Byline: Malia Mendez, Los Angeles Times, (TNS)
Kevin Costner is finally, albeit reluctantly, shedding light on his Yellowstone exit.
Costner, who portrayed Montana rancher John Dutton III in the first four and a half seasons of the Emmy-nominated drama, officially announced in June on Instagram that he would not be returning for season five, part two, of the series — more than a year after reports of his departure first dropped.
Now, as the Golden Globe-winning actor-director promotes Horizon — his newly released western epic over 30 years in the making — he's being pressed about the details of his widely mourned Yellowstone exit. That includes whether clashes with the series' creator and director Taylor Sheridan caused it.
"People say this about the two of you: both big egos, both very powerful, both at the top of their game, and that right now, maybe the two of you are playing a game of 'Whose is bigger?'" CBS Mornings host Gayle King said to Costner on June 27. "Do you see it that way?"
Costner countered, saying that he "loved the show before anybody" and that, in the beginning, "It was Taylor and myself."
But King pressed further, asking if the collaborators were on good terms. "Why can't the two of you be able to work it out?" she said.
"Well, this isn't therapy, Gayle. We're not going to discuss this on the show," Costner fired back. "I've conducted my life in a pretty straightforward way. I've never missed any obligations in my entire career."
As for the true reason for his departure, Costner suggested that the writing on the show had ceased to move him. It was a stance he had taken in his recent People cover story: "The scripts weren't there."
Earlier in the CBS Mornings interview, Costner also disputed claims made last year by Sheridan that Horizon became the actor's "priority" and that he wanted to "shift focus."
"I sure hope [the movie is] worth it — and that it's a good one," Sheridan told The Hollywood Reporter.
"Horizon didn't cause problems for me," Costner told King. "I wanted to work more than once a year, and it was important that I made room for Yellowstone and made room for Horizon, but we just — people ran through deadlines, they were busy, they had a lot to do. But Horizon was secondary to Yellowstone. But it still had to line up. I had 400 people waiting for me, so I did things in a very limited amount of time."
Costner added that whereas his Academy Award-winning directorial debut, Dances With Wolves, took 106 days, Horizon was shot in just 52.
Horizon: An American Saga — Chapter 1, the first installment in a proposed four-part film series, was released in theaters on June 28. Costner has been pushing the project since 1988.
"I thought it was good, but no one would make it," he said on CBS Mornings. "I thought, well then, I'll write four more, see how they like those."
Costner said no one liked those either, "but I did, and I couldn't forget [Horizon]. I fell in love with it."
During a panel discussion on June 27 for Josh Horowitz's Happy Sad Confused podcast, Costner said, "I felt like I had a secret for you in this movie," adding that his faith in the project has grown with the cast's. "I turned the script over to these actors, and one by one, as they read it, they said they wanted to be a part of it.
"I knew we had something," he said.
Horizon brought in just $800,000 from more than 3,000 locations on June 27, according to studio estimates — a soft start on its projected opening weekend box office take of $10 million to $12 million in the United States and Canada. Filmmakers and studios remain hopeful that Costner's fan base will deliver over the weekend.
Horizon: An American Saga — Chapter 2 arrives in theaters August 16.
Meanwhile, the final six episodes of Yellowstone are well into production and slated to air November 10. The first half of Yellowstone season five aired between November 2022 and January 2023.
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