It was there. It didn't feel like much really happened. Sure, it's building to something and there was nice comparison and contrast between the AO killer and Dexter; both have sisters and presumably
Olmos is his Harry.
Masuka's assistant(intern?) is interesting and surprisingly competent. Feel like it's going to turn out bad for him, though (who knew being a creepy pervert in an office would turn out badly?). Going to get sued for sexual harassment or something.
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KageraImitating the worst people. Since 2004Registered Userregular
I think there was a fair amount of character development for Dexter, and some setup for following episodes. The plot didn't move forward much, but I wouldn't say it was a bad episode.
Every once in a while a series that does 12 or 13 episode seasons will take a few episodes to build up to anything, and I always think they need to quit wasting precious time and get something going, but typically they pick things up and everything starts to come to a boil. I thought episode 2 was kind of like that. I guess Dexter realizing that "a monster can change" in the Mos Def character was supposed to be some sort of character development, but really I just wanted to see more development of the religious nutjob killer.
I do agree this is more of a setup episode. Masuka, Deb, Quinn, Batista, La Guerta, and a little bit of Dexter - all of them got a bit of movement forward so that division took up a bunch of screen time. I wanted to see more villain development too, but I think we'll get that, eventually.
ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
I wonder if the development with Deb is leading towards a confrontation with Dexter. Because if she's department head and discovers that Dex is a killer and there's some major case in which Dex is implicated a la season 2, things will get all kinds of interesting, what with her having to find ways to sabotage the case to save her brother. Or... deciding not to.
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I felt like her finding them at the end of last season and letting them go was the first step toward Deb being okay with a vigilante killer as long as they're going after bad guys, and the foundation for how she'll behave when she finds out about him. I think it's going to happen.
I wonder if the development with Deb is leading towards a confrontation with Dexter. Because if she's department head and discovers that Dex is a killer and there's some major case in which Dex is implicated a la season 2, things will get all kinds of interesting, what with her having to find ways to sabotage the case to save her brother. Or... deciding not to.
I'm guessing
that Deb will catch Dexter doing something he shouldn't and cover it up, possibly causing her to lose that position. But not the full extent of Dexter's extracurricular activities, that will wait until the last season of the show.
Yea, for crazy religious guy he was nicely well done. After episode 1 I was sort of dreading the whole religion angle but this episode stopped that....for now.
That's certainly what they're hinting at what with Dexter's "people obsessed with serial killers are serial killers" thing. Very creepy for sure, as for the previews, I was trying to figure out why she would be freaking out so much but yeah, that sort of makes sense...
I find this season insultingly silly so far(everything is a rehash of something we've already seen on this very show).
The series is going downhill fast.
I don't think Christianity is poorly characterized as it's followers being of blind faith. Living the south it's pretty common that people follow the faith "just because" as it were.
Olmos' character kinda seems like he might be of that persuasion as well as Hanks', especially...
the way Olmos flipped out and told him not to see his sister anymore, despite her being a good person in Hanks' eyes. I've known a lot of people to do irrational things because of religion and the like.
Hah! The dead girl, when they rolled her over, she totally moved. Like, her leg twitched and left the fucking ground. How did they miss that? Was everyone involved in that scene, from actors to the director to the fucking catering, blind?
Hah! The dead girl, when they rolled her over, she totally moved. Like, her leg twitched and left the fucking ground. How did they miss that? Was everyone involved in that scene, from actors to the director to the fucking catering, blind?
Hah! The dead girl, when they rolled her over, she totally moved. Like, her leg twitched and left the fucking ground. How did they miss that? Was everyone involved in that scene, from actors to the director to the fucking catering, blind?
I missed it.
Yes, well, unlike the people working there, it's not your job to catch these things.
I'm pretty unobservant, so the fact that I caught this mistake must mean it's very obvious. I think. I don't have a metric for this.
So, I began Dexter last week, just started season two last night. Pretty good show aside from some of the 'courts work against spousal abuse victims' or 'Brian ends up evil because of being institutionalized' implications. Personal issues with what Dexter does aside, it's enjoyable. Kind of veered into cartoon villainy at the end of the first season though. Still, the writing is decent overall and the characters are mostly interesting. I'm glad Deb isn't taking too long to deal with her victimhood issues.
Something I didn't quite get though; In the first couple of episodes of season two. Rita confronts Dexter about setting up Paul. Dexter explains that he knocked him out on impulse, which he did. She then jumps to Dexter being a drug addict? Apparently because he knew how to cook the drugs. Why would it be so much of a stretch that he learned that through his police work? Surely his late hours the last little while could be explained by working on a headliner serial killer case.
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ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
Rita, having spent lots of time being a druggie (and being around druggies) probably keys in on druggie behavior. Dexter, being cornered, went along with her gut reaction ("You're a druggie!") because it sounded a lot better than "I use drug equipment when I'm murdering people".
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So, I began Dexter last week, just started season two last night. Pretty good show aside from some of the 'courts work against spousal abuse victims' or 'Brian ends up evil because of being institutionalized' implications. Personal issues with what Dexter does aside, it's enjoyable. Kind of veered into cartoon villainy at the end of the first season though. Still, the writing is decent overall and the characters are mostly interesting. I'm glad Deb isn't taking too long to deal with her victimhood issues.
Something I didn't quite get though; In the first couple of episodes of season two. Rita confronts Dexter about setting up Paul. Dexter explains that he knocked him out on impulse, which he did. She then jumps to Dexter being a drug addict? Apparently because he knew how to cook the drugs. Why would it be so much of a stretch that he learned that through his police work? Surely his late hours the last little while could be explained by working on a headliner serial killer case.
It could certainly, but he's making a different tactical decision than that. Making a 'big admission' plays into Rita's suspicions thereby allaying them through confirmation.
It could be the wrong decision, but it is a tactical one.
Am I alone here when I say that Hanks and Olmos' characters are of no interest so far?
Hopefully when their motives come out and are known I will be more interested in their story. Whenever they are on screen though I feel like fast forwarding.
I agree. Maybe they should focus on them a bit more and less on the characters no one gives a fuck about. Though I believe it was a couple episodes in before they really started focusing on Trinity, so maybe they're about to. At least they finally got to the horse scene that they've been previewing constantly.
Rita, having spent lots of time being a druggie (and being around druggies) probably keys in on druggie behavior. Dexter, being cornered, went along with her gut reaction ("You're a druggie!") because it sounded a lot better than "I use drug equipment when I'm murdering people".
Yeah, I forgot about her being an addict as well. I guess it could be interpreted as Dexter manipulating her, as he got sympathy hugs at the end of the conversation.
Hah! The dead girl, when they rolled her over, she totally moved. Like, her leg twitched and left the fucking ground. How did they miss that? Was everyone involved in that scene, from actors to the director to the fucking catering, blind?
I missed it.
Yes, well, unlike the people working there, it's not your job to catch these things.
I'm pretty unobservant, so the fact that I caught this mistake must mean it's very obvious. I think. I don't have a metric for this.
I remember in a previous season, can't remember which, one of the bodies was breathing quite noticeably. You can't really cover up things like necks throbbing, and I always enjoy looking for signs of life from the "corpses" in these shows, but come on, how hard is it to hold your breath while you're being filmed for a few brief seconds as a dead body?
Edit: I did a Google search. Apparently it was in the second episode of season four--Remains to Be Seen.
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It is kinda difficult to play dead, as far as I can tell. I mean, lots of your body's motion isn't even controlled. Twitches, breathing, veins moving... the body isn't meant to be perfectly still.
When you're on a TV show with a limited budget and time constraints, going over and over to get a corpse scene perfect is just not feasable. You pick the best take and roll from there.
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ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
It is kinda difficult to play dead, as far as I can tell. I mean, lots of your body's motion isn't even controlled. Twitches, breathing, veins moving... the body isn't meant to be perfectly still.
When you're on a TV show with a limited budget and time constraints, going over and over to get a corpse scene perfect is just not feasable. You pick the best take and roll from there.
This.
I view such errors more with "haha, I saw that" than "GRRR THEY FUCKED UP RAAAAAAGE".
I submitted an entry to Lego Ideas, and if 10,000 people support me, it'll be turned into an actual Lego set!If you'd like to see and support my submission, follow this link.
It is kinda difficult to play dead, as far as I can tell. I mean, lots of your body's motion isn't even controlled. Twitches, breathing, veins moving... the body isn't meant to be perfectly still.
When you're on a TV show with a limited budget and time constraints, going over and over to get a corpse scene perfect is just not feasable. You pick the best take and roll from there.
This.
I view such errors more with "haha, I saw that" than "GRRR THEY FUCKED UP RAAAAAAGE".
It doesn't ruin anything for me, I find it amusing as well. It does surprise me, though. I can see rolling with a shot where an eye twitches or some minor breathing can be seen. This episode, that body looked like it was about to get up and then realized it was dead.
Yeah - I am looking forward to seeing what Deb was so freaked about. I wonder if a major character is going to bite it.
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
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VariableMouth CongressStroke Me Lady FameRegistered Userregular
edited October 2011
I feel like these villains are extremely compelling. likewise Dexter's possible new friend in the car shop guy (terrible with character names)
maybe I just find the weird religious stuff exciting. the end of this last episode was a classically great moment for me, like when Dex follows home Trinity to find
The first two eps of this season have kinda sucked really hard. Aside from the Mos Def character, not a single person has been interesting or compelling. This ep seemed to be a little better, but the season still seems to be going nowhere fast.
I really liked Dex's interactions with the Tooth Fairy, and I liked seeing Deb adjust to the stress of her new job. However, I still do not care at all for Hanks or whoever the old guy is. I hope hope hope against hope they're ramping up to something awesome.
Also,
I swear to god, if Deb doesn't find out about Dex I'm going to be pissed. SHE NEEDS TO FUCKING FIND OUT. That's the only direction this show can go, and the longer they drag it out the more frustrating it gets. Dex needs to be caught.
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Masuka's assistant(intern?) is interesting and surprisingly competent. Feel like it's going to turn out bad for him, though (who knew being a creepy pervert in an office would turn out badly?). Going to get sued for sexual harassment or something.
I'm guessing
Based on the preview for future episodes, with Debra screaming and looking upset at what appears to be a crime scene, I'm wondering if she
The series is going downhill fast.
Olmos' character kinda seems like he might be of that persuasion as well as Hanks', especially...
I missed it.
Yes, well, unlike the people working there, it's not your job to catch these things.
I'm pretty unobservant, so the fact that I caught this mistake must mean it's very obvious. I think. I don't have a metric for this.
Something I didn't quite get though; In the first couple of episodes of season two. Rita confronts Dexter about setting up Paul. Dexter explains that he knocked him out on impulse, which he did. She then jumps to Dexter being a drug addict? Apparently because he knew how to cook the drugs. Why would it be so much of a stretch that he learned that through his police work? Surely his late hours the last little while could be explained by working on a headliner serial killer case.
It could certainly, but he's making a different tactical decision than that. Making a 'big admission' plays into Rita's suspicions thereby allaying them through confirmation.
It could be the wrong decision, but it is a tactical one.
--LeVar Burton
Hopefully when their motives come out and are known I will be more interested in their story. Whenever they are on screen though I feel like fast forwarding.
Coran Attack!
I remember in a previous season, can't remember which, one of the bodies was breathing quite noticeably. You can't really cover up things like necks throbbing, and I always enjoy looking for signs of life from the "corpses" in these shows, but come on, how hard is it to hold your breath while you're being filmed for a few brief seconds as a dead body?
Edit: I did a Google search. Apparently it was in the second episode of season four--Remains to Be Seen.
When you're on a TV show with a limited budget and time constraints, going over and over to get a corpse scene perfect is just not feasable. You pick the best take and roll from there.
This.
I view such errors more with "haha, I saw that" than "GRRR THEY FUCKED UP RAAAAAAGE".
It doesn't ruin anything for me, I find it amusing as well. It does surprise me, though. I can see rolling with a shot where an eye twitches or some minor breathing can be seen. This episode, that body looked like it was about to get up and then realized it was dead.
maybe I just find the weird religious stuff exciting. the end of this last episode was a classically great moment for me, like when Dex follows home Trinity to find
Also,