X

Email Address:

Password:

Forgot password?
OK

Commentary

Sign In | Home | Customer Service | About Us
PRINT SUBSCRIBERS: REGISTER FOR ONLINE ACCESS

advanced search
  • Subscribe
  • Give a Gift
  • Renew
  • Register Online
  • Customer Service
  • Back Issues
  • Buy Articles
  • Donate
    1. This Is A Kosovar Muslim
      Michael J. Totten
    2. 1948, Israel, and the Palestinians—
      The True Story

      Efraim Karsh
      May 2008
    3. When Jihad Came to America
      Andrew C. McCarthy
      March 2008
    4. 1948, Israel, and the Palestinians: Annotated Text
      Efraim Karsh
    5. Obama's War
      Peter Wehner
      April 2008
  1. 1948, Israel, and the Palestinians—
    The True Story

    Efraim Karsh
    May 2008
  2. 1948, Israel, and the Palestinians: Annotated Text
    Efraim Karsh
  3. This Is A Kosovar Muslim
    Michael J. Totten
  4. Looking for Allies
    Reader Letters
    May 2008
  5. When Jihad Came to America
    Andrew C. McCarthy
    March 2008

Advertisement

Advertisement

horizon.jpg
about us | contact us | archive | contributors | subscribe to commentary | advertise | RSS
commentary's blogs: the horizon | contentions | connecting the dots
« Ridley Scott's Final Cut
Lumet's Latest »

Dithering on Dexter

Peter Suderman - 12.19.2007 - 3:51 PM

Showtime’s Dexter, which just finished its second season, is up for a WGA award this year. Like most high-profile cable dramas that have appeared in the wake of The Sopranos, it balances upper middlebrow dramatic concerns—quirky characters, complex narrative lines, psychological questioning—with visceral, often vulgar elements. But the competing interests of these two strains has forced it into a series of ungainly, and sometimes ugly, moral contortions.

The show, which follows the exploits of Dexter Morgan (Michael C. Hall), a Miami PD blood-spatter analyst who also happens to be a serial killer—albeit one who only targets other murderers—is high concept in the extreme, a cockeyed mash-up of American Psycho, Miami Vice, and CSI. Dexter, we learn, is a bona fide murderous sociopath—lacking a conscience and unable to experience normal emotions—but he lives by a code imparted to him as a boy by his adoptive father.

The code allows Dexter to control his bloody urges by killing those who “deserve it,” and requires him to blend in with society in order not to get caught. So he maintains a polite, even conciliatory persona, and has a perky girlfriend, a respectable job, and a sister for whom he has assumed responsibility. Meanwhile, Dexter, in voice-over, muses on his own humanity (or lack thereof) as a creature with no more moral compass than a rock.

The problem, though, is that, as a cable-TV protagonist, Dexter must not be wholly unsympathetic. Often, one gets the sense that the show’s writers are simply engaged in a game to see how disreputable they can make him and still have an audience follow him. How many times can you watch someone dismember another human—even if they’re only criminals—before he becomes too disgusting to watch? The show tries for balance by having Dexter perform acts of seeming goodness (playing with his girlfriend’s kids, helping out his sister), but then quickly reminds us that he only does these things to keep up the façade.

The show clearly recognizes its quagmire, and even plays to it, putting Dexter in all sorts of situations that ought to expose him, once and for all, as either a true moral void or someone of at least limited conscience. But every time it does, it opens up a way for him to escape these situations without having to make a defining choice. It’s a series of dodges, and eventually it becomes fairly tiresome.

More than that, it borders on cowardly. The writers want to have it both ways: the, sick, voyeuristic, and attention-grabbing thrills of following a serial killer and the moral bedrock afforded by a traditional protagonist. The show’s fatal flaw is that, lacking the strength either to celebrate its title character’s amorality or to condemn him for it, Dexter hopes to pass off the refusal as praise-worthy ambiguity.

»Back to The Horizon »Back to Commentary

del.icio.us del.icio.us
Google Google
Facebook Facebook
Email This Post Print This Post Permanent Link To Article


This entry was posted on Wednesday, December 19th, 2007 at 3:51 PM and is filed under The Horizon. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

3 Responses to “Dithering on Dexter”

  1. 1
    Ari Says:
    December 19th, 2007 at 4:11 PM

    I’ve seen the first season of this show, and I think it’s absolutely phenomenal. It’s very odd, but it’s very good.

  2. 2
    JLS Says:
    December 19th, 2007 at 9:09 PM

    Really sorry you feel this way. But reading your review I really don’t think you get the show at all. (My opinion) :)

    POSSIBLE SPOILER BELOW…..

    It’s NOT a kill of the week show at all!!! He CLAIMS to have no feelings for anyone but he DOES have feelings. We as an audience see this over the course of S1. Season 2 was even better than 1 if that’s possible. S2 he learns he NEEDS these people in his life….that they are not just a cover for him.
    I see him on an emotional roller coaster ride for both seasons. It’s what I LOVE about this show. :)

    I wish S3 wasn’t so far away!!!!!!!!!!!! 10 whole Months

    Best show in my opinion since Farscape, which is another show that the lead character is on an emotional ride…..

  3. 3
    Daniel Crandall Says:
    December 26th, 2007 at 2:30 PM

    I found Dexter - S1 quite intriguing for several reason, not the least of which was how the show’s creators tried to make us care about such a despicable person. Another reason was how it so obviously betrayed Liberal pieties regarding the death penalty. I will have to wait until Season 2 is released on DVD, since I don’t have television service, but I’m looking forward to it.

    FYI, I discovered the Dexter Show Runners toned down the Season 1 opening murder from what was in the book. In the book, Dexter kills a murderous pedophile Catholic Priest. In the show it was a non-denominational boy’s choir director.

Leave a Reply

Advertisement

image of latest cover
image of latest cover

FREE SAMPLE ISSUE

  • the complete archive
  • hundreds of authors
  • thousands of articles
  • American history
    since 1945

ENTER THE ARCHIVE

ADVERTISER LINKS

Illustrations by Terry Colon
Secured Loans
Used Cars
Car Loans
Debt Consolidation Loan
Car Finance
Bad Car Credit
Holiday Accommodation
Mortgage Advice
Designer Watches
Debt Management
Used Cars
Concert Tickets 
Compare Secured Loans
Life Insurance
Corporate Events

Advertisement


Advertisement

Commentary is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).

Home | Subscribe | About Us | Donate | Advertise | Contact Us | Legal Notices | RSS

Commentar

Copyright © 1997-2007 Commentary Magazine
All Rights Reserved