This article mentions suicide.

It’s quite possible that if John Dutton (Kevin Costner) hadn’t died in the premiere ofYellowstoneseason 5, part 2, he would have died in the series finale regardless. Fans were curious how Taylor Sheridan would write Costner out of the show after he didn’t return for the conclusion.Yellowstoneseason 5, part 2’s premieregot the main question out of the way immediately, revealing that John Dutton had, allegedly, killed himself in the governor’s mansion. WhileJohn Dutton’s deathwas more complex than it seemed, the premiere wasted no time explaining thatYellowstone’s patriarch was gone.

John Dutton’s death outraged some audience members afterKevin Costner’s controversialYellowstoneexit. Still, it could be that Taylor Sheridan moved on without John Dutton because, in the end, John always needed to die for the executive producer and screenwriter to end his flagship neo-Western story the way he intended. That said, while his fate was brutal,John’s death inYellowstoneseason 5 wasn’t far from what Sheridan intended.

John (Kevin Costner) helping Tate (Brecken Merrill) making a fire in the woods in Yellowstone

It’s Possible Kevin Costner’s John Dutton Would Have Died In Yellowstone’s Finale Anyway

Looking at comments from key creators, it’s pretty clear thatJohn Dutton was always supposed to die inYellowstone, and it was just a matter of when. That said, it’s possible that John’s death was supposed to happen inYellowstone’s finale. All of Taylor Sheridan’s otherYellowstoneshows witness the death of a major character in the final episode. For instance, Elsa Dutton (Isabel May) dies in thefinale of the prequel series1883,and Alex Dutton’s (Julia Schlaepfer) death marks the end of1923.John’s passing inYellowstone’s season finale would have fit that mold.

“Inevitably, at some point, he was going to die.”

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Executive producerChristina Voros confirmed John Dutton’s death was inevitablein an interview withThe Hollywood Reporter.When asked about John’s death, Voros said it was always supposed to be part of the conclusion, because Kayce’s (Luke Grimes) solution wouldn’t have been possible without his father’s passing. She said,“Inevitably, at some point, he was going to die,”and,“Even if there had been 17 more seasons with Kevin Costner, eventually in the story that is the saga of Yellowstone, that’s what happens. The patriarch passes and the legacy moves onto his children.”

If John’s death was always planned, but intended for the finale, then, suddenly,Yellowstoneseason 5, part 2, makes a bit more sense. The finale’s events all orbit John’s death, soit could be thatYellowstone’s finale was always supposed to show John’s fate, and the rest of the season was intended to set up its impact. The final chapter was filled with divisive flashbacks to before John’s death, which could have been the story that Sheridan set out to tell before he decided to move John’s death up to explain Costner’s absence.

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What Would Have Happened To Yellowstone If John Dutton Lived

Taylor Sheridan Still Could Have Fulfilled Yellowstone’s Prophecy

While it’s evident that John’s death was part of the storyYellowstoneset out to tell,it’s tempting to think about what could have happened if John Dutton lived. If the governor had somehow avoided the attack on his life, he would have continued fighting for the ranch, regardless of whether his adopted son,Jamie (Wes Bentley), the attorney general for Montana, successfully impeached him. If John had survived, perhaps he would have finally listened to Beth (Kelly Reilly), who said the ranch needed to turn a profit and enact her business plans, giving John the capital to continue.

Technically, if John had lived and maintained his claim on the land, the end ofYellowstoneseason 5 could still have fulfilledTaylor Sheridan’s prophecy in1883.In a conversation between John’s ancestor, James Dutton (Tim McGraw), and Spotted Eagle (Gil Birmingham), the Crow elder tells Dutton that he can settle the Paradise Valley, but that his people will rise and take it in seven generations, to which James replies they can have it. John’s ranch would have passed to Kayce eventually, then Tate (Brecken Merrill), restoring stewardship of the land to the Crows’ descendants after seven generations.