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Set in a mining town that was not part of any U.S. state or territory in the post-Civil War years, Deadwood revolves around the characters of Deadwood, South Dakota; the town of deep corruption and crime.
Deadwood is about a great many things, but one of the things I think it doesn't get enough credit for is just how much it is a series about kindness, about the ways that we can be good to each other and treat each other well.
It sets new standards for the Western drama and brings to life an era of American history that, seen for what it actually was, is all the more extraordinary.
Milch, the man who gave NYPD Blue its most pungent police dialogue, has come up with a horse opera that makes the West wilder than you've ever seen it, while retelling tales of legends like Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane.
HBO's extraordinary new Western, Deadwood, is not your father's horse opera and that it stands proudly beside the bleak, unromanticized likes of Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven and Larry McMurtry's Lonesome Dove.