TV-MA | 10 episodes | Drama, Romance, Western | 2025
Although the series met with positive critical and audience approval, it was canceled in January, which is unfortunate as it closed with a cliffhanger.
Box Checking
The series opens with great promise, with multiple “Yellowstone” boxes being checked. Widowed rancher Staten Kirkland (Josh Duhamel) was at odds with his son Randall (Hubert Smielecki) when he dies in a car crash after a heated argument. The car was a recent gift from Randall’s uncle (and Staten’s former brother-in-law) Davis Collins (Eoin Macken). No details of the accident are provided, which is OK as the event is revisited in flashback later on.
Staten and Davis more or less hate each other. Both are competing for the affections of Quinn O’Grady (Minka Kelly), the owner of a local dance hall and a former classical pianist. Classy, unaffected, gorgeous, and thoroughly lacking in pretense, Quinn seems more interested in Staten; neither, however, seems to be in any kind of hurry to reveal their true feelings. Their season-long, will-they-or-won’t-they slow burn is arguably best subplot of the series.
Love Triangles
Before the first episode is even over, “Ransom Canyon” morphs into a modernized mix of [name your favorite 1980s teen movie] and the “Real Housewives of Dallas.” Love triangles of the young and ex-spouses of supporting adult characters begin to dominate the narrative and, for a while, it seems all is lost.Through a combination of dumb luck and accidental foresight, show runner April Blair and her team of writers, working from a series of books by Jodi Thomas, are able to right the rudder. They infuse the show with meaty crime-thriller elements that keep everything heading in the right direction. If there is a second season, Blair would serve herself and viewers well by keeping the teen element down to a minimum and leaning heavily into the crime or thriller aspects.

Stretching the Brand
I’m a huge fan of “Yellowstone” and everything else the series’ show runner Taylor Sheridan did before it. From “Sicario” to “Hell or High Water” to “Wind River,” I love all of them. He’s a true visionary.However, with the subsequent “Yellowstone” prequels (“1883,” “1923”), I’ve noticed that he’s “stretching the brand” a little too thin. It’s too much of more of the same. On the flip side, when Sheridan tries something original (“Mayor of Kingstown,” “Tulsa King,” “Landman”), he returns to peak form.

The point here is that “Yellowstone,” like “All in the Family” and “The Sopranos” before it, was a once-in-a-generation TV marvel. It can’t be duplicated, copied, or cloned with any degree of lasting conviction or success.
Blair needs to recognize this and should distance her show from “Yellowstone” as much as possible. Keep the bare bones stuff—the thriller elements, the grown-ups’ romance, the turf wars, the Western flair—and jettison the rest. It’s all dime-store window dressing and has no staying power.
“Ransom Canyon” is at a crossroads. Does it want to be another variation of “Dynasty,” “Dallas,” or “Yellowstone,” or something with teeth that can survive on its own merits?