Marshals Season 1 Finale Pays Off Patience Brilliantly and Shames the Detractors — Review

Marshals Season 1 Finale Pays Off Patience Brilliantly and Shames the Detractors — Review
Television


Critic’s Rating: 5 / 5.0

5

“Marshals confines Kayce Dutton within a dim procedural that lacks the narrative spark and intrigue that Yellowstone managed instantly, making this one ham-fisted trek.”

That’s the critics’ consensus on Rotten Tomatoes for the first post-Yellowstone spinoff, which they rated 42%.

And the critics are fairer than viewers who have given the show a measly 27% score on the same site.

Marshals Season 1 Finale Pays Off Patience Brilliantly and Shames the Detractors — Review
(Fred Hayes/CBS)

Everyone blew Marshals off as another run-of-the-mill procedural because they watched a few episodes, and there were weekly cases and shootouts.

But those of us who have been with the show for thirteen weeks have witnessed the brilliant storytelling that layers Yellowstone’s history without making the show feel like a dirge.

It has developed interesting characters who can sometimes make you angry (I’m looking at you, Miles), but it knows exactly what it is doing.

Marshals continues to amaze me at every turn, and the season finale is one of those instances.

(Fred Hayes/CBS)

For the first thirty minutes, ‘Wolves at the Door’ feels like a classic pre-2025 network cop-out — the kind of safe, status-quo resetting hour designed to keep a show on the air for ten seasons without changing a single variable.

And then, showrunner Spencer Hudnut brings the big guns.

But first, let’s start with that twist: some of us saw it coming, but it wasn’t so in-your-face.

The Weavers Have Been the Villains All Along

Yellowstone and, lately, Dutton Ranch kept up that never-ending battle to protect what’s someone’s.

With their ranches under threat, John and Rip are always fielding threats from all corners.

(Fred Hayes/CBS)

But Marshals didn’t seem interested in the cutthroat world of ranching — until now.

When the Weavers arrived, they came like good neighbors and cozied up to Kayce. Dolly and her father used his grief to manipulate him into selling, and sometimes used external pressures.

Remember Marshals Season 1 Episode 3 when Kayce randomly finds a bullet on his doorstep? That’s when I sensed something was off.

And Dolly? No one is that sweet, especially to a fresh widower. She was four, five seconds from writing him sonnets just to keep Kayce placated. But I never bought it.

I never bought the good-cop-bad-cop routine they had going on, and I never bought the forced smiles and flirty lines aimed at him.

Marshals has been building towards this ranch feud, and I couldn’t have asked for better pacing.

(Fred Hayes/CBS)

While the Dutton Ranch series premiere drew lines immediately, Marshals takes a slow-burn approach.

And that’s what many don’t get about procedurals, especially when they’re well done.

Storylines don’t get resolved in one season, and ships don’t become canon at least until three seasons have passed.

It’s easier to invest in this kind of storytelling because it’s comforting. Marshals has been laying the groundwork for this since the series premiere, and their patience eventually pays off.

Kayce and Tate are left in danger as Dolly takes him far out on the ranch while Tom goes with Tate to Texas.

These people want this ranch, and they will do anything to take it, including killing Rainwater.

(Fred Hayes/CBS)

What Pete’s team had thought of as a political feud is actually something more sinister.

The Weaver ranching corporate mafia knows scaring Kayce while hollowing him out emotionally would motivate him to sell, but Rainwater is another thing altogether.

He doesn’t cower, and he always remains the last man standing. They’re getting Yellowstone over his dead body.

Based on how coordinated the mercenaries Weaver had hired are, this is just the beginning, and I’m glad that Miles is with him because there is almost certainly another attack planned.

Marshals Shows Growth

And Miles? I’m glad he’s back.

(Fred Hayes/CBS)

The show doesn’t give him an out; it forces him to confront his anger issues, and he shows some self-awareness and remorse.

And instead of throwing a tantrum when benched, he’s happy to get that opportunity back.

That’s the kind of forward momentum I like to see in a story. There’s always a chance he’ll slip up in the future, but to err is human. What matters is the genuine desire to improve.

We left the team facing an uncertain future on Marshals Season 1 Episode 12 as Andrea contemplated leaving.

The obvious direction the show had to take was to find a way to keep her here, which would have made the entire development unnecessary.

But they let her go, even if it is hard. Something being emotionally hard to accomplish doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be done.

(Fred Hayes/CBS)

The only justification she could have for returning is if something personal happened, like Cowboy being in danger.

And that’s a good enough reason for me because they have earned that bond throughout the season.

One Recurring Problem

Finally, the show touches on Kayce and Tate’s bond after the attack on their home, which forces Tate to take a life.

I haven’t been impressed with how the show has handled Kayce and Tate’s story.

It lacks depth because Tate pops in and out randomly, and they keep having the same conversation. Their relationship carries an air of antagonism that is dispelled by repeated affirmations of love and care.

(Fred Hayes/CBS)

It’s getting old. Tate is a young man with his own life, and he deserves a storyline, ideally one that includes his father.

While I’m sure he enjoys spending time with his grandfather, he’s there way too much.

But first, he had to survive this kidnapping — and his dad has whatever Dolly has planned for him.

Gut Check

“Wolves at the Door” truly earns its name. This episode delivers on everything. The ambush is engaging and well-choreographed; the arcs gain momentum, and the Weaver twist finally puts everything into perspective.

(Fred Hayes/CBS)

Intrusive Thoughts

  • Kayce should stop using his home as a safehouse for every Tom, Dick, and Harry.
  • Tate is going to Texas, but no mention of his relatives?
  • Yellowstone-verse is really running the reputations of ranch foremen.

Over to you, Marshals fanatics. What did you think about the story this hour? Was the payoff worth it for you?

Let’s keep the conversation going — it’s the only way the good stuff survives.
Say something in the comments, share if you’re moved to, and keep reading. Independent voices need readers like you.

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