The End of Yellowstone

Kevin Costner serves as star and executive producer of Yellowstone

Kevin Costner serves as star and executive producer of Yellowstone

In the spring of 2023, there is widespread panic about the fate of Yellowstone. Part 1 of Season 5 concluded in midwinter, and production has not resumed for Part 2. Frankly, pardner, I don’t give a damn.

MoKayceVisionQuest

Mo Brings Plenty helped Kayce prepare for vision quest

The conclusion of Yellowstone’s Season 4 seemed like a perfect ending to the tale. In the last two episodes of Season 4, tribal elders guide Kayce through a vision quest in which, he tells Monica, “I saw the end of us.” It doesn’t sound like particularly bad news, just a recognition that all things must pass.

The final scene of Season 4 follows the classic Western formula of the hero riding off into the sunset, with the extra symbolism of the aging hero being accompanied by a young boy, implying that a new generation will keep alive the aspirations of the passing generation.

BethAndRipOnGrass

Beth married Rip in the Season 4 finale

The Season 4 finale contains an actual wedding—Beth and Rip—and a committed relationship—Jimmy and Emily—conforming to the convention that Shakespearean comedies conclude with a wedding or multiple weddings. The final episode of Season 4 also features the mythic tragedy of Jamie assassinating his biological father, conforming to the convention that Shakespearean tragedies end with a death or multiple deaths.  So, Yellowstone—a mashup of soap opera, Western, crime thriller and political drama—could have had a mashup ending as both a comedy and a tragedy if the series had stopped at Season 4.

Westerns and Me

I spent weeks of my childhood summers with my grandparents on a farm in rural South Carolina. My grandfather raised cattle and hogs, and had a plow mule even in the age of tractors. He would take me with him on his chores, traveling around the farm in a creaky pick-up truck with the windows rolled down in the southern heat.

Once I helped my grandfather capture a calf that had gotten out of the fence; it sized me up as the weakest link and charged towards me; I felt scared and jumped out of the way; my grandfather ran to me, I thought he would be upset because I let him down and let the calf escape; he grabbed me by the shoulders and hugged me, and said, “Son, you should have jumped sooner. That cow could’ve killed you.”

Roy Rogers

Roy Rogers

Every evening, as I remember it, my grandfather and I watched Westerns on a small black-and-white TV. I had an early bedtime, so these may have been reruns before prime time. One evening we would watch Gunsmoke, another evening it would be Wagon Train or Rawhide. There were so many Westerns back then in the fifties and sixties: Bonanza, Maverick, The Rifleman, Branded, The Lone Ranger, Roy Rogers, Bat Masterson, Zorro, The Big Valley, Cheyenne, Have Gun – Will Travel, Sugarfoot, The Virginian, others I don’t remember right off.

One night I dreamed that a buffalo herd was stampeding toward me, like in a scene from one of those westerns; in the dream, I was crouched behind a fallen log, and the buffalo jumped over the log and landed on the other side of me, again like in a scene I had watched on TV; I must have been whimpering or thrashing around or something, so my grandmother came to check on me; when she sat down, I felt the mattress sink and I thought the buffalo were stomping next to me, and I screamed and sat up straight; my grandmother thought she had scared me, so I tried to explain about the buffalo.

Kung Fu

Kung Fu

Kung Fu came out when I was in college, and I planned my schedule around it. A few years later, when I was working my first job, I watched the reruns every night, usually with friends in the neighborhood. This area of coastal South Carolina was famous for its population of herptiles, and collecting them was a science and a hobby. One of my friends came in during an episode of Kung Fu, and waited for a commercial break before he started talking. He said, “You know, I don’t think I’m going to hunt rattlesnakes barefoot any more.”

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

As a young adult, I caught Western movies when they came out in theaters (including Blazing Saddles, Dancing With Wolves, and Little Big Man; while I was traveling around, I went to a theater in Paris and saw Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid with French subtitles… Qui sont ces hommes ?.

The Searchers

The Searchers

As time has gone by, I have seen most of the classic Westerns on DVD (including The Searchers, Unforgiven, Stagecoach, The Outlaw Josey Wales, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Once Upon a Time in the West, and The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly).

Lonesome Dove

Lonesome Dove

Together with 26 million other households, my family watched the Lonesome Dove miniseries in 1989, and I later rewatched it on VHS and DVD. Before the TV adaptation aired, I had already read Larry McMurtry’s novel, and a guest lecturer at my local library mentioned that McMurtry classified Lonesome Dove as an American Arthuriad. That launched me into an ongoing study of the parallels between the legends of King Arthur and the Western. For more detail, see the Lonesome Dove menu on my website.

Yellowstone

Yellowstone

So, in 2018 when I heard there was a new Western starring Kevin Costner on TV, I naturally gave Yellowstone a try. As television presentations, both Yellowstone and Lonesome Dove take advantage of more space than a movie provides to explore themes, characters, and plot lines. The Lonesome Dove miniseries ran over four nights in two-hour installments, which amount to more than six hours of programming after subtracting commercials. Yellowstone has aired four seasons of ten episodes each as of January of 2022 and has announced a fifth season with fourteen episodes.