Temporada Dexter 7 Review

For the first half of the season, the plot is driven by one question: Can Deb forgive Dexter? She forces him to teach her his code. She covers for him. She literally cleans up his messes (RIP, Louis Greene). It is a twisted, co-dependent love story that feels both heartbreaking and inevitable. Let’s talk about the Ukrainian mobster. After the cartoonish DDK of Season 6, Ray Stevenson’s Isaak Sirko was a breath of fresh air. Sirko isn't a delusional cult leader or a religious nut. He is a professional, grieving lover who wants revenge.

The first episode, "Are You...?" , is arguably the best in the show’s later years. Deb doesn’t faint. She doesn’t call the cops. She throws up. The visceral horror on Jennifer Carpenter’s face as she realizes her brother is the serial killer she has been chasing for years is the show's acting peak. temporada dexter 7

What makes Sirko brilliant is his motivation. Dexter killed his lover, Viktor. This makes Sirko the mirror image of Dexter—a killer who only kills for love. Their scenes together (especially the bar scene where Sirko admits his sexuality and his pain) are written like a neo-noir thriller. For a few episodes, you actually root for the mobster to catch our "hero." For the first half of the season, the

Stevenson brought a Shakespearean weight to the role. When Sirko finally meets his end (not by Dexter's hand, but by a rival mob), the season loses a bit of its steam—but his arc remains a high point. Season 7 introduces the most divisive character in Dexter history: Hannah McKay (Yvonne Strahovski). She is a beautiful florist with a green thumb for poison. And she is Dexter's first real "equal." She literally cleans up his messes (RIP, Louis Greene)

8.5/10. A return to form that proves Dexter still had blood in its veins before the final flatline. Are you Team Hannah or Team Deb? Did LaGuerta deserve better? Let us know in the comments below.

She shoots LaGuerta’s informant (poor, poor George). She sleeps with a psychopath to get information (Isaak Sirko’s man). And she develops a psychotic, confession-inducing need to control Dexter. The show walks a fine line here—is Deb protecting her brother, or is she becoming him?

The final standoff in the shipping yard is claustrophobic and brutal. Deb has a gun pointed at LaGuerta. Dexter has a gun pointed at a cop. LaGuerta is begging Deb to remember her training.