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    Home » “Dexter” Returns, Brings “New Blood” To Showtime

    “Dexter” Returns, Brings “New Blood” To Showtime

    By SHOOTWednesday, November 3, 2021Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments2456 Views
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    This image released by Showtime shows Michael C. Hall in a scene from the new series "Dexter: New Blood," premiering Nov. 7 on Showtime. (Seacia Pavao/Showtime via AP)

    By Mark Kennedy, Entertainment Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) --

    America's favorite serial killer is hiding out in upstate New York when we finally catch up to him. The good news is he hasn't killed anyone in a decade. The bad news is his knife skills are still top-notch.

    Michael C. Hall, who plays the troubled hero of the "Dexter" series, steps back into the role with Showtime's "Dexter: New Blood," resurrecting one of TV's darkest characters after an eight-year break and an ending that many found unsatisfying. It starts Sunday.

    "The fact that the ending of the series was both open-ended and unsatisfying was part of the motivation to come back and revisit the character with all this time having passed and find out more definitively what happened to him," says Hall.

    The new series isn't a ninth season, but a departure. Dexter Morgan has abandoned warm and bustling Miami for the fictional small town of Iron Lake, New York. The 10-episode series takes place over 17 days in the icy winter, as blood mixes with snow.

    Dexter may have left a trail of corpses in Florida, but in New York, he's managed to keep his murderous impulse — he calls it his Dark Passenger — in check for 10 years. 

    There are less than 3,000 residents in his new town and few secrets. He's got a job at a fish and game outfitter — access to guns and knives — and is even dating the chief of police. They line-dance to a Blondie song at the local bar.

    But not all is calm. His dead sister — played by Jennifer Carpenter — haunts Dexter. And the arrival of his long-lost son, Harrison — now a moody teen with lots of questions about why he was abandoned by his dad — forces Dexter out of his comfort zone.

    "People are going to die. We know all of that. I wanted to present Michael with a theme, and the theme, which is very dear to me, is fathers and sons," says showrunner and executive producer Clyde Phillips.

    Hall notes that the arrival of Dexter's son coincides with the bubbling out of his murderous impulses: "A sort of door to his humanity that he's shut is opened, but you can't selectively open internal doors. They all open and everything starts to get out."

    In addition to coming to grips with fatherhood, Dexter is both fearful and excited by the notion that his son also might have a Dark Passenger. Is his murderous streak genetic? Or does it have to do with both of them experiencing horrific events when they were infants?

    "The lines remain blurred and the blacks and whites turn to gray," says Hall. "And that's a part of what the show always does, and where the show always lived, I think." 

    While the nature-versus-nature debate takes center stage, the series also delves into opioid abuse, bullying, school shootings and climate change. Throughout is its trademark dark humor. In one scene, Dexter butchers a body while the Christmas song "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" is sung by a choir. "Sorry about the mess," he tells the victim. "I'm out of practice."

    Eagle-eyed fans will watch as Jack Alcott, who plays Harrison, mimics many of Dexter's behaviors, like the way he eats his food aggressively or the similar ways they sleep or cross a room.

    "It's all reminiscent," says Phillips. "But does he have the essence of Dexter? Does he have the Dark Passenger? And that's the big question for the season."

    "Dexter" ran for eight seasons from 2006 to 2013, winning four Emmys and a 2007 Peabody Award. Hall earned five straight Emmy nominations as the title character between 2008-2012.

    "Dexter: New Blood" was shot earlier this year during a 119-day shoot in northern Massachusetts. They began in frigid February when, if the wind changed, the temperature would drop from 20 degrees to 2 degrees. 

    The cast and crew filmed all the snowy scenes first before spring arrived and had to act like it was cold even when it wasn't anymore. Phillips laughs about one final scene shot on July 28 when the crew was in shorts and T-shirts and the cast was in overcoats, boots and hats.

    "It was a very challenging and very rewarding shoot," says Phillips. "You stand there in a snowstorm, in knee-deep mud and you look at each other and you say, 'God, I love what I do for a living!'" 

    Since the original "Dexter" ended, Hall has been on Broadway in "The Realistic Joneses" and "Hedwig and The Angry Inch" as well as in the film "In the Shadow of the Moon" and making music with his band Princess Goes to the Butterfly Museum. But Dexter still tempts.

    "The fact that the show is as broadly appealing as it is would suggest that perhaps we all have some version of a Dark Passenger we contend with," he says. "Our experience of being human is at least a part about managing our darker impulses."

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    Category:News
    Tags:Clyde PhillipsDexter: New BloodMichael C. HallShowtime



    “The Chronology of Water” Brought Imogen Poots A Great Role, and A Best Friend In Kristen Stewart

    Wednesday, December 10, 2025

    Imogen Poots has been thinking about a Sam Shepard quote: "People here have become the people they're pretending to be." Those 10 words, from a poem in his "Motel Chronicles" collection, are kind of about her character in "Hedda," the quietly courageous Thea. But they're also kind of about everything. After 20 years of acting in movies, television and on the stage, Poots is having a clarifying moment. And Shepard's words somehow get to the heart of it all: the disorienting paradox of attempting to work as an artist in a big industry like Hollywood and preserving your soul in the process. "I was always clear about what I wanted to do professionally, if only I could get there, in independent cinema and theater," Poots told The Associated Press in a recent interview. "But only in the last two years, something's clicked." The 36-year-old English actor has always managed to elegantly navigate her way through the distracting noise of franchises and fame and find the types of interesting filmmakers, stories and projects she'd always dreamed of, working with the likes of Peter Bogdanovich, Terrence Malick, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Imelda Staunton along the way. But this year has been particularly special with three films that she's enormously proud to be part of: sharing the screen with the great Nina Hoss in Nia DaCosta's fiery"Hedda" (streaming on Prime Video), delving into the throes of an affair, with Brett Goldstein, in the romantic drama "All of You" (streaming on Apple TV) and giving herself over to what may just be remembered as a defining performance in Kristen Stewart's directorial debut, "The Chronology of Water" (in theaters in Los Angeles and New York, nationwide on Jan. 9). "You can make these films that simply don't find their home, or don't... Read More

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