Welcome to the End of the Thought Process (Unofficial) House, MD Episode Guide: Part 1
Published February 13, 2008
There is an iconic scene that defines House as different than other doctors. As Foreman ponders whether to resign his fellowship to accept Dr. Marty's job offer, House offers a contrast between their differing medical philosophies. “He sleeps better at night,” House argues. “He shouldn’t.” Dr. Marty believes that you do your job and accept the inevitable with a shrug of the shoulders. House struggles with himself and with everyone else to obtain a better patient outcome, whatever it takes. And for or all of Gregory House’s outward arrogance, House has a sort of humility that Foreman, Dr. Marty, not even Cuddy and Wilson really understand. To me, this scene completely sums up the character. The episode also ends on a poignant note as Giles, now healed due to House's persistence, presents him with a priceless gift — his beloved trumpet. The depth to which House is touched is expressed wordlessly and eloquently through Hugh Laurie’s expressive eyes. One of my absolutely favorite episodes.
"Histories" (B+) - A fine episode in which the series poses the ethical question: does a homeless person deserve respectful care in the hospital when ill, no matter what the cause? House’s answer is yes; and in so doing reveals an underlying (and deeply-buried) humanity pointing out the glaring difference between Foreman’s angry arrogance and House’s affected arrogance. Foreman would have thrown this week’s patient disdainfully to the curb and out of her snugly warm hospital bed, insisting that she is simply "faking it" to get a night out of the cold. But Foreman gets a lesson in the real humility that House lectured him about in “DNR.” As it turns out, she has rabies, eventually dying from the disease. A chastened Foreman sits with her in her final hours, granting her a modicum of peace and dignity.
* "Detox" (A+) - A tour-de-force acting performance by Hugh Laurie pits House’s stubbornness against his need for Vicodin after betting Cuddy that he is not addicted to pain meds. He agrees to give up Vicodin for a week in exchange for one month off clinic duty. During the increasingly difficult and painful struggle, House tries to diagnose a teenage boy. The team, growing more wary of House’s judgment as he suffers the effects of narcotics withdrawal, insists that the boy has lupus. House, just as insistent, is certain that it is something else. As they boy's condition worsens, even Foreman wants to see House back on Vicodin, offering him a bottle of the drug. Spilling the pills onto his desk, you can see the interior struggle raging within House's eyes.
- Welcome to the End of the Thought Process (Unofficial) House, MD Episode Guide: Part 1
- Published: February 13, 2008
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Television, Video: Drama
- Part of a feature: Welcome to the End of the Thought Process: House MD
- Writer: Barbara Barnett
- Barbara Barnett's BC Writer page
- Barbara Barnett's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us
Comments
thanks for commenting, Mary. I remember after watching "Cursed," which my first episode, and then going nuts tyring to find the already-legendary episodes of Detox and the pilot (and some others) to download and watch. I always appreciate your comments here.
Barbara
Dear Barbara, Thanks for treating " House" as seriously as it deserves and for your perceptive comments.
House is not your cliche curmudgeonly doctor with a heart of gold; he has a heart but it is a dark one.He really is what he appears to be but what he appears to be is only the tip of the iceberg.
I agree with your definition of him as a Romantic Hero, but might he not also be a Tragic Hero ? I think he is angry, not only at what has happened to him but at what he sees around him every day.
This,and his bleak childhood ,leads him to see life as random and meaningless, but,since he is no coward he picks the greatest enemy-death- and fights it tooth and nail.(like Lucifer defying God in Paradise Lost ). This is why he really can't understand other people's obsession with professional rules,conventional ethics or drug addiction, which seem to him irrelevant and trivial.House as a fallen angel ?!
Ann--Thank you for your kind words perceptive comments. I love your take on House. I have also thought about House as a fallen angel from time to time. He does fight death as his arch enemy. But his is not unwilling to let a patient go either, if the choice that lies before them is worse. He also has fought for patients to have a better outcome beyond the ailment for which they originally sought him out. Rather than band-aid a problem, he (when he can) has sought to heal rather than to "fix". A great example is in "Half-Wit."
Fantastic write-up, Barbara. I love this show passionately, and I enjoy it even more through your eyes.
Thanks, Phillip! Part two is coming in the next day or two.
Barbara
It's pretty obvious that House is Holmes and Wilson is Watson, as the names suggest. Holmes plays violin, etc.
The great thing about these men is that they are great logicians and problem solvers. They are also capable of ego sacrifice (they don't hesitate to denounce their own hypotheses, as necessary, which is a rare quality, almost nonexitent, in either police or medical practice).
Police and medical are the two arenas of our experience where outsiders inject themselves into peoples lives at times of great stress and danger. Like gods. Gods with feet of clay because they make mistakes, mostly out of excessive ego involvement. Success will require getting beyond your own Press Notices, which is why House walks the tightrope of offensiveness and even illegality: he doesn't want anyone to overlook his own mistakes out of an exaggerated respect for his status and reputation for that will lead to their dishonesty and ultimately his own.
I don't mean to be a kvetch, Barbara, cause I like your columns. But the use of "whole" to refer to the absence of disability is offensive to a lot of us...(able-bodied works without implying that any of us are partial people or anything like that.)
Thanks.
Happy viewing.
Hey Erica--not a kvetch...a valid issue. I meant "whole" in a non-physical sense. The "healthy" referred to his physical being, but I believe the piling on of his existence from his childhood through the present has left him feeling less than whole (and, that, from his POV). I absolutely did not mean that disabled people are less than whole. I have a disabled mother, so I mean no offense. Sorry for the confusion over my use of the term.
Barbara (delighted that you enjoy reading my columns!)
Well, people do say that sometimes...I just thought I'd point it out...it used to be a more common usage than it is now, and as such, is...not preferred.(But maybe you already knew that.)
Yes, I'd agree that Greg House has...fragmented since his injury and that it activated unhealthy tendencies he probably always had.
Thanks for clearing that up.






"Jumping into a series mid-fourth year isn't always easy."
I jumped into watching "House" in mid-third year, with my first episode being "One Day, One Room." I had heard the positive reviews of the show, and don't know what had been keeping me so busy that I'd never watched it until a year ago. But the quality of the writing and the acting were so compelling that I was well and truly hooked from that episode. (The following Tuesday evening was one of those two hour episodes of that silly reality show that precedes it, and I remember standing in my living room, waiting for my "House M.D." fix, and being angry that it wasn't available.)
Thanks to DVDs and DVD rentals, it's possible to catch up fast with storytelling as excellent as this. I'm happy that I've had the opportunity to do so, and to share in the appreciation of it that I have found online in forums such as this.