There is no Landman without Billy Bob Thornton. Series co-creator and writer Taylor Sheridan penned the character with the former Friday Night Lights and Bad Santa star in mind, right down to the specific no-nonsense tone with which he cracks one-liners every episode. Yet, after a shocking twist near the end of season 2 that drove fans up the wall—his character, M-Tex oil president Tommy Norris, was fired and forced to strike out on his own—many viewers convinced themselves that it was possible Thornton could leave the show.
Leave Landman? Thornton laughs when I tell him about all the fan theories before the season 2 finale aired on Sunday night. "I don't see that stuff," the seventy-year-old actor says over a video call. "I'm signed up for like five years or something, so as long as they want me, I'll be there."
In place of a departure, the finale serves as a new beginning for Tommy Norris and his Texas family. Following two seasons of Tommy managing an oil company away from potential bankruptcy after former president Monty Miller (Jon Hamm) suddenly dies, Monty's widow Cami (Demi Moore) makes the shocking decision to run the company without his help. She may live to regret that decision.
With the help of his son Cooper (Jacob Lofland) and damn near the entire cast of Landman, Tommy works out a deal in the finale to start his own oil company, CTT: Oil Exploration and Cattle. The unusually happy moment for Landman could serve as the end of the series, if it wasn't already renewed for season 3. But according to Thornton, it might just be the eye before the storm.
"The end is the beginning of the season," Thornton says. "What's interesting about it is that Tommy's not the kind of guy who ever trusts happiness. But just for this one moment—now that it's going to be the family's company, and at the end when he tells the coyote 'You can't have today'—Tommy lets himself be happy for a change. But I still think he's wearily happy, if you know what I mean?"
Below, Thornton shares more about working closely with Taylor Sheridan, how AI scares him, and what it means to see Sling Blade celebrate its 30th anniversary this year.
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