Ten years after faking his death in Miami and moving to Upstate New York under an assumed name, Dexter gets an unexpected visit from the son he abandoned....
Ten years after faking his death in Miami and moving to Upstate New York under an assumed name, Dexter gets an unexpected visit from the son he abandoned....
The series leans left due to its strong critique of institutional failures, the impunity of the wealthy, and its explicit inclusion of social justice issues, particularly the neglect of missing indigenous women, which aligns with progressive values despite the central narrative being a personal tragedy.
The series features significant diversity in its main cast, particularly with a prominent Native American female lead. Its narrative explicitly addresses critical DEI themes, focusing on the issue of missing indigenous women and portraying a white male antagonist who preys on them, while the Native American chief of police champions their cause.
The series features multiple LGBTQ+ characters, including a main character in a same-sex relationship and a supporting character who is gay. Their identities are depicted with dignity and normalcy, integrated naturally into the story without being a source of conflict, mockery, or negative stereotypes. The portrayal is consistently respectful and affirming.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Dexter: New Blood is a continuation of the original series. All returning legacy characters, such as Dexter Morgan, Harrison Morgan, Debra Morgan, and Angel Batista, maintain their established genders from the prior installments. New characters introduced in this series do not count as gender swaps.
Dexter: New Blood is a continuation of an existing series. All returning legacy characters maintain their established race. New characters introduced in this installment do not constitute race swaps as they lack prior canonical racial depictions.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources