‘Marshals’ Review: CBS’ ‘Yellowstone’ Spinoff Can’t Quite Step Out of the Dutton Shadow

Luke Grimes as Kayce Dutton. Photo: Sonja Flemming CBS

Luke Grimes returns as Kayce Dutton in a procedural that feels more tethered to legacy than liberated by it.

There’s a moment early in Marshals when Kayce Dutton insists he fought hard to escape the weight of his family’s legacy. It’s meant to signal a fresh chapter — a man trying to define himself beyond the Yellowstone brand. Ironically, that same struggle defines the series itself.


CBS’ latest expansion of the Yellowstone universe follows Kayce (Luke Grimes) as he joins a team of U.S. marshals policing the rugged stretches of Montana. On paper, it’s a clean pivot: swap ranch wars for federal badges, replace dynastic land disputes with weekly cases. In practice, Marshals feels reluctant to cut the cord.


The setup is straightforward. Kayce is recruited by former Navy SEAL buddy Calvin (Logan Marshall-Green), now a deputy marshal handling everything from violent criminals to tensions surrounding Native land and anti-mining protests. Kayce’s skill set makes him an obvious asset; the moral clarity of the show ensures he’s always justified when things turn lethal.



And lethal they do. Each episode adheres to a tidy procedural rhythm: complication, chase, confrontation, resolution. Gunfire is frequent. Moral ambiguity is not.

Luke Grimes as Kayce Dutton. Photo: Sonja Flemming/CBS

Grimes remains a steady presence, all clenched jaw and internalized turmoil. But three episodes in, Kayce still feels defined more by what he isn’t — not his father, not the worst of the Duttons — than by who he actually is. The show repeatedly invokes his family’s legacy, often through dialogue that circles back to past sins and faded power. It’s reverential without being revelatory.


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That reverence ultimately becomes the series’ biggest obstacle. Rather than carving out a distinct tonal lane, Marshalskeeps glancing backward. For longtime Yellowstone viewers, that connective tissue may feel comforting. For newcomers, it can feel like homework.



The ensemble around Grimes injects occasional sparks. Marshall-Green brings warmth and credibility as a leader you can believe in. Arielle Kebbel adds welcome edge to her fellow marshal. Tatanka Means, though underserved by the writing, offers a grounded presence. There’s potential chemistry here — the beginnings of a team dynamic that could evolve into something sharper and more character-driven.

But the storytelling rarely allows space for messiness. Unlike other contemporary law enforcement dramas that wrestle with systemic flaws or ethical gray zones, Marshals presents its heroes as fundamentally unimpeachable. Their only real misstep is not acting forcefully enough. That moral simplicity makes for clean plotting, but thin drama.



Visually and structurally, the series delivers what CBS procedurals reliably do: crisp pacing, scenic Montana backdrops, efficient action beats. It’s competent. It’s watchable. It rarely feels urgent.



The lingering question is whether Marshals will eventually find the confidence to let Kayce exist without the constant echo of Yellowstone. There are glimmers of that possibility in quieter character beats and in the embryonic camaraderie of the task force. But for now, the spinoff seems more interested in preserving myth than redefining it.



Kayce may want to escape his family’s shadow. The show, at least in its opening stretch, hasn’t quite managed the same.



RATING: ★★★☆☆

Marshalls

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That's A Wrap

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Marshalls | That's A Wrap |

A serviceable procedural that keeps looking over its shoulder instead of charging forward.
— Jonathan P Moustakas

CREDITS

Release Date: Sunday, March 1

Cast: Luke Grimes, Logan Marshall-Green, Gil Birmingham, Arielle Kebbel

Creator: Spencer Hudnut

Studio: CBS

Run Time: One-Hour Episodes

Rated TV-14



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