Season 6 could have benefited with a different actor for Travis. The casting of Hanks for that character was horrible.
See, I was the exact opposite. I actually stopped watching season 3 halfway through, and came back a few months later and finally forced myself to get through it so I could watch S4 once I started hearing about how awesome it was.Eklypze said:I agree about some points in season 5 but you're overstating the problems. I think everybody behaved pretty damn close to expected. 6 was waaay weaker than 3. 6 was the first time I started feeling like it was a chore to watch week to week
Don't know if this was posted already, but here are season 7's episode titles:
7-01 30/Sep/12 Are You....?
7-02 07/Oct/12 The Shadow Knows
7-03 14/Oct/12 Buck the System
7-04 21/Oct/12 Run
7-05 28/Oct/12 Swim Deep
7-06 04/Nov/12 Do the Wrong Thing
7-07 11/Nov/12 Chemistry
7-08 18/Nov/12 Argentina
7-09 25/Nov/12 Helter Skelter
7-10 02/Dec/12 The Dark Whatever
7-11 09/Dec/12 Do You See What I See
Imo, Season 5 was mostly great but the ending of it completely ruined the whole season. Finally, Dexter had found a companion that saw him for who he truly was and she was completely ok with it. I thought Michael C Hall and Julia Stiles had great chemistry together and i really enjoyed watching their "Relationship" develop. But then in the end, she was all like "yeah, um i'm done, it was nice killing people with you. K, bye!!"
I was so looking forward to Lumen being a new recurring character and seeing her and Dexter become a dynamic duo but alas...i imagine the show couldn't afford to have stiles for more than one season.


See, I was the exact opposite. I actually stopped watching season 3 halfway through, and came back a few months later and finally forced myself to get through it so I could watch S4 once I started hearing about how awesome it was.
Season 6 had me hooked from the beginning, and it wasn't until halfway through that I got annoyed with it. Again, the Geller/Travis twist wasn't too hard to spot, BUT what had me interested was that it would have set up a nice problem for Dex. At that point in the show, they were making a big to do about Dex and morality/religion. Dex had even revisited his code a few times, affirming that it was okay because he only killed the truly guilty.
Now, what would he have done had we found out Geller was Travis, yet the Travis personality was still completely unaware, and not only that, but wanted to be free of Geller. How does Dex handle that situation, he now has effectively, one innocent person and one guilty in the same body. The code never taught him how to handle that situation.
But, I got the feeling the writers didn't know how to handle the situation either, because once we find out the twist, they decided to have Travis go completely against the way his character had been written all season and suddenly be completely fine with everything Geller was doing because Geller was him. It felt sloppy and forced, and that's what really annoyed me about 6. But I felt 6 had great potential.
Season 3 on the other hand, never had much potential from my angle. I knew the second Dex started getting friendly with Miguel how Miguel would end up. And I knew that once Miguel inevitably turned on Dex he wouldn't be much of a threat, because he was never written as being on par with Dex intellectually. It just never interested me, and turned out pretty much exactly how I expected it to.
Here's how it goes. Travis had 3 personalities. Gellar, The Travis up until ep 8 or 9 and then the sadistik, sociopath which was the real Travis all along. When Travis reaized he'd actually killed Gellar he integrated the personalities and true Travis came out. I get what yall are saying about the situationi and I agree, they took the cheap way out. I still say Elijah Wood could have pulled off Travis better. I'd like to see somebody COMPLETELY outta left field like ****ing Rainn Wilson get cast as a killer! He woulda made Travis ALL WORTH IT! Can you imagine a psychotic Dwight Schrute!?!?!!?! "HELLLLO, WHOOORE" BEYOND AWESOME