
Knife to the Heart |
Ann Cohen and Lynn Hall |
| 204 |
4 |
Robert Thacher |
X |
unknown |
Murderer |
|
|
Marcus White |
X |
unknown |
Killed Parents |
|
|
Oscar Sota |
X |
unknown |
Kept Guns in the Walls |
|
|
Joesph Sapeda |
X |
unknown |
unknown |
| 205 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 206 |
1 |
Ken Olsen |
- |
Knife to the Heart |
Copy Cat Killer |
| 207 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 208 |
1 |
Santos Jiminez |
X |
Chainsaw |
Chainsawed Laura Moser |
|
31 |
46 Slides |
|
Found by Doakes |
15 slides previously accounted for |
| 209 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 210 |
2 |
Jose Garza |
- |
Hand Saw |
Murderer |
|
|
Juan Rinez |
- |
unknown |
Kills Prostitutes |
| 211 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 212 |
1 |
Lila West |
- |
Knife to the Heart |
Blows up Sgt. Doakes, also attempted to kill Rita's children. |
| 301 |
6 |
Oscar Prado |
- |
Knife to the Heart |
Tried to kill Dexter |
|
|
Guy at Carnval |
X |
Butcher Knife |
unknown |
|
|
4 slides |
X |
1st in new slide case |
|
| 302 |
1 |
Fred "Freebo" Bowman |
X |
Knife to the Neck |
Killed 2 Sorority Girls |
| 303 |
1 |
Nathan Martin |
- |
Strangled |
Pedophile stalking Astor |
| 304 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 305 |
1 |
Ethan Turner |
X |
Knife to the Heart |
Killed his wives |
| 306 |
1 |
Clemson Galt |
X |
Knife to the Heart |
Jenna Kendrick |
| 307 |
1 |
Camilla Figg |
- |
Poison Key Lime Pie |
She asked him to help her die as she was terminally ill. |
| 308 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 309 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| 310 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| Total |
64 |
|
|
|
|
Notes: Doakes steals Dexter's slide case while he is killing Santos Jiminez. All slides made after Episode 207 are not included in the 46 slides of the Bay Harbour Butcher Investigation
[edit] Differences from novel
The first season of Dexter is based on the novel Darkly Dreaming Dexter by Jeff Lindsay. However, there are numerous differences, ranging from extra subplots to rearrangements and modifications of elements from the source material. An example of a minor change is that, in the books, Dexter is fluent in Spanish while in the show he only seems to know a few words. The biggest change is the lead-up to and revelation of the identity of the "Ice Truck Killer", called the "Tamiami Butcher" in the novel. In the novel, Dexter is led to believe that he might be the one committing the murders, due to a series of strange dreams that connect him to the murder. The final clue is a blurry photo, taken from surveillance footage, of a man who resembles Dexter at a crime scene. After the "Tamiami Killer" kidnaps Deborah, Dexter finds and confronts him. It is subsequently revealed that the killer is actually Dexter's nearly identical long-lost brother, Brian, who, like Dexter, witnessed their mother's brutal murder. Dexter is followed by Detective LaGuerta, who is slain by Brian. Deborah finds out her brother is a killer and Dexter helps Brian to escape. As a trophy, Dexter adds a drop of LaGuerta’s blood to his collection. In the television series, Brian is introduced under the fake name Rudy, a prosthetist who becomes Debra's boyfriend. Dexter hesitantly kills Brian instead of letting him escape, Debra does not discover her brother's secret, and LaGuerta is not present at all in the confrontation. In the novel, Dexter and his brother are nearly identical, whereas the actors playing the two characters are distinct from each other in their looks.[16]
The novel is narrated exclusively from Dexter’s point of view and focuses mostly on his pursuit of the "Tamiami Butcher". This helps the reader relate even without understanding the Miami specific lingo and street names, including Tamiami. The series expands on the minor characters roles with subplots not present in the original, such as Angel’s rocky relationship with his ex-wife. Another addition is the inclusion of Rita’s abusive ex-husband Paul. In the show, he becomes a fully-fledged supporting character who professes love for his children, but nevertheless still treats Rita violently. Some of the supporting characters are changed. Detective LaGuerta is named Migdia in the novel and Maria in the show while Doakes' first name is changed from Albert to James. The character of Camilla Figg in the novel is a young lab tech infatuated with Dexter, while in the television series, she is an older woman who once worked with Dexter's father. She is the records supervisor and has a more maternal relationship with Dexter.
In the novel Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Dexter references his urge to kill as being controlled by a "Dark Passenger", and when in his killer trances he tends to refer to himself as "we" or "us". In the first season, only one reference is made to the "Passenger", as Dexter stands at the scene of Angel's stabbing by Brian, an event absent in the book. In the second season, the writers explain Dexter's urge to kill as his "Dark Passenger", and make multiple references to it throughout the episode. Much of the second season had little to do with the second novel, Dearly Devoted Dexter, although they both shared a subplot concerning a suspicious Doakes following Dexter, both concluding in Doakes being 'taken care of' by another killer to prevent Dexter from breaking his moral code. In Dearly Devoted, Doakes is tortured and dismembered (his hands, feet and tongue are removed) by Dr. Danco, an ex-military interrogator/torturer, and returns in the third novel albeit in a much different state; he is unable to speak coherently and is fitted with prosthetic limbs. The Showtime series has Doakes being blown up by Lila, Dexter's psychopathic ex-girlfriend.
[edit] Critical reception
The initial response to Dexter was positive. The website Metacritic calculated a score of 77 from a possible 100 based on 27 reviews, making it the third-best reviewed show of the 2006 fall season. This score includes four 100% scores from the New York Daily News, San Francisco Chronicle, Chicago Sun-Times and People Weekly.[17] Brian Lowry, who had written one of the two poor reviews for the show, recanted his negative review in a year-end column for the trade magazine Variety after watching the full season.[18] On the CNET Networks website TV.com, Dexter has an overall rating of 9.4/10.[19]
On December 14, 2006, Michael C. Hall was nominated for a Golden Globe Award in the category Best Actor in a Television Drama Series for playing Dexter.
The show was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Drama Series for its second season (Showtime's first ever drama to be nominated for the award), and its star for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series. It won neither, losing to "Mad Men" and actor Bryan Cranston, respectively. [1]
[edit] DVD release
| DVD Name |
Release Date |
Ep # |
Additional Content |
| The Complete First Season |
Region 1: August 21, 2007
Region 2: May 19, 2008
Region 4: Feb 14, 2008[20] |
12 |
- 2 Audio Commentaries by the Cast
- The Academy of Blood – A Killer Course!
- N Technology
- 2 episodes of Showtime's Brotherhood
|
| The Complete Second Season |
Region 1: August 19, 2008
Region 2: March 30, 2009
Region 4: August 21, 2008 |
12 |
|
[edit] Video game
A video game based on Dexter was announced on March 4, 2008, to be developed by Marc Ecko's game development company, which previously developed the controversial urban graffiti game Getting Up.[21] "Dexter is the extremely rare TV show with enough layers of action and tension to translate perfectly into a compelling video game," said Marc Fernandez, Vice President of Marc Ecko Entertainment.
More info was released at the San Diego Comic-Con, revealing that the games would be released exclusively on the iPhone and iPod Touch, via iTunes, and that the games would be episodic.
[edit] Soundtrack
The music from the Dexter TV series was released August 28, 2007 on the album Dexter: Music from the Showtime Original Series. It is produced by Showtime, and distributed by Milan Records. The album is also available online on the iTunes store. The iTunes release includes five additional bonus tracks from Seasons 1 and 2.
The album contains 25 tracks over 1 hour and 4 minutes. Track 1 is the opening theme by Rolfe Kent. Tracks 2 through 11 are mostly Cuban and Latin music used during the show, with tracks 2, 6 and 9 containing narration by Michael C. Hall. Tracks 12 through 24 were written by Daniel Licht, who composed all of the show's other themes. Bonus track 25 is track 24, "Blood Theme", with Jon Licht singing over. Kent's widely praised opening theme utilises an eclectic selection of European and Asian instruments, including ukulele, piano, bouzouki, trumpets, pizzicato strings, electric piano, saz, and tambour, set to an Afro-Cuban beat. Licht's original themes are based around a mixture of Latin and electronic music, reflecting Dexter's warm and cold elements.[22]
Blood Theme was also used by Finnish band HIM as an intro song for their recent Venus Doom tour. The song also features on their CD/DVD, Digital Versatile Doom.[23][24][25][26]
| Track listing |
|
- "Dexter Main Title" (Rolfe Kent) – 1:40
- "Tonight’s the Night" (Michael C. Hall, Daniel Licht) – 1:07
- "Conoci La Paz" (Beny Moré) – 3:03
- "Uruapan Breaks" (Kinky) – 2:21
- "Flores Para Ti" (Raw Artistic Soul featuring Rafael Cortez) – 5:16
- "Blood" (Hall, Licht) – 0:59
- "Con Mi Guaguanco" (Ray Armando) – 7:12
- "Perfidia" (Mambo All-Stars) – 2:37
- "Sometimes I Wonder" (Hall, D.Licht) – 0:29
- "Born Free" (Andy Williams) – 2:25
- "Dexter Main Title" (Kinky) – 1:41
- "Escalation" (D.Licht) – 2:09
- "Shipyard" (D.Licht) – 2:03
- "Deborah Loves Rudy/The House" (D.Licht) – 3:12
- "I Can’t Kill" (D.Licht) – 2:21
- "Voodoo Jailtime" (D.Licht) – 2:58
- "New Legs" (D.Licht) – 2:01
- "Photo Albums" (D.Licht) – 3:22
- "Courting the Night" (D.Licht) – 1:22
- "Hide Your Tears" (D.Licht) – 1:36
- "Wink" (D.Licht) – 2:08
- "Astor’s Birthday Party" (D.Licht) – 2:00
- "Epilogue/Bloodroom" (D.Licht) – 3:44
- "Blood Theme" (D.Licht) – 2:25
- "Die This Way" (D.Licht, Jon Licht) – 3:55
|
[edit] Awards
- 2006
- AFI Awards – TV Program of the Year – Official Selection
- IGN – Best New Show[27]
- IGN – Best Actor – Michael C. Hall[28]
- IGN – Best Villain – The Ice Truck Killer[29]
- IGN – Best Character – Dexter Morgan[30]
- Satellite Awards – Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series – Julie Benz
- 2007
- Emmy – Outstanding Main Title Design
- Emmy – Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Drama Series
- IGN - Best Storyline[31]
- IGN - Best Television Program[32]
- Satellite Awards – Outstanding Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series – David Zayas
- Satellite Awards – Outstanding Actor in a Series, Drama – Michael C. Hall
- Satellite Awards – Outstanding Television Series, Drama
- Saturn Awards – Best Actor in a Television Program – Michael C. Hall
- Television Critics Association – Individual Achievement in Drama – Michael C. Hall
- 2008
- Saturn Awards – Best Syndicated/Cable Television Series[33]
- Scream Awards - Best TV Show
[edit] Nominations
- 2006
- Golden Globe – Nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Drama – Michael C. Hall
- IGN – Best Television Program[34]
- Satellite Awards – Outstanding Actor in a Series, Drama – Michael C. Hall
- Satellite Awards – Outstanding Television Series, Drama
- 2007
- Emmy – Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing, Drama
- Emmy – Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music
- Golden Globe - Nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Drama – Michael C. Hall[35]
- Saturn Awards – Best Supporting Actor in a Television Program – James Remar
- Saturn Awards – Best Supporting Actress in a Television Program – Jennifer Carpenter
- Saturn Awards – Best Syndicated/Cable Television Series
- SAG – Male Actor in a Drama Series – Michael C. Hall
- Television Critics Association – New Program of the Year
- WGA - Episodic Drama - any length - one airing time Dark Defender
- WGA - Best Dramatic Series[36][37][38]
- Peabody Award - Announced April 2, 2008[39]
- 2008
- Emmy - Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series - Michael C. Hall
- Emmy - Outstanding Drama Series
- Emmy - Outstanding Art Direction - Tony Cowley, Linda Spheeris
- Emmy - Outstanding Cinematography - Romeo Tirone
[edit] References
- ^ CHANNEL CANADA :: Dexter Coming to CTV
- ^ IGN.com, "Dexter Gets Ready for Another Killer Season"
- ^ IGN.com, "Dexter Makes Friends"
- ^ "Massive Leak of Pre-Air TV Shows: Piracy or Promotion?". TorrentFreak (2007-07-24). Retrieved on 2007-07-24.
- ^ Show Tracker - TV News - Los Angeles Times
- ^ "Dexter Keeps Killing". IGN (2008). Retrieved on 2008-10-22.
- ^ "Parents Television Council Denounces CBS's 'Dexter' Plan"
- ^ "PTC to CBS: Do Not Air Dexter on Broadcast TV"
- ^ "Good Dexter / Bad Dexter" at YouTube
- ^ "Dexter, Decency and DVRs"
- ^ "In an Unprecedented Move, a Premium Cable Drama To Air On Network Television"
- ^ "Showtime’s Serial Killer Moves to CBS, to a Not Entirely Warm Welcome"
- ^ Eggerton, John (2008-05-01). "PTC Pushes CBS Affiliates to Drop Dexter", Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved on 1 May 2008.
- ^ "Dexter Text Message discussion". Designate Online. Retrieved on 2007-08-15.
- ^ Would-be victim sought in case of filmmaker charged with murder
- ^ Lindsay, Jeff (July 2004). Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Doubleday. ISBN 038551123X.
- ^ "Dexter (Showtime) – Reviews from Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
- ^ Looking forward, some no-no’s for the New Year
- ^ TV.com highest rated shows
- ^ "Play.com (UK) Dexter: Season 1: DVD". play.com. Retrieved on 2008-02-29.
- ^ "Marc Ecko, Showtime Partnering For Dexter Game" (2008-03-04). Retrieved on 2008-03-05.
- ^ Jarry, Jonathan. "Dexter: Soundtrack". Soundtrack.Net, September 27, 2007
- ^ Soundtrack – Soundtrack.net: Album Information, reviews and more
- ^ Soundtrack – Showtime: Official page
- ^ Soundtrack – Milan Records: Official page
- ^ Soundtrack – Amazon.com:Product page
- ^ "IGN.com presents The Best of 2006". IGN (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- ^ "IGN.com presents The Best of 2006". IGN (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- ^ "IGN.com presents The Best of 2006". IGN (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- ^ "IGN.com presents The Best of 2006". IGN (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- ^ "IGN Best of 2007". IGN (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- ^ "IGN Best of 2007". IGN (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- ^ Cohen, David S. (2008-06-24). "Saturn Awards are 'Enchanted'", Variety, Reed Elsevier. Retrieved on 25 June 2008.
- ^ "IGN.com presents The Best of 2006". IGN (2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-13.
- ^ "Hollywood Foreign Press Association 2008 Golden Globe Awards For The Year Ended December 31, 2007". HFPA (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-13.
- ^ "2008 Writers Guild Awards Television & Radio Nominees Announced". WGA (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-13.
- ^ "WGA announce TV, radio nominees". Variety (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-13.
- ^ "HBO tops WGA awards list with five noms". The Hollywood Reporter (2007). Retrieved on 2007-12-13.
- ^ 67th Annual Peabody Awards
[edit] External links
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