Development Following the surprise cancellation of
Deadwood, on June 5, 2006,
HBO and creator
David Milch agreed to make a pair of two-hour television films in place of a fourth season. On July 12, 2007, HBO executives admitted that producing the telefilms would be difficult and put the chances of them ever being made at "50–50." Actor
Ian McShane claimed in an interview on October 1, 2007, that the show's sets were due to be dismantled and that the movies would not be made; actors
Jim Beaver and
W. Earl Brown commented a day later that they considered the series to be over. On August 12, 2015, it was reported that talks between HBO and Milch had resumed regarding a
Deadwood film. In January 2016, HBO gave Milch the
green-light to write a script for the film. On April 19, 2017, McShane announced that Milch had submitted a script for a two-hour
Deadwood movie to HBO, saying "[A] two-hour movie script has been delivered to HBO. If they don't deliver [a finished product], blame them." On November 12, 2017,
TVLine reported that the
Deadwood movie was set to begin production in fall 2018, although HBO had not officially greenlit the project. On July 25, 2018, HBO confirmed that a
Deadwood movie had been greenlit and that
Daniel Minahan, who directed four episodes in the series' original run, would direct the film, with production set to begin in October 2018. According to research requested by the producers, the film was to be set in 1889, approximately 10 years after the end of season 3. On August 21, 2018, W. Earl Brown confirmed that virtually everyone in the main cast would be returning; however, the characters played by Powers Boothe and Ralph Richeson, who had since died, would not be recast. "Everyone from the main cast who still draws air, with the exception of Silas Adams" (played by Titus Welliver) would return, Brown said. Production on the film would begin on October 5, 2018, according to Brown.
Filming On November 5, 2018, HBO announced that the film had begun production. The returns of cast members Ian McShane,
Timothy Olyphant,
Molly Parker,
Paula Malcomson,
John Hawkes,
Anna Gunn,
Dayton Callie,
Brad Dourif,
Robin Weigert, W. Earl Brown,
William Sanderson,
Kim Dickens, and
Gerald McRaney were confirmed, while
Jade Pettyjohn and Lily Keene (taking on the role played by Bree Seanna Wall in the original series) were added to the cast.
Nic Pizzolatto revealed in December 2018 that he had helped Milch write the screenplay. The show's mining town was recreated by production designer Maria Caso and was filmed on the same sets as
Westworld. Milch, whose Alzheimer's diagnosis was made public in April 2019, took a hands-off approach to the production of the film; he relied on director Daniel Minahan and co-executive producer/writer
Regina Corrado to see to the details. The first photos of the production were released on December 19, 2018. An accompanying interview with the film's executive producer
Carolyn Strauss was released that day, in which she characterized the film as being about "the passage of time. The toll of time on people. It's mellowed some people and hardened others. And it's about the town's maturing and becoming part of the Union and what that event sets in motion, in a very personal way for the people that it brings in town and what ensues. The time has taken its greatest toll on [Al] Swearengen. He's the person who really drove so much of the life of the town and there's a sense of that power waning somewhat, and what ensues of that is a big part of the story." A full trailer was released on April 25, 2019. ==Reception==