TV Review: House - "97 Seconds" - Page 2

Part of: Welcome to the End of the Thought Process: House M.D.

What we do see, however, is House at his most frustrated point of the season thus far. I think he has tired of the game; tired of the competition; tired of the candidates. He is annoyed when he tells them to take off the numbers, and has little patience for the candidates right from the start. The teams are divided (more or less by gender) and the game is afoot. Meanwhile, House retreats to the clinic to do his hours.

The clinic patient draws a knife, taking House by surprise, but not by more surprise than he is taken a moment later, as the patient, who is quite banged up, proceeds to the nearest outlet and jams the knife into it. House is momentarily stunned witnessing this bizarre act. Probably in the moment before, he was wondering if once again he was going to be attacked by a patient. House calls for a crash cart and revives the electrocution victim, but, as is clear from the subsequent scenes with both Cuddy (who he visits first) and Wilson, he is very preoccupied with the actions of the clinic patient. He remains preoccupied with them throughout the remainder of the episode until, he, himself, replicates the act.

Until he speaks with the now-conscious clinic patient, he wonders — puzzles — as to why anyone would stick a metal object in a live outlet. Is it attempted suicide? Or a suicidal gesture — an attempt to get attention for his problems? Suicide would be easier with a gun. Electrocution is not an easy way out. It is clear that House cannot quite fathom why anyone would do this irrational thing.

Upon speaking to the patient, House learns that the guy is not trying to kill himself, but trying to duplicate the sensations he experienced when, a week earlier, he was badly injured in a car crash. “The paramedics told me I was technically dead for 97 seconds. They were the best 97 seconds of my life,” he tells House. He describes, though not in detail, that there is “something” out there. Something beyond living. On the “other side.” House is completely drawn in, listening, caught up in the guy’s words. Coming back to himself, however, House retorts that (as he described in "Three Stories") that all the guy experienced was the release of serotonin and endorphins — chemical reactions as the brain begins to shut down.

One has to believe that House has spent a great deal of time over the past 10 years (maybe more of that time early in this 10-year period) researching and thinking about his own experiences. How can he explain his experiences described in "Three Stories"? His “hallucinations” in "No Reason"? We can be certain that House, the inveterate researcher of all things, has considered every angle before placing them all within his own worldview.

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Article Author: Barbara Barnett

Follow Barbara on Twitter. Barbara Barnett grew up on politics and pop culture. Her professional life has been eclectic, because her left brain doesn't know what her right brain really wants. Her real passions are writing, music, reading--and House.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Ann

    Oct 18, 2007 at 7:56 pm

    Thanks, Barbara. I loved your review and look forward to what you'll have to say about future episodes of House. What are your thoughts about the first two episodes?

  • 2 - Barbara Barnett

    Oct 18, 2007 at 8:46 pm

    My first comment! Thanks Ann. Glad you liked my review. My earlier reviews are housed (as it were) at my LJ. I've posted reviews for the first two seasons there as well as reviews for the entire third season and some of the first season and second seasons as well.

  • 3 - HouseFan

    Oct 19, 2007 at 1:32 pm

    Nice commentary, makes me look forward to reading your thoughts on more episodes.

    As the seasons have progressed and we've learned more about this guy House, and perhaps because of the episode involving the autistic boy, it seems to me that House is living with Aspergers as many adults now do without having a pinpoint explaination of why they are how they are.

    It's just my opinion, and hopefully this show will last a few more seasons and we'll learn more about House's past. Remember, it's been said that he was the way he is before his leg problem.

  • 4 - Barbara Barnett

    Oct 19, 2007 at 1:48 pm

    Thanks, House Fan. The question of House and Aspergers comes up all the time in the various fan forums. Does he have it? The show played with notion in the Season 3 episode "Lines in the Sand," in which the patient was an autistic child. House was seemingly fixated on his office carpeting in the aftermath of his near-fatal shooting at the end of Season 2. Wilson went to Cuddy with the idea that maybe House had Aspergers syndrome. Cuddy disagreed. I'm not sure one way or the other (I don't even play a psychologist on TV :)). The main character in the BBC show Wire in the Blood (who is a psychologist, actually) was diagnosed with Aspergers and it is part of the show's canon. Tony (the main character) has a lot in common with House, so... I do think it's going to be something that will be debated by fans until the series is over the issue is addressed head-on. But it's an interesting idea.

  • 5 - Terri

    Oct 19, 2007 at 2:16 pm

    I loved your in depth review and agree wholeheartedly with it. When I consider what the afterlife would be for House if you don't mind indulging me, I would like to quote a few lines from my own fanfic that deals with just that. AFter House dies mysteriously he has a conversation with 'God', or whatever supreme being you wish to consider....
    ____________________________________________________

    "He felt remarkably well. So well in fact that he began to feel a touch of anger at not having felt this way in life.

    “So a person has to die to feel alive?” he muttered to himself shaking his head in the process. “Where am I anyway?” the thought was immediately met with a response.

    "You are were you always expected to be. This is your idea of the afterlife Greg. It is what you always expected to find."

    “But there is nothing here!” he yelled out to his invisible companions.

    "Exactly"

    The realization hit him hard. He understood what they meant. He didn’t believe in an afterlife so consequently there was no pearly gates, no tunnel of light, no ‘anything.’ Essentially he got exactly what he wanted.

    “So this is hell then?” he asked out loud to his invisible and growingly annoying companion. Almost before the question left his lips an answer shot back.

    "No, for you this is heaven."

    House pondered that for a moment, trying to grasp its meaning.

    "All your life you’ve believed that there is nothing after you die. And all your life you have pushed people away in an effort to be alone. Hell for you would have been pearly gates, overwhelming joy and long lost friends here to greet you. If that is what you had found it would have meant that you were wrong and you couldn’t bear that, could you? That would have been hell.

    Gregory, this is all you have ever dreamed of and the best you could hope for. Aren’t you taking pleasure in your faultless reasoning?"
    ___________________________________________________

    I don't think House would be happy if there was an afterlife simply because he would be proven wrong.

    Terri

  • 6 - sdemar

    Oct 19, 2007 at 9:37 pm

    I have had the pleasure of reading your commentaries over the past few years, and have always felt that you truly understand the nature of this very complex man called House. I look forward to visiting here and commenting on your reviews.

  • 7 - Barbara Barnett

    Oct 20, 2007 at 9:50 am

    Thanks Terri and Sdemar for your lovely and welcoming comments. Terri, I'm not sure what House may or may not have seen this time, or after his infarction as described in Three Stories. He said he chooses to see his experience as the brain shutting down, so as not to believe that life (his life--as harsh as it's been, and with his disability--and maybe even his addiction issues) is not simply "a test." I liked the clip from your story. Thanks for sharing it.

    barbara

  • 8 - HouseFan

    Oct 21, 2007 at 3:04 pm

    Barbara,

    I wasn't aware of debates about whether House is living with Asperger's, that's just what seems to explain the character more than anything else if you look at the progression of the character over the 3 seasons and even the few episodes into this 4th one. I'm not a psychologist or anything of the sort, nor do I watch Wire in the Blood (reminds me of all the CSI and Law & Order shows, which are all the same to me). I like Waking the Dead and Cracker more, better characters and stories.

    The thing is that even though Cuddy disagreed with Wilson at that time regarding House's fixation on the carpet, it's not just about the carpet, it's much more than that. It's House's relationships with people in general, not just women problems. It's that Cuddy puts up with him because he's brilliant at the diagnostics. It's that Wilson is his friend because Wilson tolerates him. In the one with Larroquete (apologies for the wrong spelling there) House talked about why he wanted to be a doctor, and if he was telling the truth that's another clue among many. The drug use itself, if he was an addict before his leg problem, could be connected since the first resort most doctors take is to suggest drugging up anyone who seems "different" socially. For example, if someone doesn't enjoy large crowds of people, a doctor tells them that they need antidepressants or something similar to make them "feel good." Not liking large crowds of people cannot be carelessly equated to being depressed. It's complicated, as is the House character.

    As I stated, it's just my opinion at this point in the run of the show. It could make for interesting storylines if the writers/producers went more into House's past. Just hopefully in a more Three Stories way than a cheesy TV drama way.

  • 9 - Barbara Barnett

    Oct 21, 2007 at 3:24 pm

    HouseFan,

    I agree a storyline that delved into the idea of Aspergers would be very interesting. I don't know enough about autism or the Aspergers variety of autism to say for certain. I do know that House has many of the traits of people with this type of autism. But some things do not seem to fit. Several people I've talked with who have AS see themselves in the character of House; but some have said that he doesn't fit enough of the criteria.

    A webpage that has several sets of diagnostic criteria for Aspergers syndrome can be found here.

  • 10 - HouseFan

    Oct 21, 2007 at 3:42 pm

    Barbara,

    Thanks for the website link, and for your comments. Sorry mine were so long, but it is an interesting area to debate for the House character. I think it would make for a great storyline. Possibly a role for Stephen Fry as Autism/Aspergers expert from England who just happens to be doing work at Princeton Plainsboro?

  • 11 - sassydew

    Oct 21, 2007 at 8:54 pm

    I always enjoy your thoughtful reviews and this one is no exception! I'm delighted to see that they will now be posted here at blogcritics! :)

  • 12 - Barbara Barnett

    Oct 21, 2007 at 9:55 pm

    Hi Sassydew,

    So glad that you found me over here ;) I'm looking forward posting regular reviews and commentary on the show. Enjoy.

    Barbara

  • 13 - hl_lover

    Oct 21, 2007 at 11:56 pm

    Sasmom,
    Congrats on an excellent review of an excellent episode of "House".

    I would lean in the same direction as yourself concerning House and Asperger's. His antisocial behavior seems too intentional and can be turned off at will. But I can see how the idea could be entertained that he carries this diagnosis.
    Anyone who cultivates the aura of being a jerk and prides himself on it (outwardly) would not be in this subclass of autism.

  • 14 - Nancy

    Oct 22, 2007 at 2:42 am

    I'm so glad you admitted outloud that you don't like Foreman. I don't like him either. I wish he would leave the show. This is not a personal attack against the actor, just the character.

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