REVIEW

TV Review: House - "House's Head"/"Wilson's Heart"

Written by Diane Kristine
Published May 20, 2008
Part of House
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But this isn't yet about Thirteen's impairments, it's about House's. Did he forget he'd already taken some Vicodin? It's not as though he needs an excuse to overdose. Did he forget Taub's name? I frequently do too. He does remember Thirteen's, at least after a moment, as well as the salient-to-him fact that she's bisexual.

Of course, he doesn't exactly remember her name, but that's not a clue since he never has. When he solves the mystery of the bus driver's ailment – before realizing thanks to the fly in the ointment that he saved the wrong person – he traps Thirteen in the patient's room and asks her to stab the air bubble in his heart. She balks as the others try to break through the door. "Shut up and make a decision" is House's directive, echoing his usual theme that there is an absolute right and wrong, but if you can't be certain which is which, commitment to your chosen action is the only absolute right. It's how we know House is too close to the case in "Wilson's Heart" – he starts from the premise that his theories are wrong.

When Cuddy calls Thirteen "Dr. Hadley" in that battle for her soul – or at least her decision – it's the first on-screen utterance of that surname. House hilariously responds: "See, she doesn't even know your name." The NBC/Universal PR people and the props people didn't keep the secret as well as Thirteen herself did, so fans who wanted to know her name already did. But it's a fun Easter egg, even if it doesn't exactly qualify as the revelation of how they got the caramel inside the Caramilk bar, or a coherent explanation for what those Lost numbers actually mean. Maybe in another season or two we'll hear her first name, too.

The distinction between hallucination and memory was less clear in "House's Head" than between fiction and reality, or I would really have been an idiot for not being sure Amber was really in the bar with House. I did suspect it, but because of all the misdirection the episode and in my own "Three Stories" influenced brain, I never clued in that she was on the bus, or was the one with the symptom. Though in retrospect the amber necklace was a glaringly obvious clue, the conversation about it being a fly in the ointment was enough of a red herring to make me blind as a bat.

Because of that sensual-before-turning-bloody scene with the Mystery Woman and the red ribbon, and Wilson's comments to House in the MRI, I did think, as I was supposed to, that it was obvious House had inappropriate feelings or even an inappropriate relationship with Amber. Well, all his relationships are inappropriate, aren't they? I mean inappropriate in the "bros before hos" way. Therefore, it was obvious to me that House did not have inappropriate feelings or a relationship with Amber, because obviously the writers would not set it up that obviously if that were true.

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Diane is a publications manager who's addicted to television, movies, and books and justifies her pop culture obsessions by writing about them for Blogcritics. She also runs the TV, Eh? website, a compilation of news and information about Canadian television series.
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TV Review: House - "House's Head"/"Wilson's Heart"
Published: May 20, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Drama, Video: Television
Part of a feature: House
Writer: Diane Kristine
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Comments

#1 — May 20, 2008 @ 14:04PM — Jeffrey [URL]

Part 1 of these episodes was a bit gimmicky. The trailer for part 2 looked even more overwrought and gimmicky... So what a relief to find out that Wilson's Heart was the sort of thing that television does best. It takes years to evolve characters to a point where they are that nuanced and involving. There was one too many sappy-song musical montages - one of the first two should have been re-thought. But overall, was an incredible season finale.

#2 — May 20, 2008 @ 14:14PM — Josh Hathaway [URL]

I went for this two-parter hook, line, and sinker. I thought it was extraordinarily well written and executed by the writers, actors, and director(s). Brilliant.

#3 — May 20, 2008 @ 14:55PM — Jeffrey [URL]

And how 'bout that Fred Durst, getting billed in the credits for his bartender cameo.

Limp Bizkit in da 'House, indeed.

#4 — May 20, 2008 @ 15:35PM — Elizabeth

I thought "House's Head" was much better than "Wilson's Heart" for a few reasons: "Wilson's Heart", though extremely well-acted, was sort of corny. Everything played out the way it was expected, except, of course, what happened to Amber. But when 13 ended up having Huntington's? It was so unoriginal. And also, did it look like a new set in some places? One more thing--after the BONES season finale in which a main character got sent to an asylum at the end, "Wilson's Heart" was extremely depressing. However, I thought it was really clever the way they used the vocals to the song "Teardrop," the HOUSE theme, in the middle of the episode.

#5 — May 20, 2008 @ 18:06PM — SludgeFace

in my opinion the best house episode yet. It was simply so emotionally touching, especially as it neared the end, and i found myself crying... something i NEVER do for a movie/tv show, and amazing at how powerful this episode really was.

#6 — May 20, 2008 @ 18:29PM — bliffle

Wow! That was a thorough and engaging recapitulation. So many interesting characters. Thanks for all the effort and attention you've put into this material. It helps to elevate it above the usual TV program.

#7 — May 21, 2008 @ 15:31PM — Clara

LOVE this article. Very well written. Yea--I'll admit I cried my eyes out at the end, too. House is a great show. Already counting down the days to Season 5!

#8 — May 22, 2008 @ 07:28AM — Mary K. Williams [URL]

Ack, tried to leave a comment yesterday - but it never went through.

Very wonderful job on this Diane. Welcome Back!

#9 — May 22, 2008 @ 10:20AM — Diane Kristine [URL]

Thanks!

Clara, I'd be counting the days too but do we know the premiere date yet? They'd better not make us wait until after baseball.

Elizabeth, I'm not sure how Thirteen having Huntington's is unoriginal, but I hope they deal with the aftermath of what it means to live your life with that knowledge. I haven't seen that in an ongoing role before.

#10 — May 22, 2008 @ 12:26PM — Clara

Found this on Housemd-guide.com, don't know if you've seen it yet:

"May 17, 2008: Fox announces schedule change for House next season.: For the first half of the season "House" will be on Tuesday nights in the first hour of primetime 8/7c. Then in January the plan is to move "House" to the first hour of primetime on Wednesdays. Scheduling for January is always very tentative since the network doesn't know which new shows will succeed and which won't."

Also, read somewhere that House might return in August... gotta keep my eyes pealed for more info.

#11 — May 22, 2008 @ 13:53PM — Diane Kristine [URL]

Right after I posted that comment I saw an interview with David Shore saying September 2. (It's a funny interview too.) It's not August but it's early-ish at least.

#12 — May 27, 2008 @ 01:41AM — Boffle

Thanks for the review, DK. Beautifully written. I so much agree with the love for these two episodes. The first: cerebral, dreamlike, haunted, like House's head, and the second: fierce, confused, torn, broken like Wilson's heart. I join you in trusting the instincts of this stellar creative staff: they keep throwing House into new situations where he is forced to grow, we think, and then he has his own surprising take. The scene where Wilson asks House to have the brain stimulation despite his severe injuries will, I think, have changed how they see each other: it will never be the same.

I loved how the rest of the staff responded to Amber's dying and then, the parallels with House and 13, the one facing a damaged life, the other an early death. And even though he was "barely coherent" from the beginning, he still found time and energy to notice 13's response (or lack thereof) and mentor her by getting her to face it, and then she got him to face his own.

Sept. 2? Looking forward to it. Hope you continue to post about House from time to time: your take adds a lot to the enjoyment of this brave and amazing show.

#13 — May 28, 2008 @ 11:43AM — swatkat [URL]

this was absolutely beautiful. like you, i'm avidly anticipating season 5... why isn't it september yet?

#14 — May 29, 2008 @ 02:13AM — Grace

13's first name is Remy.

#15 — May 29, 2008 @ 10:55AM — Diane Kristine [URL]

Yes, as I said, any fan who wants to know her name and can use the Internet already knows. But the first name hasn't been said on the show yet.

#16 — June 5, 2008 @ 11:58AM — Della

What a fantastic review. Thank you for posting that. Your review was so good that I could picture in my mind each part of the episodes you commented on and because your review was so clear and precise, that when you got to the heartbreaking moments of the episodes you made me cry again.

*ahem* Aaaanyway, having watched a few finales that were on offer from some of the other leading shows out there, these two for House were, in my opinion, just exceptional. Far, far, far, far, far, far better than all of them, including the Numb3rs finale, which I thought had a lot going for it as well.

"House's Head" and "Wilson's Heart" contained everything that I enjoy watching in an episode. I don't mean the high-drama and the angst, though, you know, every once in a while it's a wonderful thing, but it was more to do with the fact that both episodes were so character driven.

They were episodes which managed to cater for all of the characters, which is a huuuuge feat all of itself given how many characters House has now.

But what I truly liked about these two episodes was that there were no fancy shots (like one finale I could mention), just a confidence in the acting abilities of the actors involved in conveying the truly heartbreaking scenes at the end. No fancy tricks, just simple settings with a bit of music, and a whole lot of exceptional acting and writing. Wonderful!

The only thing that confuses me is why several people are adamant that Wilson is angry at House. I didn't see that at all. Hmm, maybe I wasn't looking hard enough, or maybe, just maybe that by that point I was sobbing so hard that I just *couldn't* see - chuckle.

Thanks again for such a wonderful review.

Take care
Della

:-)

#17 — June 5, 2008 @ 21:40PM — Diane Kristine [URL]

Thanks so much Della, that's really nice of you to say (and Boffle too - sorry, I missed you last time).

Wilson's emotional reaction is up for interpretation, of course. His anger, if that's what it is, is definitely quiet, and of course combined with grief. The fact that he couldn't talk to or approach House at the end, and that House thinks he has earned Wilson's hatred, makes me think that anger is at least part of it. I guess we'll find out Sept 16 - that's what Fox is saying is the season premiere date.

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