Let time not be wasted on the hating of pleasures!

This blog was made to host the television reviews and share the thoughts of regular viewers. It includes the reviewer's episode rating and his or her favorite line(s). The point is to break the monopoly of the professional snobs and bureaucrats on serious commentary and take intelligent public opinion out of the oafish chat rooms. If you want to contribute as a guest blogger, please include your email address in a comment and I will invite you to be an author for the blog. The more the merrier.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Dexter 507


This is one of my favorite shows. I love how it explores the uncharted frontier of humanity by focussing on the social barriers we ignore and erasing those that we cling to. Dexter is the serial killing protagonist.  A seemingly heartless sociopath with a mind for utilitarian order. Dexter is by most accounts an outsider looking in, though the show plays with the idea that - contrary to Dexter's own belief - he is more a maligned insider looking out, and in turn that the viewer is more Dexterian than he or she would care to believe.

This season has so far lacked the phenomenal social commentary of Dexter's internal monologue from seasons past, but has partially compensated by featuring Dexter's unique and evolving way of relating to the world externally. Despite Dexter's efforts to keep order and to compartmentalize, his wife has been murdered, his adopted children have rejected him, he struggles to meet the responsibilities of care for his own infant son, and he has submitted uncharacteristically to fits of dangerous spontaneity. One of these fits has led to a witness of Dexter at his darkest. Enter Lumen. Unable to descend into further disorder and dispose of this liability, Dexter nurses the maimed witness back to health and eventually wins her trust. Finally able to let her defenses down, Lumen confides to Dexter her sordid tale of victimhood. Prolonged gang-rape and torture. Dexter is not unsympathetic but urges Lumen to return home, rebuild her life, and move on. After having his hopes of restored order and control repeatedly dashed by Lumen's blood-thirsty recalcitrance, Dexter agrees to help  Lumen hunt and kill her remaining attackers while effectively mentoring her in the craft.

Enough with the story then, I'm here to comment not to explain. Lumen's character is a little disappointing. She is interesting in as far as the affect she has on Dexter, as a stand alone character however, she falls a little flat. What I really enjoyed about this episode was the emergence of a new character in Jordan Chase. The presumed psychopath ringleader of Lumen's mysterious abusers, Chase keeps a day job as a wildly popular self-improvement guru and motivational speaker. This is, I think, another one of the producer's brilliantly cynical methods of exploring the sinister in man. With this curious character, the show brings to mind questions of the self and the selfish. What separates psychological independence and assertiveness from primal narcissism? What separates a sense of self-worth from self-importance? What qualifies a person to preach? What makes up the preacher's mentality? What is the basis for society's assignment of celebrity and why? And what does one's celebrity do to himself/herself? I find all of these questions and the trademark process of investigation developed through Dexter irresistibly compelling, and with that in mind, I look forward to the next episode.

Episode rating:
7  (Lower end quality TV)

Episode's best line:
"I don't know how much longer I'm gonna be able to talk to you like this. Soon you're gonna be able to understand me." - Dexter (to son Harrison)

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