SPOILER        ALERT: This blog contains details about the last ever episode of Dexter.      
              When it was announced that Dexter's eighth season would be its last, the        news was not entirely unwelcome. The show had never fully recovered        from the devastation wreaked by season four's main villain the Trinity        Killer (John Lithgow), and this final run has played out that        inferiority, being patchy, unfocused and, at times, sloppy. Yet for all        its flaws, I stuck with it, and hoped the series finale, at least, would        be worth the wait. It wasn't. And I'm disappointed. It all fell apart        completely in the last few minutes, with Dexter making two boneheaded,        un-Dexter-like decisions that wearily knocked the final nails into the        coffin that season eight built.      
              Our protagonist sailed his boat, Slice of Life, into a hurricane, and        was pronounced missing, presumed dead. His fugitive girlfriend Hannah        choked back the tears in a cafe in Argentina and took Dexter's        ever-irritating son Harrison for ice-cream, presumably to soften the        blow of his daddy's watery death. But Dexter wasn't dead, after all! He        swam like a greased porpoise away from a deadly hurricane and ended up        in Oregon, where presumably he will live out his days chopping down        trees and tending his awful beard.      
              Dexter survives eight seasons of hacking and stabbing, leaving "a trail        of blood and body parts," and yet viewers don't get to see him caught or        killed. In fact, it was his foul-mouthed, grumpy sister Deb who died,        without getting the heroine's death she deserved (though she wobbled,        she was the show's moral centre). She ended up in a vegetative state,        having been shot in the stomach by Oliver Saxon, Dexter's last-minute        nemesis and the son of his mentor Evelyn Vogel, at the end of the        penultimate episode.      
              So Dexter switched off her life support and dumped her body in the        ocean, where the bad people go, then sent his son to live with Hannah,        who, despite seeming quite nice this season, might conceivably poison        him at some point in the future.      
              This whole final season has been shot through with the sense that Dexter        is not as smart as he seems, and that is a betrayal of the character we        spent seven seasons getting to know, as monstrous as he may have been.        He made bad decisions repeatedly, negating the idea of any extraordinary        intelligence, which was the one unshakeable truth that held Dexter, as a        series and a character, together for so long. With a terrible beard, a        boring job and a dead-eyed stare, Dexter is no longer the monster we        were introduced to seven years ago.      
    


 
 
 
 
 
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