bironic: Neil Perry gazing out a window at night (Default)
bironic ([personal profile] bironic) wrote2007-10-23 10:31 pm

House 4.4, "Guardian Angels"

Okay, seems I can't skip a week after all.

I really enjoyed tonight's episode. Even with only one Wilson scene (still—lavender tie! House crashing on his couch! many references from many characters to the fact that they are a strange sort of best friends!), even with the misleading preview/few minutes of show in which I, like the patient and the fellows, thought we were dealing with the ghost of House's grandfather (thank you anyway, Wilson, for asking something along the lines of, "What's with your sudden obsession with the afterlife?"), I thought it was an engaging hour of TV. There were psychological underpinnings in the (refreshingly coherent) diagnostic process and treatment, a pretty cool final diagnosis, intriguing symptoms along the way, a nifty visual effect with the necklaces blending together, a thrilling-scary-hot (take your pick) teaser with an assault on a pretty girl, and fun interactions between and among the fellows. The ex-fellows got their own meaty subplots, and it's beginning to become apparent how each of them may slot into the episodes; Cameron the case-provider and House-provoker, Chase the jaded technical assistant, Foreman the seasoned antagonist. Cameron looked cute in her scrubs-with-sweats-underneath and really seemed like she was having fun taunting House now that she didn't have to worry as much about being punished for it. It makes me sad, though, to see her once again taking on a role that traditionally belongs to Wilson (the lunch-paying, not the straw-sharing; although... :) ).

I felt bad for Foreman not being able to find another position, and suspect that he'd have had more luck if he'd looked longer. After all, House went through four positions before Cuddy took him in, which suggests that three of them hired him after he was fired for pulling stunts worse than Foreman's. Maybe if Foreman had one of the greatest medical minds of our generation, as the pediatrician (?) affirmed, more potential employers would be willing to overlook his behavior. You can be arrogant and a risk-taker, but you have to have the consistent brilliance to back it up.

I'm sorry to see Asexual Messenger Boy go, but he did get to play doctor the way he'd been yearning to all those years, and he's grateful for it, and House knows that; heck, that's why he let him keep competing: let the man live his dream for a few weeks. I hope he gets to come back some day.

I was surprised the religion/molestation connection was dropped, especially following the patient's initial hallucination of being sexually assaulted and the attention paid to what happened when the patient was young (trauma could have been some kind of factor).

On a fanficcish note, I got a kick out of House playing that "Surgeon" game after he played "Operation" with Wilson in one of the Aftershocks chapters.

ETA: Also, a follow-up thought on 4.3: In the same vein as what Jacobs and Shore said in their DVD commentary for "Half-Wit" about the House-Wilson pizza scene being important because it signified that Wilson realized that House wanted to get better, I think that the whole fiasco with the knife and the electrical socket was important* because it showed that some part of House wants to believe there's an afterlife. That would be progress ("progress") from his comfortably atheistic self of yesteryear (e.g. "Damned If You Do").

*To the writers and producers, at least; even with this justification for its existence, I still have several problems with the way the show has been treating its House-searches-for-meaning theme, including lack of finesse and the fact that a character's atheism can't be left well enough alone.

And that's all there's time for. See you next week....

[identity profile] purridot.livejournal.com 2007-10-24 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
Hi! Hope you're having a nice trip!

I too was very sorry to see Cameron not only replacing Wilson in the cafeteria, but even asking how Wilson would react to House in that situation. And her character has changed *again*. Now she's bouncy! Well, that might have something to do with *not* working for House, I suppose.

I miss the old guy. I think they could have slotted him in. House's personal janitor whom he asks for a consult?
ext_25882: (Lascaux Bull)

[identity profile] nightdog-barks.livejournal.com 2007-10-24 02:45 am (UTC)(link)
I enjoyed this episode a whole lot more than I thought I would -- this time I was actually somewhat interested in the pseudo-ducklings.

I was surprised the religion/molestation connection was dropped ...

*nods*

I thought there were at least two dropped plotholes/bunnies -- just who was Walter, if he wasn't House's grandfather?

And yay (I have to say it) for ergotamine!

Hee!

[identity profile] blackmare.livejournal.com 2007-10-24 05:30 am (UTC)(link)
What? religion/molestation connection??

*scratches head*

I must have missed that somehow.

As for leaving House's atheism alone, why should they? House routinely attacks the faith of others, making them question themselves. What's wrong with seeing House question his own beliefs as well? It feels right to me that he would.

I'll agree with you, however, that I often dislike the way they go about it.

Overall I really enjoyed this episode, though. Cuddy in particular. I just missed Wilson and was irritated at the notion of Cameron slipping into Wilson's usual place. Hopefully that won't be a trend.

[identity profile] elynittria.livejournal.com 2007-10-24 02:48 am (UTC)(link)
Ditto to what you and [livejournal.com profile] purridot said about Cameron replacing Wilson. I hope that the addition of new fellow along with the continuing presence of the old team doesn't mean that Wilson's screen time is going to be seriously diminished this season.

I'm not fond of Cameron's new personality. It's just so radically different from the last three seasons that I don't find it very believable.

[identity profile] dangomango.livejournal.com 2007-10-24 08:38 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not fond of Cameron's new personality. It's just so radically different from the last three seasons that I don't find it very believable. Heh. The poor girl's had so many personalities I don't think I find her character believeable sometimes.
ext_7448: (house OT3)

[identity profile] ahab99.livejournal.com 2007-10-24 03:16 am (UTC)(link)
I found it very engaging too! It didn't have the bad patches that made much of last week's episode hard for me to watch, though I didn't enjoy seeing Foreman come crawling back given how I had a hard time believing that every single doctor in the entire country wouldn't hire him because of one incident. I feel like Cameron and Chase have legitimate reasons to still be around and be involved even though they no longer work for House; I fear that next week I'll spend most of the episode feeling like Foreman has been shoehorned in for no good reason.

But! My question was: what was that line of Bosley's about talking to Wilson supposed to me? I interpreted it as a confirmation that House thinks about Wilson and spending time with him, but I'm not quite clear on what the show meant it to be...

[identity profile] deelaundry.livejournal.com 2007-10-24 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
I think the show was trying to say that Bosley was so like House that if he wanted to hang out, he should call Wilson and hang out with him, the way House would. That's what I thought, anyway. I really, really hope they bring Bosley back a few times over the season. He can shake the other doctors out of the attitude of "I'm a doctor therefore I know better than anyone else" mode they sometimes exhibit.

[identity profile] pun.livejournal.com 2007-10-24 05:26 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, I didn't take it that way at all, although that's an interesting take on it. I just figured it meant that a) Wilson knows House's schedule, and b) House isn't good about responding to attempts to communicate with him, so the best way to get in touch with him is through Wilson.

I can't really see House as being particularly willing to share Wilson, even with his alter ego.