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Sylvester Stallone tries the whole TV thing with Tulsa King

Taylor Sheridan and Terence Winter team up for Paramount Plus' undercooked fish-out-of-water mob story

TV Reviews Sylvester Stallone
Sylvester Stallone tries the whole TV thing with Tulsa King
Sylvester Stallone as Dwight Manfredi and Martin Starr as Bodhi Photo: Brian Douglas/Paramount+

When the trailer for Tulsa King premiered during the NFL’s week six broadcast of the Buffalo Bills vs. the Kansas City Chiefs, the league’s early season heavyweight title bout, it seemed more than apt: The show promised a punchy, swaggering, sporting choice of violence, featuring the television debut of Sylvester Stallone, and offering the most stout shoulder and jutted jaw this side of the gridiron. Sly’s goateed jaw protrudes as if chiseled out of mossy stone, his voice tumbling throatily almost through marbles, eyes half shut, part tough-guy disinterest and part brawny boxer brain damage, his biceps prominently featuring an unnatural highway system of veins. The series poster promises one star at the top, one name needed: “Stallone.”

As he ships a package the man behind the counter asks, “Any flammable liquids or firearms?” and the audience is supposed to feel a collective guffaw, a notion of, “Dude, this is Rambo!” We are all in on the joke, in on all of the pedestrian one liners from the trailer: “If I stopped eating every time somebody tried to hurt me I’d be a skeleton.” He is coy and he is rugged, he is out of place but unto himself, he is only a gray hair in a suit, but, in the words of Mickey, he is still very much a “greasy, fast, 200-pound Italian tank.”

For all the noise and bravado, though, the Red Bull and fist pumping vibes that seem to frame the energy of hungover Saturday afternoon frat house fare, what is easy to miss, aside from the promise of “From the Creator of Yellowstone,” is that the show was helmed by one of the most original and promising writers in Hollywood. Taylor Sheridan wrote Sicario in 2015, a twisty, criss-crossing, paranoid, and depraved look at the war on drugs, at machismo, at shady government dealings, at, well, shady personal dealings, in a picture as confounding and fractured and dark as could be expected of a major release. He was then nominated for Best Original Screenplay for 2016’s Hell Or High Water, an impeccably structured bit of neo-Western crime noir that would make the Coen brothers jealous. It’d be almost easy to overlook Wind River, a windswept and chilly and chilling thriller much more hopeless than Hell. In just a few years, as a writer, the man originally known as playing David on Sons Of Anarchy seemed to have channeled and repackaged a special modern blend of Cormac McCarthy and Larry McMurtry, with a sprinkling of Sam Peckinpah and the spirit of early Warren Zevon. His voice is lean and unsentimental, accompanied by a vision full of menace and the darkness just beyond the reaches of a prairie campfire.

Here Sheridan pulled a different type of trick, penning the original story of Tulsa in just three days, supposedly, before handing the project off entirely to Terence Winter, the writer and producer known for work on The Wolf Of Wall Street, Boardwalk Empire, and, yes, The Sopranos. Winter acts as surrogate showrunner and seems grateful for such an entirely new entree for a mafia story. “Mobster in cowboy country,” is how he describes it, specifying this particular variance of fish out of water, yet we are comfortable miles from Steven Van Zandt repurposing Silvio Dante for Lilyhammer.

Allen Coulter directs the first two episodes, in an act of full commitment to the David Chase antihero oeuvre. (Max Casella shows up too, in a seeming winking nod to Sopranos acolytes.) As we open, Stallone’s Dwight Manfredi is found leaving prison, scoffing at the new Manhattan of Apple stores and VR headsets, on a path to rectify the sins of his past, build a new life, accrue something of a new crew. “I married this life, I’m gonna see if it married me back.” At his welcome home party, he comes in hot, though. “Don’t stand behind my fucking back,” he barks, wasting no time getting down to the ludicrous business, his fists cathartically going thwack and pffff, mixing it up with the beefy men at the head of the family (led by Domenick Lombardozzi), those responsible for his 25-year residence in “college,” as they might call it. All of them are near caricature-level quick to the draw on the chest-puff snarls and the finger-pointing and spittle-inducing toughie platitudes, the pissing contests of former football players in business casual residing in tasteless McMansions. He eventually accepts his “banishment,” that there is “nothing left for me here,” and provides some mild exposition about an ex-wife and a daughter who “hates me.” “Why not?” he asks, and if you’re hungry for more explanation he might tell you he’s in “the none of your fucking business kind of business.”

Either way, he lands in Tulsa with vague assignations dealing with “horse races,” immediately hires a driver (an endearing Jay Will as Tyson), strong arms his way into the medical-marijuana business (fronted by a stoned, deadpan Martin Starr), and bounds the realms between mountainous stoicism and semi-comic violence. Yes, Dwight might use a canteen, thrown like a shortstop turning two, no less, to combat a security guard, but he also might deadpan lament prison’s tiramisu. He uses the threat of a foot stomp, but it’s cooked with a base affability, as he explains “we’re partners,” and persuades with a “don’t make me be an asshole about this.” He is the buddy you like going places with, the one who can befriend any bartender (sad-boy supreme Garrett Hedlund), who throws 100s around like he’s paying off penance for a “lifetime of bad choices,” but can also wax on the finitude of “crossing the Rubicon,” or, say, Arthur Miller versus Henry Miller.

Like Sheridan’s best stuff, Tulsa is a story driven by a character with baggage. It is a familiar against-the-world trope of redemption and second chances and also a geriatric take on the blockhead underdog tale we’ve all known and loved Stallone for since those earliest rounds and those charmingly awkward dalliances with Adrian. Still, the vibe is of much lower stakes, like a medium-burn cruise along with an old friend who’s found new perspective. From the backseat, Dwight ponders the brave new world: “GM’s gone electric, Dylan’s gone public, a phone is a camera, coffee is five bucks, the Stones, god bless ‘em, are still on tour.” Such minor-key riffing and some stoner hijinks fill the long slow Oklahoma drives—wanna see Mickey Mantle’s childhood home?—that themselves buffer the contemplative scene-setting preparing for a glut of preordained violence.

Tulsa King | Official Trailer | Paramount+

But most of the early going is a long way from Winter or Sheridan’s most inspired work and more like something indeed cooked up in a short amount of time, say, in a stir-crazy pandemic weekend, something less apt to get married to than to pass along to a colleague while you go back to your Kevin Costner project (Yellowstone season five premieres the same day as Tulsa King), or your Jeremy Renner project (Mayor Of Kingstown season two premieres in less than two months). It helps if said colleague might overlook the cliche daddy issues that seem borrowed from Rocky V, or the it’s-a-small-world storyline lent directly by one of the most beloved episodes of Sopranos season one.

Still, Tulsa ranks as another sturdy chapter in the volume of prestigious, showy 21st century antiheroism. “Go West, Old Man” is the name of episode one, making thematic motives clear. Here we are, actor and character re-polishing, reawakening in a new background. There is not too far of a line to be drawn to Jeff Bridges’ recent work in The Old Man, another story of a, yes, old man, crafting a new career bookend before our eyes, another leading dog doing it now with gray in the beard, revisiting old tools and tricks while learning some new ones. Stallone, for his part, is actually quite funny, quite often. “If I can change, and you can change…” indeed. It’s a reminder of an American icon so known it’s easy to take him for granted, so one-hue it’s nice to see a flex of different muscles, so undeniably charismatic he’s welcome to take a country ride with.


Tulsa King premieres November 13 on Paramount+.

27 Comments

  • kinjacaffeinespider-av says:

    “If I stopped eating every time somebody tried to hurt me I’d be a skeleton.”
    Oh you Italians with your food and your violence!

  • leobot-av says:

    I’m trying to figure out why Oklahoma has suddenly become such a thing of interest in television and film. I was born there; I lived there the first eighteen years of my life. It’s interesting, complicated, etc. But I haven’t figured out what urged on all these projects. It seems like they all came about very suddenly and nearly simultaneously.

    • colonel9000-av says:

      Oklahoma is effectively Mordor to people on the coasts, a state where babies can carry guns, schools are closed on Friday because of lack of funding, and the government has been entirely controlled by White men since the dawn of time despite the fact that they seemingly do nothing but punish their own citizens (white men excepted, of course).I’ve spent a great deal of time in Oklahoma, and it’s truly baffling to me why anyone would choose to live in such a hateful, rundown state. It’s the dream of the GOP, Aubrey McClendon is like a god there, but to folks in say, Hollywood, it’s the worst place in the country.So you send Stallone there to fuck it up. Makes total sense.

    • paezdishpencer-av says:

      Tax breaks.  Same thing happened to Georgia.

    • noisetanknick-av says:

      Looks like the state increased its film tax rebate incentives significantly in early 2021, which I’m sure has a lot to deal with it.

    • bcfred2-av says:

      I think the national image of other states is probably a bit more developed (Texas for sure) and other options like New Mexico or Arkansas wouldn’t have anything for him to do as a gangster.  Oklahoma is shorthand for western but most people probably have no real image of Tulsa other than “yeah that’s kind of out there by itself and would be a big change from New York.”

      • captainschmideo-av says:

        Funny thing is, it’s set in Tulsa, but I would say 98% of the scenes filmed are in Oklahoma City. The studio that they are using to film a lot of interior scenes is located in the center of Downtown OKC.
        I have only seen maybe 4 or 5 scenes that are definitely in Tulsa.

    • dinocalvitti-av says:

      Pity? Altruism? Those Hollywood liberals…

    • captainschmideo-av says:

      I still live in Oklahoma. Manfredi is going to get an education on what real endemic corruption is all about. If anything, though, maybe he can show some our crooks how to take a skim and still manage to build something amazing, the way they do it in Noo Yahk and Chicahgo…

  • zerowonder-av says:

    I don’t care what his new character name is, no way that Martin Starr isn’t playing Gilfoyle again, especially in that photo.

  • colonel9000-av says:

    A show about White men being tough guys? Oh thank god! We were at a deficit there.That said, I guess it’s only fair given the demographic of people who watch TV these days.  Hard pass. 

  • xirathi-av says:

    This is a fucking sad boomer show, made for your Dad. B+ ?????

  • noisetanknick-av says:

    I was interested in checking this out for some schlocky “Down-home Stallone” but had no idea Terrence Winter was showrunning this. Between that and the review, I’m cautiously optimistic that it will hold my attention past the pilot.

  • bcfred2-av says:

    I had no idea until this moment that Sheridan was the cop in SoA. He rides so well on Yellowstone that I wasn’t surprised to find out he legit competes.

  • bythebeardofdemisroussos-av says:

    “I married this life, I’m gonna see if it married me back.” Who likes this quippy shit other than men who criticise women’s form in the comments of exercise youtube videos?

  • gildie-av says:

    His voice is lean and unsentimental I wouldn’t say that, though. He does have a nihilism very similar to Cormac McCarthy but Yellowstone is full of sentimental ponderings about the cowboy lifestyle or what it means to be a man.

  • nukedhamsterr-av says:

    I’ll stick with Lilyhammer for my fish out of water mob guy story. 

  • reformedagoutigerbil-av says:

    Man, I scrolled to the bottom of the site and came across not one, but TWO ads on killing rats. As a rodent, I’m feeling pretty fucking triggered.

  • hcd4-av says:

    Glad you mentioned Sheridan’s stint on Sons of Anarchy, because despite his earned praise for some of his screenplays his sentimental machismo, and predominantly white male violence thing is built a lot on the same use of tropes that show did. I find that connection a lot more instructive than TV-Cormac McCarthy or the like. He may be capable of producing stuff with more range or depth, but I think his best creative successes had leads who teased out more than his texts have written most of the time.

  • filmgamer-av says:

    I enjoy seeing Stallone and think Sheridan has a lot of talent given beyond Yellowstone a lot of these shows so far actually land on their feet. But MAN, the women on these shows SUCK. Every woman is either super sexed up and dumb or old bitter and unattractive.On this show the lead female beds Stallone in a one night stand which is actually well written and set up. But then she is also SHOCKED Sylvester Stallone is 75 and is then weirded out by it and makes a big deal about her mistake. And then she is revealed to be an ATF Agent who had no idea this guy spent time in Prison, a fact the male bartender can recognize instantly. Granted the bar tender also did time, but at the end of the episode her sleeping with Stallone is seen as her mistake even though she did nothing wrong. AND the show makes her look stupid for doing so.It’s the same on Yellowstone where a heavily pregnant woman about to give birth volunteers to drive herself to the hospital where shocker she gets in an accident on the highway. It’s just too predictable on this show where the female characters don’t get results unless they are negative and related to stereotypes about their sexuality.

  • erictan04-av says:

    Yes, for starters, the NY mafia types were all caricatures. The dialogue was clunky, and Stallone is an acquired taste. But hoping the rest of the season is better. Only watching because Taylor Sheridan created it.Mayor of Kingstown was good.

  • albieisidiot79-av says:

    easily the best show on TV right now. sucks that they are 30 min episodes and have to wait a week to watch the next one

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