Kevin Costner will not be playing John Dutton in the final episodes of Yellowstone’s fifth season,
and that’s old news. However, questions still remain about how the show will continue without him.
Now, with the series’ November 10 premiere date approaching, the anticipation to see how Taylor
Sheridan’s Western moves forward is growing, and the man behind the Dutton patriarch is opening up about how the series can move on without him.
Obviously, we won’t have any solid answers about how Kevin Costner’s John Dutton will be written out of the show until Season 5B premieres on the 2024 TV schedule in November. However, we do know that without him, the Yellowstone cast will be led by John’s kids — Kelly Reilly’s Beth, Luke Grimes’ Kayce and Wes Bentley’s Jamie as well as Cole Hauser’s loyal ranchand and Beth’s husband Rip. While they’ve always been paramount to the story, it seems they’re taking center stage now, and Costner admitted that that’s the logical direction to take the story as he told ET:
Obviously, it can go on, you know, I have children. So, you make the story about them.
I think Costner is saying what we’re all thinking. Between the success of other Yellowstone shows and the impact killing off a main character can have on the show, there’s potential for this season to pack a massive punch.
Now, let’s break down why this show can be excellent if it focuses on the kids. Think back to shows like Succession and Game of Thrones, both killed off their patriarchs, and the chaos that followed made for excellent storylines. Due to series like those, I’ve been a proponent of writing off John since before Costner’s departure was official. John’s potentially unexpected death would send the ranch into a new spiral and up the drama exponentially as the kids figure out who is going to take it over.
From upping the ante on Jamie and Beth’s feud to amplifying Rip’s role on the ranch to forcing Kayce to reckon with his internal battle of picking his family or the ranch, writing John off makes a lot of sense when it comes to intensifying his kids’ stories.