Toward the beginning of , the Discovery Channel鈥檚 new drama about the 1897 Yukon Gold Rush, the show鈥檚 two primary stars, Abbie Cornish and Richard Madden, meet in a Dawson City saloon.



Cornish plays , the indomitable owner of a timber mill; Madden is , a stout-hearted Vermonter who鈥檚 come west to seek his fortune. He鈥檚 about the only miner in Dawson City with a shred of decency. Mulrooney, detecting as much, orders a round. A greedy stew of miners, hookers, fiddlers, and grifters surrounds them. , played by Sam Shepard, is notably absent. 鈥淕old鈥檚 a whore,鈥 Belinda warns. 鈥淵ou may lust after her, may even think you love her, but you don鈥檛 need her.鈥
If gold鈥檚 a whore, then Discovery runs a busy brothel. In recent years the first network in adventure television has offered Gold Rush, Jungle Gold, and Bering Sea Gold. This latest offering, though, is decidedly new. Klondike is Discovery鈥檚 debut scripted drama, a six-hour, three-part series that premiered on Monday and wraps up this evening.
Based off Charlotte Gray鈥檚 2010 historical account, (liberties are taken onscreen), directed by Simon Cellan Jones and co-produced by Ridley Scott, Klondike seems to be an effort to carve out a place alongside HBO and Showtime, at least for a moment. In addition to Madden and Cornish, the network invested in Tim Roth, who plays a sociopathic entrepreneur known only as ; Shepard, the town鈥檚 preacher and conscience; and newcomer Johnny Simmons, who serves as a young, story-collecting .
Six hours is an 800-meter race鈥攏ot enough to stand up to a full-length series, and too much for a movie. A few plot lines come undone early, others drag on too long. But the acting is terrific, the writing is mostly good, and the scenery鈥擜lberta’s Spray Lakes stand in for the frozen Yukon River鈥攊s spectacular. Echoes of HBO’s Deadwood are apparent from the opening credits, and although Klondike isn’t nearly as tightly wound, it’s certainly entertaining. The avalanches and wolves (real ones, not the CGI variety) only help.
聽The series follows Haskell as he and a partner, (Augustus Prew) head north seeking adventure and money. They manage to escape a thunderous avalanche鈥擠iscovery moved 300 tons of snow and used nine bags of explosives to create the scene鈥攂ut Epstein quickly succumbs to a rifle shot to the gut from a jealous miner below a canopy of northern lights.
The show鈥檚 primary plot hinges on Haskell鈥檚 quest for vengeance and the romance with Mulrooney. She, meanwhile, engages in a vicious power struggle with Roth鈥檚 Count for control of the town鈥檚 timber. Roth, feral and typically brilliant, is unfortunately given short shrift in favor of Haskell, who can be cloyingly noble. Part of Deadwood鈥檚 genius was putting the bad guy up front. But when The Count takes the lead, Klondike is delicious.聽
鈥淲hat would you like to confess,鈥 Shepard鈥檚 preacher asks him in church.
鈥淎rson, murder,鈥 says The Count.
鈥淲hen did you commit these acts?鈥
鈥淲ell, I haven鈥檛, yet,鈥 Roth snaps.
Eventually, greed overwhelms, the bodies pile up, and so do the platitudes. Just about everybody starts offering newfound wisdom about gold鈥檚 corrupting power.
Haskell intones, 鈥淲hile we seek out gold and abstractions like justice, death only seeks more.鈥 After striking it rich he contemplates skipping town to start a farm. Mulrooney supports the idea, saying that her lover is 鈥渢oo damned good for the Yukon.鈥
But that鈥檚 not true. The real Bill Haskell, we’re told, returned to the Yukon one last time, and that didn鈥檛 go well. The allure of the north is strong. Discovery knows as much鈥擬onday鈥檚 premiere episode drew 3.4 million viewers. Whether or not the network dives headlong into scripted drama remains to be seen, but it鈥檚 probably a safe bet that the gold rush will continue.