HrvojeM-5
Joined Jul 2025
Welcome to the new profile
Our updates are still in development. While the previous version of the profile is no longer accessible, we're actively working on improvements, and some of the missing features will be returning soon! Stay tuned for their return. In the meantime, the Ratings Analysis is still available on our iOS and Android apps, found on the profile page. To view your Rating Distribution(s) by Year and Genre, please refer to our new Help guide.
Badges2
To learn how to earn badges, go to the badges help page.
Ratings16
HrvojeM-5's rating
Reviews2
HrvojeM-5's rating
Dexter: Resurrection isn't just another revival-it's a reckoning.
For years, fans of the franchise were haunted not by Dexter's crimes, but by the unresolved legacy of his character. The original series finale left many of us hollow. But Resurrection doesn't beg for forgiveness-it earns it, episode by episode, by reinterpreting what made the series brilliant in the first place: duality, dread, and the illusion of control.
Michael C. Hall steps back into Dexter's blood-splattered shoes like he never left. His performance is tighter, older, but never colder. You feel the years on him-and that's exactly the point. This isn't just the return of a killer. It's the return of a man who knows what he destroyed-and still might destroy again.
The New York City setting breathes fresh danger into the story. It's not just a backdrop; it's a psychological mirror. The lights are brighter, but so are the shadows. And in those shadows, the writing is sharper than ever: poetic, ironic, sometimes devastatingly self-aware. There's humor again-not cheap laughs, but the dark kind that reminds you how deeply this show understands its own monster.
For years, fans of the franchise were haunted not by Dexter's crimes, but by the unresolved legacy of his character. The original series finale left many of us hollow. But Resurrection doesn't beg for forgiveness-it earns it, episode by episode, by reinterpreting what made the series brilliant in the first place: duality, dread, and the illusion of control.
Michael C. Hall steps back into Dexter's blood-splattered shoes like he never left. His performance is tighter, older, but never colder. You feel the years on him-and that's exactly the point. This isn't just the return of a killer. It's the return of a man who knows what he destroyed-and still might destroy again.
The New York City setting breathes fresh danger into the story. It's not just a backdrop; it's a psychological mirror. The lights are brighter, but so are the shadows. And in those shadows, the writing is sharper than ever: poetic, ironic, sometimes devastatingly self-aware. There's humor again-not cheap laughs, but the dark kind that reminds you how deeply this show understands its own monster.
Absolutely gripping!!!! Episode five delivers peak tension, stunning performances, and masterful storytelling. Dexter's internal conflict deepens, and the suspense never lets up. The pacing, twists, and Dexter and Harrisons dynamic make this a standout-10/10 brilliance!
A little calmer then other episodes, which makes me even more excited for the next one.
A little calmer then other episodes, which makes me even more excited for the next one.