
(S03E03) In the third episode of this third season of House, we'd been shown in previews that it would be one of the more "controversial" episodes of the series, or at least of this year's batch of shows. As it turns out, it definitely fit that bill, though the controversy wasn't as plain as day as what the advertisements would have us believe. This time around, House and his team are given a patient who has been doing a number of medical tests and experiments on rats, who had recently started coughing during a dissection of one of his "patients," passed out, and had one of his rats start biting his lip while he was out cold. As it turns out, this doctor was fairly well-known within the medical community for a number of his "experiments" in the past, including a number on humans, namely babies.
Faced with the medical dilemma of a patient who knows what he is talking about and doesn't want to suffer through whatever pain he is in for, the team must do what they always do, choose whether or not to treat the patient for his pain, or attempt to cure what ails him, even if it is against said patient's wishes.
It's definitely been something we've discussed here before, about how sometimes this show is so much more about what isn't necessarily "shown" on the screen as far as video goes, but about what is said between the lines, or almost what's implied. If there's something seen in a thread this season, it's that what's going inside a few of the characters - House, Cameron, and Cuddy - is what's driving the stories. Cuddy regrets her keeping something from House, House is torn between truly being "healed" and the addiction he clearly has to pharmaceuticals, and Cameron isn't sure what she wants both in her personal and professional life.
As we quickly learned, House wasn't being quite so forthcoming when he was to "put out" his patient, Ezra Powell (Joel Grey). He was looking to have his team leave the room not so he could get away with anything, but more so that they wouldn't have to feel associated with what he was doing. Sure, they were making a conscious decision to leave the room and let their boss do what he wanted, but that wasn't all that was going on. As the medical tests continued on during this week's show, it almost seemed like they weren't necessary. Not that we were so sure that House was correct in his diagnosis of what was making Powell so sick, but we saw a bit of Cameron's feelings come out after a teenage girl was enamored with House's actions during his clinic hours, when he easily diagnosed her father. It's pretty clear that while she might not actively be interested in House, she is definitely interested in not seeing him with someone else, especially a 17-year old girl.
Also present this week was House's cane, that he pulled out of the closet last week as the show began to close, which caused a big stir with his colleagues. Is he really "back" as the same old House as he used to be, and does he really need the cane to walk, or is there some sort of phantom pain going on that he is more comfortable dealing with, rather than just handling the fact that he'll feel good 90% of the time and will experience pain here and there? I'm not sure we'll ever get an answer, but we will probably have something to learn from what Cuddy appears to be hiding, because it can't just be guilt at this point. Pregnancy, I'm thinking no, but you never know. If anyone might be able to spot pregnancy a mile away, it'd be the wonder doctor, right?
Once the results all become clear, the team has no choice but to tell Powell that his case is terminal, and he won't be making it much longer. And that's when it all becomes clear. Ezra Powell is heaving a bit in his bed as he lives in last moments on earth, House is leaving the hospital, and Cameron is seemingly stressed out in the locker room. As House makes his way back into work the next morning, he's greeted not only by a calendar with a date six months off when his clinic patient's thong-showing daughter will be legal, but Cuddy wondering if he knew anything about Powell dying the previous night. After seeing Powell cleaned up by a nurse and his eyes closed, we see House giving Cameron a pat on the shoulder, as she is openly upset sitting in a large room on the campus, leaving us no choice but to know what happened here. Now, whether or not she did what she did because she was upset with what Ezra Powell stood for or the fact that she reached a point where she could relate, we may never know. But it's definitely clear as a bell that the wishy-washy-ness that she had shown for the first few weeks of this season is gone, perhaps forever.















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-20-2006 @ 8:54AM
Lacey said...
This show never ceases to amaze me.
I would also like to say that i really like the "new" Chase. The change started about mid-way though last season, but has really showed this season. He stands up for House more, he's quick to take his side, which is the EXACT opposite of how he used to be (especially first season, during the Vogler (i don't know if i spelled that right) episodes).
I like it, he's a lot less annoying to me than he was before.
And Cameron, she was quite Fiesty this episode, she had a couple of good lines.
And there was a big lack of Wilson in this episode (I think he was in like one scene, which is dissapointing, he's my favotrite (Next to House of course).
Can't wait until next week. lol, House gets an underage stalker. Awesome.
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9-20-2006 @ 10:12AM
Karen said...
I think Cameron was sitting in a pew in the hospital chapel when House found her, tear-streaked, at the end.
Great episode.
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9-20-2006 @ 10:28AM
Chris W said...
I like House... a lot. I watch it every week. I think highly of it for it's acting, dialogue, and tone. However, I was afraid they wouldn't be able to tackle this week's subject manner seriously enough.
I was wrong. What a twist on the debate; instead of taking a position, really blurring the lines.
Mercy vs. murder: did Cameron kill the guy because she hated what he did, or did she come around and think even he shouldn't suffer if he didn't want to? It's not clear. Either way, she's messed up about it and I guess it comes down to how it's perceived by her and those around her... It's all perspective, because at the end of the day the act (of inducing death) remains the same. THAT's powerful.
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9-20-2006 @ 3:17PM
ROMEO said...
HOUSE IS THE BEST SHOW ON TV ITS REAL TV. AND VICODIN ES IS NOT A STRONG DRUG IVE HAD CHRONIC PAIN 4 15 YEARS AND IT DID 0 FOR ME KEEP EATIN HOUSE.
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9-20-2006 @ 4:55PM
Angi said...
I loved it. It was so intense and powerful and I think it tackled the issue very well.
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10-11-2006 @ 7:38PM
DeAnn said...
I've watched House from the start, initially because I've been a fan of Hugh Laurie for 20 years, since watching him in the Bertie and Jeeves stories and in various Blackadder series with the wierd and disgusting Rowan Atkinson, and the glorious, wonderful Stephen Fry. Hugh is a fantastic actor, and after seeing him on Ellen Degeneres's show and the last 15 minutes of the Actors Studio, I feel even more enamored of his dramatic and comedic prowess. House has been a great vehicle for Hugh, and has introduced us to some other fascinating characters in the other doctors and administrators. Though I am not a huge fan of Robert Sean Leonard, I have to say he's doing a stellar job as Wilson, the Watson to Hugh's Holmes. And though I have a real problem with anorexic actresses, Cameron is the conscience of the show, and is doing a fine job of it. Jessie, the blonde doctor isn't my cup of tea at all, but he's been growing as a character and becoming more interesting as Carter. And Forman is hot, not because he's good looking, but because he has been talking back to House for a long time now, and he's a strong actor as well. The woman who plays Cuddy is so annoying, I have had trouble watching her, and I've been waiting for House to smack her around for being such a witch. But now that she is wanting to get pregnant, I have a feeling House will find a way to make sure he's the one who knocks her up. The writing on this show is great, and not all that unrealistic. I worked in hospitals and in nursing homes and hospice for 10 years, and I encountered more than a few doctors who were worse than House in being arrogant and cruel. My current gastroenterologist is the best in the state, but he's also a real SOB, and has been his whole career. He's got no more bedside manner than House does, but he doesn't like people, he just likes figuring out how to heal them.
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