Star of the Resurrection Michael C. Hall on his long -awaited return and that everything you can eat Buffet (exclusive)

After a shocking conclusion in episode four, Dexter: Resurrection Really begins to increase the focus while our main man Dexter finds himself in a new environment with new deadly knowledge that has a similar thirst for blood, although without his moral code, it is probably only a matter of time before the bush of the port of the bay will need to knock again.
After detecting the first episodes before the launch of its launch of the series, I had an exclusive opportunity to sit with the man himself, Michael C. Hall, to talk about the new exciting season and the way he is finally able to give us a version of Dexter which embraces his code while testing his own limits of new ways.
We are entering the place where Dexter’s head is at the moment, how the black passenger always influences her, and why this chapter in his story looks both like a new start and at a nod to everything that made the original series so addictive. In addition, he shares a taase of what will come and what he will do with his new “everything you can eat buffet”.
Watch our full video interview with Michael C. Hall below and / or continue to scroll to read the transcription. In addition, do not forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel for more exclusive content!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvcr0vwsbd4
Rohan: Dexter seems to kiss her true me this time, especially after the end of things with Harrison. Where is his state of mind now – with this second chance and this failure behind him?
Michael:: I think it is surprised that it is still there. I think he is very aware that he had a second chance, and with this second chance, he wants to follow what is most important to him and eliminate what is not. I think he is able to finally deposit part of the weight he has transported, in terms of his past. He may have finished doing his self-imposed exile and penance, and he is ready to move forward, to recover his identity figuratively and literally, and, yes, I think of defining more concise who he is and what it is. And I think what it is about is code and his son.
Rohan: During the previous seasons, Dexter often talked about his “black passenger” as a distinct entity. Has this relationship changed-do you think he still considers him as separated from himself? Above all, given what he does when he arrived in New York?
Michael:: I think there is actually a moment later in the season when Dexter really tries to articulate what the dark passenger is for him, or what he is, what, I think, is interesting and revealing. I think that the lines between – the really clear line that Dexter drew between his dark passenger and his simulated mask is much more vague than they have been when we met him for the first time, and he undoubtedly simulates his relationships and presents a personality in the world which serves it or serves the situation, but I think it is less convinced that it is false. Regarding the dark passenger, yes, I think the question is: is it alive at the service of the dark passenger, or is the black passenger something or someone he manages? And, I think it’s an open question for him.
Rohan: In episode 4, Dexter describes his meeting as an “unlimited buffet”. Do you think he really believes that he can stick to his code in this new environment, or is the sense of the community something that could overwhelm it, especially since it is always sucked in to integrate?
Michael:: Well, I think it is the intrigue of this situation. Will it be prompted to connect with these individuals sharing the same ideas in a way as short circuits, you know, the desire to remove them. This tension is, I think, which makes its interactions with these people in this new environment interesting, but I will not say definitively.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84O1Q6FB20K
Dexter: Resurrection, a continuation of Dexter®: New Blood, takes place weeks after Dexter Morgan (Hall) took a bullet in the chest of his own son, while he wakes up a coma to find Harrison (Jack Alcott) left without trace. Giving the weight of what he put through his son, Dexter leaves for New York, determined to find him and do things correctly. But the closure will not be easy. When the angel of Miami Metro Batista (David Zayas) arrives with questions, Dexter realizes that his past catches up with him quickly. While the father and the son sail on their own darkness in the city that never sleeps, they soon find themselves deeper than they imagined – and that the only way out is together.