Dexter Season 8: Official Trailer

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
well season 8 is the final season and one can only guess what happens to Dexter after his sister Deb killed her boss Lt LaGuerta of Miami PD. Will he be caught? Will he be killed? Will his sister turn him in and/or kill him to save herself or better yet will his girlfriend who is also a killer do to Dexter what she has done to other men?

This is the season we have been waiting for. Hopefully Showtime will deliver

Starts Sunday June 30

 
Final season begins tonight. How will it end for Dexter? Will he be killed off?

‘Dexter’ Season Premiere Spoilers: Sex, Drugs & Grisly Murder

by Andrew Gruttadaro-Hollywood Life

Showtime’s bloodiest show is back for one more season on June 30! Get an early peek at the all the crazy drama that awaits Dexter this season with these five scoops.
After all these years, Dexter is coming to an end, but not before one more thrilling season. When we last left our favorite serial killer who only kills serial killers, the walls were closing in like never before, with his family and Miami Metro growing more and more suspicious that the boring blood analyst guy was something much more. After getting a sneak preview at season eight, we can assure you that the tension will be higher than ever, and that Dexter lovers will have these five spoilers to look forward to in the season premiere.


‘Dexter’ Season Premiere: 5 Spoilers
1. LaGuerta’s Death Will Not Be Overlooked

If you remember, Debra Morgan (Jennifer Carpenter) had to choose whether to shoot her brother Dexter (Michael C. Hall) or Lt. Maria LaGuerta (Lauren Velez). Deb kept it all in the family, shooting down the latter. And while Dexter masterfully covered his and his sister’s tracks, don’t think they’re out of the woods. One character in particular, who had an intimate relationship with the lieutenant, isn’t quite ready to let LaGuerta’s death go.

2. Deb Dabbles With Drugs

The aforementioned murder has really sent Deb to a dark place. Like a snort-a-lot-of-cocaine kind of place. If you’ve spent the last seven seasons annoyed at Deb for being so darn straight-laced, then you’re in luck! The old Debra Morgan is long gone.

3. Dexter Faces Off With A Brit

Almost every season there’s a character who shows up in Miami who’s a huge threat to Dex — Doakes, Lundy, Miguel Prado. Enter Dr. Evelyn Vogel, a genius psychiatrist who is described as a sort of “serial killer whisperer.” Will Dexter be able to tip-toe around her, or is he going to have to put her on his operating table?

4. Brains!

Dexter has featured a guy who bleeds his victims out in an ice truck, one who skins his victims, and one who killed in a specific series of three. So yeah, we’ve seen some gruesome deaths before, but season eight’s big bad guy might be the creepiest. Mostly because this killer cuts open his victims’ heads and messes around with the insides. Just another day in the life of Dexter!

5. Sex On The Miami Beach

With Debra busy off snorting cocaine, her ex-fiance Joey Quinn (Desmond Harrington) has a ton of time on his hands. And if you know Joey, you know how he’s going to use his free time. But you’ll be shocked to find out who he’s spending it with!
 
saw episode one of Season 8 last night and boy did it deliver. To all you Dexter fans one has to wonder how it will end for him but suffice it to say, excellent writing in this first episode

by Adam Buckman

What now?

That’s the open-ended question about “Dexter” as the Showtime series with a serial-killer “hero” begins its eighth and final season (tonight — Sunday, June 30 — at 9/8c).

Why ask “what now”? Because after seven seasons of white-knuckle suspense, you have to wonder: What can the producers of this series possibly do to top — or, at the very least, continue — this series through another 12 episodes?

Well, for starters, they’re introducing a new character this season. She’s Dr. Evelyn Vogel (played by British screen veteran Charlotte Rampling), a renowned expert on the psychology of serial killers — a widely published author on the subject and someone who, years before, maintained close ties with the Miami Police Department. In the season premiere of “Dexter,” she turns up in Miami after a long absence to help the MPD investigate yet another serial killer who has begun leaving his victims around the area. Among this killer’s modus operandi: He (or she) enjoys removing a specific part of his (or her) victims’ brains with a melon-baller.

As you’ll learn if you watch the premiere, among the relationships Dr. Vogel formed years earlier was one with Dexter’s father, Harry (James Remar), who apparently sought her counsel about his then-young son, Dexter.

Thus, you have this new character who knows just about everything about Dexter. The question is: What ramifications will this have for Dexter as the season proceeds?

Running through the show, as usual, is the “threat” that Dexter — the serial killer who kills only other serial killers — will be exposed, if not by Dr. Vogel but by others such as Det. Angel Batista (David Zayas). He’s the one who will likely emerge to take up the investigation begun by the late Maria LaGuerta (Lauren Velez), who was killed at the end of last season when she was on the verge of exposing Dexter.

It’s the suspense surrounding Dexter that has always kept us glued to this show over the years, even when we felt the show’s storylines were verging on the implausible (if not ridiculous).

It’s at those moments of extreme suspense, when Dexter is babysitting his young son on the one hand and conspiring to go kill someone on the other, that you know you’ve never seen anything quite like “Dexter.”
 
I watched episode 2 of the final season last night and the plot thickens as Dr Vogel's identity becomes known. Turns out she was the psychologist Dexter's dad saw when he realized that Dexter revelled in death, blood and murder. Dr Vogel helped his father channel Dexter's psychopathic traits into that of a serial killer who only kills other murderers and serial killers. She enlists Dexter to help her search for a former client of hers who is now stalking her.

Dexter's sister Deb has fallen into drugs, depression and despair as she tells Dexter that she shot the wrong person when she killed Lt LaGuerta as she should have killed her brother. Then when we thought we knew it all we learn that Deb was involved in another murder as Dexter changes evidence to protect his sister. Only 10 more episodes until this series comes to an end and we all wonder if Dexter will walk off into the Miami sunset or he will be killed by any number of people

Great drama. Will be sorry to see it end

Show Time, Sundays at 9:00
 
Well the curtain came down on Dexter last night with the series finale. After 8 years we finally see what happens to Dexter and his sister Deb. Was I the only member here who loved this series? I mean how can one not like a series about a serial killer where the he only kills the bad guys who escape the long arm of the law.

The last 2-3 episodes tied everything together and literally exploded off the screen with such an amazing ending. Sunday evening will be empty now without watching an episode of Dexter. This show was not for the weak at heart due to the graphic violence (but not on the level of Banshee) that occurred every week. It was most interesting watching his feelings rise to the level of a normal person rather than a psychotic depraved lunatic. His relations with Hannah Mackay, Deb his sister and Dr Vogel showed how his psyche bridged the gap between normalcy and overt psychosis.

Here is a summary of the final episode but huge SPOILER ALERT and don't read if you plan on seeing the episode......

The Dexter Finale: So, What Happened?

By TOM GLIATTO, PEOPLE MOVIE CRITIC

After eight seasons of blood and fun, Showtime's Dexter ended Sunday night on a note of ponderous sorrow and penitence. You might as soon have expected Hannibal Lecter to open a funeral home for the indigent, or the Talented Mr. Ripley to sculpt balloons into animals for nursing-home patients.

So what happened to Michael C. Hall's Dexter Morgan, the Miami forensic analyst who, in secret, was a serial killer who got off on murdering fellow serial killers?

SPOILER ALERT: Plot details to follow.

He grew a thin red beard and, from what I could tell, became the very depressed employee of a logging company.


To boil this down and get the spoilers out of the way:

Dexter's plans to flee Miami and start over with his soul mate, fellow serial killer Hannah McKay (Yvonne Strahovski), and his sweet little non-serial killer son, Harrison, went completely to pieces after his sister, Debra (Jennifer Carpenter), was shot in pursuit of another serial killer, nicknamed the Brain Surgeon, and left comatose and on life support in the hospital.

Dexter, who lately had been feeling surprisingly free of his fetishistic lust for blood, expertly killed the Brain Surgeon in jail and got away with it: His boss was willing to pretend that Dexter plunging a pen into the killer's jugular with one well-aimed thrust was self-defense.

Dexter, moving quickly as a hurricane moved in on the city, removed poor Deb from life support and, noticed by no one, carried her corpse into his boat, the Slice of Life. He sped out into open waters while black clouds roiled the sky and he dumped the body, which floated down beneath the waves with suitable mournful poetry.

Meanwhile, Hannah boarded a plane with Harrison. Dexter's boat was later found splintered on the waves, with Dexter presumed lost in the storm.

New Lifestyle
It was then that we saw Dexter again: Accepting a life of unhappiness, regret and guilt as his destiny, he had opted for the solitary lumberjack lifestyle.

He was, perhaps, still pursuing serial killers and murdering them on the side. Or perhaps cutting down trees had become its own form of therapy.

It was all horribly heavy handed, an attempt to inject deep feeling into a show that thrived on playful shallowness.

I can see how difficult it would be to end the show in a way that was satisfying or even logical. The show's central conceit – a serial killer, trained by his cop father to be a moral instrument for good by destroying amoral psychopaths – was absolutely ingenious. But always fundamentally implausible. Plenty of thrillers manage to lure us into identifying with a killer, setting off what can be an oddly pleasurable dissonance and suspense.

But Dexter was also a shy, winsome boy next door, devoted to his sister (who happened to be a dedicated cop) and longing for acceptance, true love and the banishment of his internal "Dark Passenger." Sometimes he was Norman Bates. Sometimes he was John-Boy Walton.

You could only stretch this conceit so far until it finally snapped.

Promising Beginning
The season began with an inspired twist that seemed likely to deliver a corker of a finale: We met Dr. Evelyn Vogel (Charlotte Rampling), a neuropsychiatrist, and learned that she was responsible for crafting (along with Dexter's father) the so-called Code that guided him. She was a delicately sinister figure with some perverse but, within the context of the show, valid ideas: Couldn't other young serial killers be trained, like Dexter, to channel their murderous instincts?

This vision of a sort of Hogwarts for psychokillers lead to an interesting subplot, with Dexter briefly serving as mentor to a rich Miami brat with a homicidal itch.

But then everything unraveled: Hannah, whom Dexter rejected at the end of season 7, sidled back into view, rekindling their romance without any of her old femme-fatal, film-noir duplicity: How could this expert, cold-blooded poisoner be trusted to serve as Harrison's new mommy, let alone his au pair or nanny?

Vogel turned out to be fairly insignificant, a tiresome hand-wringer, and was killed off without much regret. And Dexter – whose father's insistence that he "blend in" sometimes seemed like an unacknowledged allegory of homosexual repression – decided that his romantic happiness with Hannah freed him from the desire to murder.

Debra's death made Dexter see the folly of such dreams. In a word: Timber!

Luckily, the show will continue to exist apart from this letdown. Michael C. Hall and Jennifer Carpenter both gave excellent performances from episode to episode – sexy and clever. And at least two of its eight seasons are classics: The first, with the Ice Truck Killer, and the fourth, with John Lithgow as the Trinity Killer—the most psychologically believable of any of the show's villains and, as a result, the one truly scary one. These deserve to be watched, along with season 7, which set up the surprisingly intense ménage of Dexter, Deb and Hannah.

The show was also beautifully designed, with a vibrant palette of Miami hues that shimmered in the age of high definition.

Overall, in fact, it was terrific entertainment. Thanks, Dark Passenger. Be careful of splinters.
 
I'll also miss this long running Showtime series:(
 

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