Keyser Soze
AW YEEEAH!
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2002
- Messages
- 21,405
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- 33
Sorry, but I completely disagree with your entire reading of the ending of Dexter. Deb's death forces Dexter's eyes open once and for all to the consequences of his actions. It doesn't matter that Deb forgave him...he didn't forgive himself, he knew that he had screwed up her life (by his own admission) and by the end he accepts full responsibility for her death both figuratively and literally. The ending is absolutely punitive for Dexter, but it's a very deliberate self-punishment. When he was an inch away from getting what he wanted, that's when it all comes crumbling down for him. I honestly think death or being captured by Miami Metro would've been less rough for him than having to live alone bearing the weight of Deb's death on his shoulders for the rest of his days. Completely dead inside.
Trust me, I love Breaking Bad as much as anyone and even though I have some issues with the ending, I absolutely respect the way Gilligan chose to end his story and in some ways I adore the ending in spite of my own personal objections to it. All I can say is that on an emotional level, I felt a sense of sadness and defeat for Dex at the end of "Remember the Monsters?" and I felt a sense of triumph for Walt at the end of "Felina", which I can't help but observe as interesting when all along I've wanted the opposite for the two characters.
I just feel like Dexter's "punishment" is totally hollow, because it's totally on his own terms. In their respective finales, Walt's and Dexter's plans go down pretty smoothly, but the difference is that Dexter gets to keep on living, still loved by everyone, and his reputation still intact, his dark secrets remaining forever undisclosed. The only thing keeping him from his dream happy ending is his own decision that he'd rather not be with Harrison and Hannah because for some reason he decides they'd be in danger with him. So it's not like circumstances are actively keeping them apart, it's just a synthetic way for the show to once hammer home what a noble guy Dexter is for recognising he should feel bad for Debra's death. It feels like a kneejerk reaction, and it feels phoney, thanks largely due to a terrible season preceding it doing nothing to set this ending up and making it feel like a total random brainfart decision from Dexter tacked on to give us a rushed ending.
And let's not get into how dumb Debra's death is as well. Turning off the plug is one thing... but taking her body and dumping it at sea!? What about Debra's numerous other friends and colleagues who might have wanted to say goodbye, or, you know, have a body to bury and a grave to visit? Insignificant compared to Dexter's need for a poetic, symbolic moment. It's like Walt saying "This is all about ME!" in Breaking Bad Season 4, with the difference being that the writers want the audience to agree with Dexter when he says it. And then there's the fact they kill Debra in the first place, when she was more deserving of a happy ending than anyone after the wringer she's been put through. She doesn't even get a dignified, heroic death that gives HER series-long journey any resolution. Instead she gets fridged to motivate Dexter to off Saxon and/or ride into a hurricane. And killed because of a terribly-written decision by Dexter to get Saxon into a kill-room then... change his mind, not even tranqing him before leaving Debra alone with him. Jennifer Carpenter deserved better.