Dexter – The First Season (Showtime DVD)
Picture:
B- Sound: B- Extras: C+ Episodes: B-
Dexter
Morgan robs life from the bad and gives to the needy. The needy, you ask? Well the need in this case is his deranged
craving for death and murder. Now on DVD
is the critically acclaimed Showtime series Dexter: The First Season.
The series stars Michael C. Hall as Dexter a Miami Police lab tech who
analyzes blood spray patterns to help gain insight into brutal murder
cases. And whereas Dexter may seem to be
just another stuffy, unemotional, shut in by day Dexter’s true passion comes to
life at night. Dexter Morgan is a serial
killer and has no remorse for what he does.
The lives that Dexter takes, however, are not exactly of innocent
people. Dexter Morgan murders other
murders, rapist, and a plethora of other societal scum.
In turn
Dexter’s actions bring up an interesting paradox; is it right for him to take
the law into his own hands and is he just as bad as them? Adding further fuel to the fire is the fact
that Dexter could not care less about ‘helping society;’ Dexter just is
fulfilling his need to kill. A need that
he has had since he was 3 years old and a need that his foster father helped
him to hide from the world. In many ways
Dexter’s main struggle is to just survive and appear normal. A struggle that Dexter must always be one
step ahead of.
The
series is interesting and has an original concept. The intended nature of Michael C. Hall’s
character, Dexter, to be totally emotionally absent and deranged does find the
audience to be a bit distanced. When
viewing a film or television series the audience looks for a way to connect
with the characters. The characters on this series, however, are so ‘out in
left field’ that it is hard to make any reasonable connection. Since Dexter already has no emotion, dates a
woman just to seem normal, and has no interest to help society with his murders
but only to fuel his true passion of death, the audience may find themselves at
a loss on whether they like this character or not.
Dexter’s
sister is also a main character on the series (played by Jennifer Carpenter of the
underrated The Exorcism of Emily Rose)
as a loud mouthed, newbie, police detective that has no idea her brother is a
mass murderer; in fact it is hard to know where this girl’s head is at most of
the time. The series is definitely a
dark comedy that has many drama elements.
The situations and conversations on the series are often laughable,
whether intended to be funny or not.
Some of the casting is unusual in the sense of whether the characters
are actually suppose to be that strange and hokey; this reviewer is still
unsure after watching all 12 episodes of Season
One. An example of this is actor
Erik King as Sergeant James Doakes. King
plays the character as a very brash man, with a deep, highly annunciated voice;
which just reminds this reviewer sadly and laughably of Greg Hollimon’s
portrayal or Principal Onyx Blackman on the series Strangers with Candy.
The whole
of Season One focuses on the viewers
getting to know Dexter and why as an audience (if nothing else) you should be
intrigued by the character. The series
to this reviewer boils down to not liking the character or connecting with him,
but rather to delve into the mental labyrinth of what is going on in this odd
and deranged man’s head. What is his
past? What is his future? And so forth.
Each
episode is interconnected so a viewer cannot afford to miss a single episode;
though there are summations at the beginning of each episode. This reviewer enjoyed the series to date, but
in order to keep the attention of a growing audience the series must evolve
into something more. What is this
something more? Only time can tell.
The
technical features on this 4 Disc, 12 episode set are nice but not
perfect. The picture is presented in a
16 X 9 Widescreen and tends to have some light/dark issues in many scenes and
at times the colors are skewed. The
sound is adequate with its 5.1 Dolby Digital Surrounds, but fails to give the
‘pop’ one would expect of a suspenseful murder drama like Dexter. The extras are presented nicely and are
plentiful, but failed to totally capture this reviewer’s interest; overall
being less than exhilarating. Special
Features include ‘The Academy of Blood- A
Killer Course,’ ‘Witnessed in Blood- A True Murder
Investigation,’ two free episodes of another Showtime series Brotherhood,
and a plethora of other downloadable features.
Overall, the features are there but did not capture this reviewer’s
interest in the slightest.
Dexter
Morgan is a serial killer. In many ways
viewers realize he is a car crash waiting to happen and we can’t wait. So sharpen your knife and suit up for the
Emmy Nominated series Dexter: The First
Season.
- Michael P Dougherty II