1923′s Jacob and Cara Dutton Prove Older Characters Deserve Some Romance, Too
Photo Courtesy of Paramount+
Taylor Sheridan’s Yellowstone universe is often more frequently associated with morally gray characters and visceral storytelling rather than it is with romance, as the saga follows multiple generations of the franchise’s central Dutton clan as they battle (often violently) to hold on to their eponymous Montana ranch. Yet, for all that prequel series 1923 wrestles with complex post-war issues of American identity and confronts the horrors that settlers of the West often inflicted on both one another and the native peoples who originally occupied the land they claimed, the true heart of the show can be found in the relationship between its central power couple: Jacob and Cara Dutton.
Admittedly, it’s hard not to love any characters played by Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren, who are the sort of performers that would be compelling to watch going grocery shopping together. But Sheridan has given the duo rich emotional material to mine, casting them as a longtime, loving frontier couple who put each other first, take no bullshit, and have managed to craft a life of genuine meaning out of a situation they never expected to find themselves in. According to Dutton family history, Ford’s Jacob was originally summoned west following the death of his younger brother James—the lead character from the prequel 1883—to raise his children and hold on to the land he had settled. Mirren’s Cara, of course, goes with him, but rather than fulfill the simplistic “behind every successful man is a good woman” trope, she stands firmly beside her husband in a role that’s ultimately more powerful (and, yes, openly feminist) than one would initially expect from a show about Prohibition-era ranchers in Montana.
More importantly, however, 1923 makes clear that Jacob and Cara’s relationship is deeply romantic, the rare sort of all-encompassing mature love that we so seldom get the chance to see play out on television—a medium that often likes to treat its older characters as sexless eunuchs. Here, it is apparent that Jacob and Cara’s entire world is each other, and while that doesn’t always play out in traditional ways (the ranch they’ve been entrusted to hold onto is often a looming third presence in their marriage, as is the threat of loss and violence), it doesn’t make their feelings any less potent or sincere. And if you don’t find the idea of Cara stomping off into the woods to shoot one of the men she thinks murdered her husband in the face with a shotgun just a little swoon-worthy, you may not be approaching this franchise in the correct spirit.
Though the show goes further in portraying the physical aspects of the relationships among its younger generation—Spencer Dutton and his British fiancee Alexandra, and Jack Dutton and his WASP-y wife-to-be Elizabeth—neither of those pairings carry the emotional heft of the elder Dutton duo. After all, Spencer has tried to leave Alex behind twice already, and Jack and Elizabeth have yet to make it to the altar, mainly due to the fact that they were both shot by the sheepherders the Duttons are feuding with. But while the future of these romances remains in flux, Jacob and Cara’s love for one another is unquestionably the bedrock upon which this family—and this show itself—is founded.