LANDMAN Season 2 OFFICIAL Extended TRAILER
The official extended trailer for Landman Season 2 has dropped—and it’s more than a preview. It’s a declaration of war. This isn’t just another chapter in the oil-fueled chaos of the Yellowstone universe—it’s a full-blown descent into greed, betrayal, and the corrosive cost of legacy. Every frame drips with tension, every line cuts like a knife. Because in this world, oil isn’t the only thing boiling. It’s ambition, ego, and sin clawing their way to the surface.
From the very first moment, the trailer makes one thing clear—success isn’t just a goal anymore, it’s a demand. And everyone’s willing to bleed for it. Tommy Norris, played with raw intensity by Billy Bob Thornton, is no longer the blue-collar oilman clawing his way up. He’s a man drowning in power, surrounded by enemies wearing designer suits and polite smiles. The oil fields have been replaced by the gleaming battlefield of MTEX’s boardroom—where the weapons are contracts, lawyers, and whispered betrayals.
This season, legacy collides with greed in ways no one saw coming. The ghosts that built MTEX still linger, whispering in the boardroom, rewriting rules in blood and money. This isn’t business—it’s a reckoning wrapped in a corporate logo. And when the knives come out under fluorescent light, no one’s walking away clean. What we’re watching isn’t just a company’s collapse—it’s the slow, ugly rot of the oil empire itself.
Cammy Miller, portrayed by the incomparable Demi Moore, has gone from grieving widow to power-hungry queen. The woman who once hid behind heartbreak now walks into meetings like she owns the oxygen supply. Her transformation is chilling—cold, calculating, and captivating. She doesn’t just want a seat at the table; she wants to flip it. Cammy knows the golden rule of oil country—power doesn’t come from drilling the ground, it comes from drilling into people’s weaknesses. And right now, every man at MTEX underestimates her, which makes her the most dangerous person in the room. The widow act was just the setup. The revenge? That’s the real story.
Meanwhile, Tommy’s swaggering confidence hides a man on the brink. He’s trading oil rigs for boardrooms, grit for politics—and finding out that in the corporate world, loyalty is just another commodity. He might think he’s in control, but the trailer paints a different picture: he’s surrounded by sharks, each smiling just long enough to strike. It’s a world where every handshake is a setup, and every ally has a blade tucked under their briefcase.
But the trailer doesn’t stop there—it introduces a seismic presence that sends chills through every scene: Sam Elliott. The legend himself strides onto the screen, and everything stops. His gravelly voice and thousand-yard stare don’t just suggest authority—they demand it. The mystery surrounding his character is tantalizing. Is he Tommy’s estranged father, the man who built the empire before corporate greed devoured it? Or is he the wild card, the chaos agent who plays both sides just to watch the empire burn? Either way, his presence feels biblical—a ghost of the old oil frontier come back to settle debts long overdue.
If he is Tommy’s father, expect fireworks. Imagine a generational showdown—old-school grit versus modern corruption. A cowboy who built his fortune on sweat and sacrifice confronting the son who traded a shovel for a signature. Tommy’s conscience is about to face its toughest test, and Elliott’s character might be the only man ruthless enough to make him see the truth. But if he’s not blood—if he’s something darker, like an old ally turned predator—then the game changes completely. Because in this world, when Sam Elliott shows up, he doesn’t just join the story. He becomes the storm.
And speaking of storms—Cammy’s rise is nothing short of Shakespearean. Season 1 showed her as the grieving widow. Season 2 transforms her into Lady Macbeth with a Texas accent. She’s done asking for permission. Every man who pities her becomes her pawn, every smile hides a threat. Behind her calm exterior is a mind calculating revenge with surgical precision. She’s turning loss into leverage, grief into gasoline. And when a woman with nothing left to lose finds her power? Empires fall.
But even as MTEX’s boardroom turns into a battlefield, there’s a darker force brewing beneath the surface—the cartel. Tommy’s desperation to keep the company afloat pushes him into dangerous territory, and this time, his enemies aren’t just businessmen in suits. The cartel’s interest in the oil fields isn’t about profit. It’s about control. Every handshake Tommy makes might as well be a deal with the devil, and the trailer hints that he’s already knee-deep in quicksand. Sheridan’s storytelling genius shines here—turning corporate greed into a deadly chess match where every move costs blood.
And if that wasn’t enough, there’s the haunting shadow of Monty Miller, the ghost who built MTEX on secrets and sins. His presence lingers like a curse, infecting every deal and decision. The trailer teases that Monty didn’t build an empire—he buried a crime scene. The deeper Tommy and Cammy dig into the company’s foundation, the more rot they uncover. Legacy isn’t inheritance—it’s a debt that demands payment in blood. And in Landman Season 2, that debt is coming due.

The trailer’s atmosphere is electric with betrayal. One moment, we see Tommy staring down the boardroom, determined to hold on to the empire. The next, we catch Cammy’s icy smirk—proof that she’s already planning her next move. There’s talk of a coup brewing, and it’s not happening with guns—it’s happening with signatures and board votes. The power shift at MTEX is the kind of corporate war that only Taylor Sheridan could write.
Angela Norris, played by Ali Larter, adds another layer to the chaos. She’s caught between reconciliation and survival, trying to keep her family from imploding while her husband, Tommy, drowns in his own ambition. Every scene between them drips with tension. She’s not just the loyal wife—she’s the emotional core, the one who knows that every decision Tommy makes could destroy them all. And as her patience thins, the cracks in their family become fault lines threatening to swallow them whole.
But the most fascinating twist? The villains aren’t just in the cartel or the boardroom—they’re sitting in classrooms and college offices. Sheridan introduces a new kind of threat in the form of Greta Stidum, a college admissions counselor with a clipboard and a smile sharp enough to draw blood. She’s not pointing guns—she’s weaponizing bureaucracy. Her manipulation of Tommy’s daughter, Aninsley, turns the family’s future into a battlefield. It’s the kind of slow-burn villainy that makes you squirm because it feels too real. Forget bullets—her rejections hit harder.
Meanwhile, Jacob Laughland’s Donnie Norris finally steps into the spotlight. Once a quiet observer, he’s now ready to make his mark—and probably his biggest mistakes. Every shot of him in the trailer screams danger, hinting at a man desperate to prove himself in a family where ambition is a death sentence. Sheridan’s pattern is clear: when a character finally rises, they fall just as fast.
The environmental stakes add yet another layer. Beneath the oil-soaked drama lies the show’s harshest truth—the land is bleeding. The shiny PR promises and “clean energy” speeches are just smokescreens for destruction. Sheridan turns the oil boom into a moral collapse, where every pipeline signed under fluorescent light poisons something sacred. The trailer doesn’t shy away from showing it—burned fields, poisoned water, and the slow decay of everything built on greed.
By the final montage, the tone turns apocalyptic. Betrayals erupt, the cartel closes in, and the Norris family teeters on the edge of ruin. Every frame feels like a countdown. The oil’s drying up, but the greed never will. And as the trailer fades, we hear one final line—Tommy’s haunted whisper: “Call Monty Miller.”
Paramount didn’t release a trailer—they detonated one. Landman Season 2 isn’t just a continuation—it’s an escalation. A brutal, beautifully written war between power and conscience. From cartel chaos to corporate coups, from Cammy’s rise to Tommy’s unraveling, this season promises to be Yellowstone’s darkest mirror yet—where the oil burns black, and every drop costs a soul.
Because in Taylor Sheridan’s world, the only thing more dangerous than drilling the land… is drilling into the truth.