Original Air Date: 17 October 2011
Thirteen: House...
House: I can work with people who've got nowhere else to go. People who've got something to prove. People who just get off on weird cases. but I can't work with someone whose here so she doesn't have to feel bad.
Thirteen: You're trying to save me.
House: Yes. I think that little of you and that much of me.
Speaking of Chase, when are he and Taub going to return? There's way too much estrogen even for me and I'm not crazy about either Adams or Park, though their charity war was funny in this episode. They are certainly learning from their boss on how to manipulate people, despite House doing most of the manipulation.
To be honest, Wentworth Miller's presence went unnoticed for the most part (maybe because I don't understand all the fuss about him nor have I ever watched Prison Break), and the case was not original. I remember at least two House episodes that looked at extreme altruism as a symptom of a disease. There weren't even extreme things that House did to solve this one, as dosing the patient up to force a symptom has been done numerous times. It seems that he is playing safer than ever - maybe because he doesn't want to go back to jail, despite his belief that everyone should pay for their mistakes. In the end, I was extremely surprised that Wilson didn't give him crap about basically being the reason why his patient had died, but maybe it was because he realized that his own insistence to have Benjamin donate his kidney was selfish.
What's also clear is that Foreman is not Cuddy. I've been pretty vocal in saying I don't miss her, but what I should say is that I don't miss Cuddy as a romantic interest for House in the way that it's been in the last season. As an administrator and as the one responsible to keep House in check, she was the more entertaining character.
The episode was mainly an essay on ethics. "Hypothetical, if I'm offered oral sex from a sexaholic, do I have to decline? Saying no will cause both of us pain. Saying yes will cause both of us pleasure." That was one of House's typical analogies when faced with an ethical dilemma. As Wilson puts it, "you can't take sex from a sexaholic. You can't give booze to an alcoholic, and you can't take this guy's money." When it comes about patients, one cannot take advantage of their condition for their personal gain. One might argue that House was not thinking of himself and that finding the money to fund his department and hire back his team is actually in the interest of the hospital. But we know better that that. So, how will Chase and Taub return now?
While the episode was nor overly exciting, it had its highlights (Thirteen checking on Benjamin to see if he really was crazy is just one of those) and I find this season to go in the right direction, definitely a better one than what I had expected after the way things ended last May. The new characters still need time to really fit in, but things are looking bright.[H]ouse 8x02: Transplant Back to Season 8