Dexter: Resurrection Filming Locations: The Dark Passenger hails a victim
The Location: The Dark Passenger Finds a Victim.
Q.
What is it supposed to be on the show?
A. A taxi pickup queue outside a performing arts center.
Q.
Where is it supposed to be on the show?
A. In New York City.
Q. When did we see it on the show?
A. We see this location in Episode 2 of Season 1 of Dexter: Resurrection.
We see a man, wearing a hoodie, walking towards a queue of rideshare cars outside of a concert venue.
He tries randomly asking the drivers if they are his ride, until one of them says yes.
He gets in the back of the car, and engages in a subdued conversation with the Haitian driver.
When the driver gets a message from his actual customer, asking where he
is, he begins to realize that something is wrong. But it's too late.
When he looks at a video monitor of the back seat, a bright light is
preventing him from seeing the face of the guy in the hoodie. and before
he can react, the man in the back seat throws a loop of wire (a
garrote) around his neck.
The “Dark Passenger” killer torments the driver by asking who will miss him when he's gone.
The next day, random adolescents stumble across the abandoned car, with
the driver's decapitated head lying in the front seat.
Q. What is it actually in real life?
A. A taxi pickup queue outside a performing arts center.
Q.
Where can I find it in real life?
A. This scene was shot outside of the Perelman Performing Arts Center (otherwise known as PAC NYC) , which is located at 251 Fulton St, at the northeast corner of the World Trade Center complex in lower Manhattan.
In the wide photos of the building (above), and in the matching StreetView (below), the camera is looking east up Fulton Street, on the south side the cube.
The auditorium was built as part of the rebuilding of the World Trade Center, following the 9/11 attacks.
It opened in 2023, at a cost of $560 million.
The Washington Post described it this way: "The windowless, marble-clad
structure sits on the Ground Zero site like a giant sugar cube.”
The marble siding is cut so thinthat the light from within causes the exterior of the cube to glow at night.