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A national farm in America threatened by land developers and Indian reservation, John is trying to make it the first national park in America but he is thinking of finding a solution to protect his ranch, the Dutton's attempt to deal with the various implications on this issue.
If all involved manage to keep combining old-style entertainment with up-to-the-minute awareness, this will be one of the most satisfying series of the summer.
Fist-clenching may be a novel approach, also a self-negating one, and Yellowstone -- good writing, solid cast, nice views aside -- can also be a bummer at times.
So far, I've only seen the ninety-minute first episode, but Yellowstone, while starting out a little rocky, seems like it's going to be a fun, highly watchable show.
Future episodes offer more surprises and deepen the characters -- flashbacks help establish why Beth is the way she is -- making Yellowstone an enticing summer diversion.
It's a high-profile debut, but so far, the show seems more like a writing exercise for Sheridan, who slam-dunked his first three movies and now wants to see if he can do the same with an entire TV series.
Costner's a master at engendering sympathy for potentially unsympathetic positions - did I mention how good he looks on a horse? - and Yellowstone isn't subtle in setting up the opposition, casting Danny Huston...