Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Lun 17 Mai - 8:05
Une autre BA... Le reste, demain
Tiff Admin
Messages : 1507 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009 Age : 38 Localisation : Devant mon clavier
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mar 18 Mai - 4:03
les meilleures 5 minutes de la terre !
Delph Plateau de tournage
Messages : 444 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mar 18 Mai - 6:18
Et comment je résiste pour ne pas y aller direct après ça ?!!
Delph Plateau de tournage
Messages : 444 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mar 18 Mai - 6:53
OH MY GOD !!!!! Comme tu dis "les meilleures 5 minutes de la terre"
Edit :
Souris béatement depuis une heure ...
Note de l'épisode sans les 5 dernières minutes = 9/10. Un bon drame, intense. J'ai pas capté le cas dont l'équipe s'occupe. Dommage que 13 parte. Sinon j'ai adoré. RAS sur la réalisation mais l'histoire est bien menée (comme d'hab). L'histoire .... OMG. J'ai vraiment eu l'impression qu'il s'agissait de l'épisode "conclusion" des 3 dernières années histoire de passer à autre chose l'année prochaine ... retour sur un accident, point final au Huddy, on parle de nouveau de la jambe, il en oublie même sa canne à la fin.
Le Huddy pendant l'épisode. Que de mots durs (chose énorme j'étais presque bilingue ce matin mdr) !! Cuddy veut se protéger de lui mais quand elle l'entend parler à la patiente à la fin, on voit qu'elle est perturbée et que du coup elle est moins à l'aise avec ses décisions, son "movin'on". Et ce regard échangé lorsqu'il ferme les portes de l'ambulance, les portes de leur "presque" histoire". J'en étais malade pour lui.
Note de l'épisode avec les 5 dernières minutes : 100/10. Non je n'ai pas dérapé sur le 0 Très belle scène. Je veux juste en profiter encore et encore sans me demander où est le truc qui cloche (merci traumatisme de la saison 5). J'aime qu'elle soit venue l'aider sans qu'il lui demande. J'aime que cette scène se passe chez lui, dans sa salle de bain. J'aime son reflet dans le miroir avec cette marque rouge sur la joue comme dans le 524. J'aime que la vicodin ait été de retour qq secondes. J'aime que Cuddy ne soit pas habillée en doyenne "stricte" mais en doc comme au temps du Michigan. J'aime qu'elle lui dise qu'elle l'aime, même si elle ne le voudrait pas mais qu'elle ne peut pas s'en empêcher (au moins elle est honnête). J'aime qu'il lui demande enfin de l'aide pour se lever. J'aime comme il ose à peine l'embrasser de peur que ce ne soit pas la réalité. J'aime comme il jette les comprimés pour prendre la main de Cuddy. J'aime comme il sourit. J'aime leurs doigts entrelacés.
Mention spéciale à HL encore une fois et à ses yeux si transparents à la fin.
Dernière édition par Delph le Mar 18 Mai - 8:42, édité 7 fois
Delph Plateau de tournage
Messages : 444 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mar 18 Mai - 7:05
Attention à vos petits coeurs ... les 5 dernière minutes
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mar 18 Mai - 13:08
MERCI
Et là, tout ce que je peux dire c'est......... OMFG............... Help me !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Reportage Behind the scene:
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mar 18 Mai - 15:08
'House' exclusive: Huddy fans -- your time has come!
SPOILER ALERT: If you have yet to watch tonight’s House finale, stop reading now. I repeat, if you have yet to watch tonight’s House finale, stop reading now. For the last time, if you have yet to watch tonight’s House finale, stop reading now. Everyone else, onward and downward…
Fi. Na. Lly. House went there. When last night’s season finale ended in a Huddy liplock — a real one this time, it bears mentioning! — it seemed as though Dr. Crankypants and Cuddy at last were going to give a relationship the ol’ college try. But looks, as we’ve learned the hard way, can be deceiving. Is the Fox hit just messing with our emotions again? To find out, I rang up exec producer Katie Jacobs, who wasn’t just forthcoming with the scoop, she was pretty free with the kinda scoop that’s all but guaranteed to blow your mind.
That was one hell of a final scene. What should we take away from it? KATIE JACOBS: This is real and something that they are going to try. It’s something they stayed away from for a long period of time because it’s dangerous and the consequences could be severe. But now they’re going to give it a try.
They’re going to make a go of a relationship? JACOBS: Absolutely. Yes.
What are we led to believe happened after the screen faded to black? JACOBS: That’s exactly the conversation we had. Does the audience want us to pick up two or three months later? Or is the audience interested in us [picking up right where we left off]? And it’s really dependent on the narrative. Last year when House checked himself into the psychiatric hospital, I felt like it wouldn’t be good enough for the audience justto see him come out the other end and [return] to Princeton Plainsboro. Even though they knew he would [eventually] return there, I wanted everybody to see the moment after.
So which scenario will you choose this time around? JACOBS: Put it this way… I’m certainly in the camp of not wanting to miss much after the fade to black. Because the truth is the challenges that are ahead for them are the things that kept them apart to begin with. It’s not chemistry or the spark. It’s “How are we going to deal with this? We’re going to be together. What does that look like?” Cuddy is his superior at the hospital. And she’s a mother. Those are the kind of things we’re going to have fun with.
I could be wrong but I think Huddy fans want to see a real, non-hallucinatory sex scene. JACOBS: I get it. We’re in the process of figuring all that out right now, so I don’t have an answer. But this isn’t just about the [season premiere]. This isn’t something that will work or fail in just one episode. We’re going to attempt to make a true exploration of this relationship.
Were you on set when that last scene was shot? JACOBS: Yes. It was amazing. Our prop guy, Eddie, had tears in his eyes. You never know how people are going to react to the story, but seeing Eddie with tears in his eyes and happy with the fact that House and Cuddy were finally going to give it a try was very satisfying.
Source: Ausiello
ELo Modérateur
Messages : 3565 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009 Age : 48 Localisation : Dans la Lune...
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mar 18 Mai - 15:55
Delphine, que ce soit officiel, JE T'AIME
Delph Plateau de tournage
Messages : 444 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mar 18 Mai - 19:32
A ton service
Il parle du SF au début.
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mer 19 Mai - 13:32
Oh j'aime !!! Merciiii Delph, je t'aime aussi
Interview de Greg Yaitanes sur le final
Source: LJ marabsas
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mer 19 Mai - 13:42
BuddyTV Intense Huddy Comparison
'House' Fan Columnist: Huddy is Real This Time! Tuesday, May 18, 2010 Lisa Palmer Contributing Writer, BuddyTV
After watching tonight's epic season finale of House, "Help Me," I now have a much higher appreciation of season six on the whole. This whole season, I've felt like there's been something missing. Something has been disjointed. I didn't know where it was going. I didn't know where House was in the grand scheme of things. Now I know.
Cuddy was House's end game. It was a twisted path, but we're finally there. With the exceptional use of non-chronological order, we're given a little hint of where we're going to end up. House. With vicodin in hand. Broken glass. And in his bathroom. Sound familiar? It did to me. If nothing else, the show House is brilliant in the way it is able to hearken back to old scenes, old lines, and old themes. With that, I wanted to review this episode using parallels to discuss how amazing this finale was.
House's leg:
House's leg has been a major issue throughout the entire series. In "Three Stories" we get the history of House's leg pain and how his rights as a patient were questioned when the woman he loved went behind his back with Cuddy to save his life, but cause him chronic pain and unbeknownst to them, chronic misery. In "Help Me," we're given a patient whose leg is being crushed by the weight of a collapsed building. In the beginning, House is uninterested. Easy case. Reminder of old leg pain.
Then, his patient needs him. In fact, she says, "I'm sorry I needed you." It's what he wishes so many people in his life would say. That one sentence bought Hannah, the patient, some time with House. An honest House. And one that's not sure he believes in karma, but it seems he would like to believe in justice. Keep in mind this is before Cuddy blows his world apart.
After his fight with Cuddy, he convinces his patient to amputate, citing his own unhappiness and bad decision making as reasons to save her life. This is all in front of Cuddy, who has probably assumed he has resented her for her part in his leg surgery and has just blown his world apart screaming at him. "It's just a leg." Remember Stacy saying that to House in "Three Stories?" House repeats this to his patient, now realizing how different his life could have been had he understood those words. Her amputation was rough, raw, painful, but in the end, when Hannah saw her husband, House knew he had made the right choice.
When she died, House questioned. Was it really for the best? Where's her good karma? Which brings me to my next parallel: karma.
Karma:
Karma has been explored a few times in this season. In "Instant Karma" we were left wondering if House was starting to believe that if he actually did good, it would come back to him. He thought it was ridiculous to rationalize away science, but in the episode "The Choice," we came back to the idea that karma is something House might believe exists because where there is karma, there is justice.
I love that Hannah questioned House about karma and that House has been trying to be a better man. For a year he's tried with no reward. It's no wonder he's defeated. When Cuddy emotionally beats him, she's echoing his own worst fears. And where, House asks, is the karma in that? What did he do to deserve it?
Important patient deaths and Thirteen's Illness:
In season four's finale, "Wilson's Heart," we find out Thirteen has Huntington's. Last season, we saw Thirteen go through clinical trials and her illness was addressed. This season, there has been nary a mention on how she's doing until "Help Me" and her time off? Resignation? It's unclear who's going to help Thirteen. I vote Chase in season seven.
Also in season four, we got the death of Amber, arguably one of House's most important patients. With her death, even though there was nothing he could do, the beginning of his self destruction began. Then Hannah dies, even with House doing everything he could. It's no wonder he was ready to go back on vicodin. And to boot, the person who caused the crane collapse, with a more difficult diagnosis lived. Where's the justice in that?
Cuddy saving House:
House has been saved by Cuddy before. Countless times. In "Words and Deeds," she lied for him on the stand and kept him out of jail. In "House's Head," Cuddy gives him CPR and brings him back to life. In "Babies and Bathwater," Cuddy saves House's job from Vogler and loses one hundred million dollars for the hospital. And finally, last season, House was saved by Cuddy who helped him detox, slept with him, and accepted him. But it was all a delusion.
So what now? House is barely hanging on. He's getting drunk every night. Wilson has asked him to move out. He's done with therapy. By process of elimination, all we've got left is her. And he knows it. And she knows it. When she tells House she's engaged, he's clearly devastated.
In last week's episode "Baggage," Nolan said this regarding his patient: "The thing that caused the change is gone. Therefore the change itself is gone." While House's main goal was to be happy, Cuddy was the key to that happiness. Now that Cuddy isn't an option, what is House's motivation to stay sober and try being happy? Cuddy is House's last line of defense. While he can say anything to Wilson, Cuddy is the one that has repeatedly saved him and he needs her.
This is why, to me, the scenes where she tells House he has nothing, he makes everyone miserable, and he's alone made me cry and scream at my television. Why? Why would she do this? Why, in "Ignorance is Bliss" did she tear him down so well, hurting him in ways she could only be capable of?
This season is about self-preservation. She had to keep him away. Her love for him was so strong and she knew once she gave into it, if he hurt her, it was over. It was unsafe for her to put herself at risk and by proxy, her daughter. Meanwhile House was doing what he needed to do to maintain his drug-free lifestyle and that included pursuing her. Unfortunately, their timing, as always, was off.
By the end of tonight's episode, I was cringing. I knew he was going to take it. There's no way she was going to swoop in and save him the way he had imagined. And it wasn't. He asks her at first if she's going to take the drugs from him just as it had happened in his hallucination. And she doesn't.
What she does is so much better. Huddies around the world: did you scream as loudly as I did? I literally couldn't have a imagined a more beautifully written scene. Was it purposeful that House had to break a mirror, throwing superstition and the idea of luck out the window to get to his pills? Was it also purposeful that this scene took place in the bathroom, where he imagined his detox the year before?
Cuddy's stuck on House. She loves him. And we finally got the ending that House and we as an audience deserve. And we can hardly believe our good karma. Goodbye man-child! Bring on season seven!
Come back this Thursday when I give that final Huddy scene the attention it fully deserves.
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mer 19 Mai - 14:19
Photos promos taguées hélas !
Source: Iwathforcuddy
Danacarine Admin
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Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mer 19 Mai - 15:17
May 18, 2010, 4:41 pm Behind the Plot Twists of the ‘House’ Season Finale By GINIA BELLAFANTE
Adam Taylor/Fox Hugh Laurie and Lisa Edelstein in the season finale of “House.”
The sixth season of House (major spoilers ahead) ended on Monday night with some pretty terrific wish fulfillment: Doctors House and Cuddy, who have been tugging at each others’ hearts since the series began, finally got on the road to something real.
The third side of the love triangle, Cuddy’s boyfriend, Lucas — whom House once hired as a private investigator though he now disparages him as the “manchild” — has thankfully been eliminated. What will happen now? At least one double date for House and Cuddy and their friend Wilson and his ex-wife.
In the aftermath of the finale, we asked writers for the show Garret Lerner, Peter Blake and Russel Friend to settle some final questions. Below are selections from the e-mail exchange. Mr. Blake will take questions from readers, as well; please leave them in the comments section.
Q. You have finally satisfied the twisted dreams of legions of female television viewers by getting House and Cuddy together during the last few seconds of the season finale on Monday night. Was there any internal debate about torturing viewers even further and making them wait a whole other season for the relationship to begin? A. GARRETT LERNER We have known for a long time we were eventually going to explore the relationship between House and Cuddy. And while we do relish torturing our viewers, we felt that House had really spent season six working on making himself available for such a relationship and that Cuddy would recognize the change in him. Our exec producer, Katie Jacobs, pointed out that we have ended so many recent seasons on a bleak note, that it would be a refreshing change to end this season on a hopeful one.
Q. House and Cuddy spend most of the episode in a rescue effort at the sight of a very bad accident. They argue about whether or not to amputate the leg of one of the victims. This obviously has a lot of symbolic resonance for House. Did you worry that this might seem a little too, you know, neatly hokey? A. PETER BLAKE Well, our initial idea was a lot more hokey — that the victim was also a misanthropic diagnostician with a drug addiction named Doktor Haüs –- spelled the German way, but with an umlaut.
RUSSEL FRIEND It was actually inspired by real stories we’d read about. Unfortunately these things happen when people get trapped underneath buildings. Rescuers are forced to make life-and-death decisions that often involve amputations. We had a technical adviser from the L.A.F.D. helping us out throughout prep, and production (Capt. Larry Collins), and he told us some incredible stories about his time pulling victims from the rubble in Haiti. We also watched the documentary “Sergio” [about the United Nations special representative who died in an explosion at the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad] — and with “Law & Order” going off the air, there were all these headlines just in need of being ripped from.
Q. When House arrives home bereft at the loss of this patient and the general hideous unfairness of life, he hacks into his bathroom wall to get at a secret stash of Vicodin. When are we supposed to imagine that he built this drug safe deposit box? A. MR. FRIEND: Ah, good question. Well, we’ve imagined for years now that House has various “secret stashes” of Vicodin hidden around his apartment, office, and I guess wherever else you can secretly stash something. However, as astute viewers will point out (and by that of course I mean our show runner, David Shore) at the end of last season House tells Cuddy where all the drugs are hidden and she cleans them out before he heads off for his stint at Mayfield. So, that leaves the question – did he hide this stash sometime during this past season? Or, was it a secret-secret stash that he kept secret from Cuddy? Or was it all hallucination, and he didn’t show Cuddy any secret stash? Now, I guess you’re expecting me to answer that question, but instead I’ll just trail off into silence…
Q. At 8:38 p.m. Cuddy was yelling at House and telling him she didn’t love him and was “done.” It certainly did not seem as though she was going to toss her fiancé, Lucas, to the curb within the remaining 22 minutes of the episode. Walk me through Cuddy’s off-camera thought process and the unseen dialogue between her and Lucas. A. MR. BLAKE Well, the 22 minutes that pass are only screen time. The last scene takes place around dawn, so in reality (or “reality” in quotes) many hours have passed. Not to mention that House and Cuddy getting together is actually six seasons in the making, so hopefully we’d earned it.
MR. LERNER Here’s what we think was going through Cuddy’s mind: she sees House admit something that he’s never admitted before — that the defining moment in his life (to save his leg) was actually the wrong choice. It was the most vulnerable she’d ever seen him, and for the first time, she believes he’s actually capable of change. Greg Yaitanes (who directed the episode) got a great shot of Cuddy’s reaction. So we imagine that after all of this, Cuddy goes home to Lucas and has a wrenching, long conversation with him. She tells him that she’s incredibly sorry to do this to him, but that she’s in love with House; that it’d be wrong to go forward with him.
Q. The final moments of the episode are an obvious echo to last season’s finale. There’s House in his bathroom clutching at a bottle of Vicodin and there’s Cuddy. Only this time, he stays clean and Cuddy’s presence is real rather than hallucinatory. Tell me about the decision to come full circle and end this way. A. MR. FRIEND Wait a minute, you’re wrong — last night’s episode was a just a hallucination.
MR. BLAKE To avoid death threats on the comments threads, let me note that Russ is kidding. The kiss was real. There was some debate about where to play this scene. At one point, we had it take place in House’s living room because we were concerned that the audience would think it was just another hallucination. But Greg felt strongly that the final scene of this season should echo the end of last season, and I think he was right.
Q. How much couples therapy are you going to put House and Cuddy through next season to make it work? A. MR. BLAKE Why would they pay for couples therapy when they have Wilson?
Source: The New York Times
Tiff Admin
Messages : 1507 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009 Age : 38 Localisation : Devant mon clavier
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mer 19 Mai - 16:10
Citation :
Q. How much couples therapy are you going to put House and Cuddy through next season to make it work? A. MR. BLAKE Why would they pay for couples therapy when they have Wilson?
Pauvre wiwi
Delph Plateau de tournage
Messages : 444 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mer 19 Mai - 18:26
Oh j'ai hâte de voir ça
fanHD Porte de la clinique
Messages : 20 Date d'inscription : 15/03/2010 Age : 49 Localisation : paris
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mer 19 Mai - 21:05
en francais ca dit quoi ?? lol
Delph Plateau de tournage
Messages : 444 Date d'inscription : 05/04/2009
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Mer 19 Mai - 22:08
Combien de séances de thérapie de couple est-ce que House et Cuddy vont suivre la saison prochaine ? Pourquoi payer pour une thérapie de couple alors qu'ils ont Wilson !!
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Jeu 20 Mai - 8:26
Les photos promos sans les tags !
Source: LJ house_cuddy
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Jeu 20 Mai - 8:59
House
Adam Taylor/FOX
A Brilliant House Finale by Ileane Rudolph May 18, 2010 11:23 AM EST
This is what House could and should be. The season finale brings back memories of the very best ER episodes, if George Clooney’s doc had more curmudgeon and less heartthrob. The personal and professional come together in an emotional blend that’s just about perfect. Until perhaps, the very end. More on that later.
The intensity hits at the show’s outset; with fractured close-ups of a scraped hand, bloody bandages, broken glass and House breathing heavily.
Eight hours earlier, House limps into the hospital and Cuddy tells him a crane collapsed in Trenton. House gives her the medical book written by her grandfather that he had liberated, signed to Lisa and Lucas. He tells her he knows they’re “going to cohabitate,” thinks she hesitates and gleefully says “Trouble in paradise?”
The collapse site equals hell, a war zone with helicopters, fire trucks, emergency workers and impressive aerial shots. As Cuddy and House and the EMT do triage on the injured, the crane operator who caused the accident becomes the b-side patient of the week. Sent back to Princeton-Plainsboro, Taub, Chase and Foreman, with some bitchy input by phone from House work on the diagnosis. Which takes most of the show. 13 is missing. When she shows up, she says she was at physical therapy, a lie Taub instantly recognizes. She admits she’s not OK, leaves a note on House’s desk and tells Taub that she needs to take a leave.
Following up on his suspicions about Cuddy, House calls Wilson to probe him for gossip about Cuddy. OK, he still wants her.
But down to serious doctoring. House hears tapping in the ruins of a parking gargage, and after crawling through some scary unstable passages, he finds a young married woman named Hannah, Unfortunately, her leg is trapped by untold pounds of concrete and House can’t dislodge her. Terrified she pleads for him to stay, and after he goes above ground to call his team, he comes back down. Afraid and in pain, she tries to make a personal connection. Naturally, he resists, but as her situation worsens, he starts to open up.
He may be trying to save her life, but he hasn’t forgotten about Cuddy and his suspicions that something’s not right. She tells him, she hesitated because she thought the book was an engagement present. What the hey! She and the never seen Lucas are planning to wed and she was clearly afraid to tell House, who immediately jabs at her for not wearing her ring. The news makes him extra-cranky to his team back at the hospital. That means hellish.
But more pressing things than the endless House/Cuddy will they/won’t they await. Hannah can not be rescued unless her pinned leg is amputated. If they wait too long, she’ll get crush syndrome which could stop her heart. Not to mention chances of fire or a gas leak. Hannah begs House not to cut off her leg and he promises. “For some reason that makes me feel better,” she says. She clearly knows he’s God, and thus infallible. When he tries to leave, she has a panic attack and Cuddy, admiring him as she really always does, says “She needs you, House.”
Flashback to House in his apartment with pills in hand.
It’s full out tissue time, when House returns to Hannah., who makes demands that he would normally deflect with bitter sarcasm. Instead we get reveals about him and normal responses from him. She asks him to pray with her, and though he makes clear he’s not a believer, she says neither is she. There is no mocking. When she says she used to think if she did good, she would get good in return, he admits he didn’t believe that until recently. He tried to behave that way, though he’s not sure it worked.
And then disaster: when the beam is finally lifted, the roof collapses. House has to puncture her lung to get her breathing. House goes above ground to Cuddy to get his wound from the collapse bandaged and they argue about whether to amputate Hannah’s leg. “Don’t put her life at risk to get back at me,” she says correctly. “You’re a pathetic narcissist; I don’t love you, just accept it and move on,” she says, adding that she’s tired of making excuses for him and how saving his leg really worked out well for House. Ouch. It looks as if she has taken her life back.
That gets through to him and he tells Hannah they have to amputate her leg. He answers her earlier question about his leg: blood clot, muscle dying and a chunk cut out, then endless pain. “It made me a worse person,” he admits. “Now I’m alone, You don’t want to be like me.” And he seems sincere. Cuddy watches him and her eyes fill with tears. Portent.
In an extraordinarily moving scene, House tells Hannah he has to cut while she’s awake and describes the awful procedure and the awful pain to come. And she screams and screams. But she is finally freed and taken to her waiting husband and the ambulance.
And then tragedy. As House watches over her, and she looks at him with fear and panic, she gets a fat embolism. It is fatal. And awful.
House screams at Foreman who meets the ambulance, “I did everything right! And she died anyway.”
When he gets home, he’s in emotional agony. He looks in his bathroom mirror, sees Hannah’s frightened face and smashes it. In a crevice: Vicodin pills. He takes them out and slides to the floor. And contemplates.
In comes Cuddy. And what’s sure to be a controversial exchange follows. “I ended it. I’m in my new house with my new fiance and all I can think about is you.” When he answers, “I’m the most screwed up person in the world,” she says, “I know. I love you. I can’t help it.” They kiss. He says he didn’t take the Vicodin. Hence, no delusions this time around. Their hands are entwined.
Love it or hate it? Did the ending jump the shark and ruin a terrific episode? Is Cuddy making a godawful mistake? Will House want Cuddy once he has her? What do you think next season will bring for the would be couple?
Source: TV Guide
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Ven 21 Mai - 12:57
'House' Fan Columnist: Anatomy of a Huddy Scene
Thursday, May 20, 2010 Lisa Palmer Contributing Writer, BuddyTV
As a reviewer of House, I try and do my best to visit all other reviewers (after mine are published) to see what their take was of an episode, story line, and in this case, a relationship. The last scene of "Help Me" featured a scene that I've been waiting for since I started watching the show. It was highly satisfying to the point of rewatching it an embarrassing amount of times.
Not everyone feels the way I do. Some of the reviews I've read said that that kiss and that scene were not earned. I'm wondering if they're watching the same show I am. So, I am taking it upon myself to prove that that scene was perfection by looking back at past seasons and how we ended up here.
I recently wrote in one of my articles that House is not a happy show. I know what to expect when I turn it on. I expect to see one man's heroic downfall. Or at least I did, until Monday night. I am not good with temptation so I was spoiled as to what would happen throughout the episode, the exception being that last scene. It was what I had always hoped for, but couldn't envision the House writers getting it right. Well, congratulations are in order.
Let's jump right in. House is alone, sitting in his bathroom. My mind jumps right back to last season's detox with House and Cuddy staring at each other while he desperately tries to grab the pills she flushed. When he asks her, "You going to leap across the room and grab them out of my hand?" he is clearly thinking about the same thing. In the fantasy, she saves him from himself. He doesn't want to change so much as having someone come in and rescue him.
I love that she says its his choice. I feel like this is one of her last ounces of self-preservation. She doesn't want to have to save him. She wants him to want to save himself, so she knows she can move on with him.
Take a look at the clothes they're wearing. House's motorcycle jacket has made its way into some of the show's most important scenes. He was wearing it after the bus accident and more importantly, it made a rare reappearance in "Joy" when he goes to Cuddy to build her back up after losing the baby. She's dressed down. It's rare we see Cuddy looking anything less than a hot authority figure, but in both scenes, the only real love scenes we get with these two, she's in scrubs. Obviously, there's much more to her appeal than her physical appearance despite House constantly making cracks about her body. Also in both scenes, her hair is pulled back, revealing her face much more clearly than we're used to seeing. Could be about her being more open and vulnerable.
The dialogue in this scene was simple. Not much was said, and what was said was carried off so incredibly well by the actors, it was impossible not to believe what they were saying. House's expression after Cuddy said she it ended it with Lucas was priceless. It was the absolute last thing he was expecting from her. And why would he after she tore into him at the accident site earlier? It's what he's wanted to hear since she and Lucas started dating. House is rarely a character that registers shock on his face. It's too vulnerable of an emotion. His face after she told him she had ended it reminded me of his face in "Lucky Thirteen" when he found out Cuddy was adopting. House has a way of knowing things before people tell him so it's rare that he's surprised. His shock mirrored mine. The difference was that I let out a shriek that that could have woken the dead.
All the theorizing this season on why House and Cuddy weren't getting more scenes together have finally culminated in what I consider this hypothesis: bad timing, self-preservation, and fear. In season five, Cuddy was ready for House. In "Let Them Eat Cake" she confronted him with "Everyone knows this is going somewhere." While not entirely vulnerable to him, she did give herself to him physically and he blew it. So much so that at the end of that scene, we see him and can barely hear him when he swears (arguably).
After that, she shut herself off to him for the most part. It wasn't going to be her making the moves. In season six, House was ready, but Cuddy, knowing that trying things with House was too emotionally risky, moved on to be with someone more safe and less complicated. Enter Lucas.
House pursues, Cuddy deflects. And she deflects hard. Her words to House this season haven't been her nicest, but it's all for the sake of pushing him away so he doesn't seem like an option to her anymore. Hurt him so he can't hurt her. By the end of an exhausting season capped off with an even more exhausting day, Cuddy cracks. And while to some, it might seem like a fairytale ending, to me it felt like an ending that was earned for both of them. This whole season they've both been doing what they think they should be to be happy the safe way.
Why wouldn't it take an emotionally draining day plus a vulnerable House confession to bring her back to where she knows she wants to be? Now, for those that think House is merely turning into a soap opera I have this to say: trust the writers. They know House-land better than any of us and they've gotten us to this point organically. This pairing between House and Cuddy isn't a soapy-it's real. And we've known they've connected for some time now. From "Known Unknows" where the seed that House has loved Cuddy for years to that scene in "5 to 9" where Cuddy relies on House for her adult needs, we know these two people connect. Not to mention their scenes in the rest of the series. Why does that have to mean to some people that the show has gone off the deep end?
I watch this show for insight about a character, namely House. If you watch this show to strictly be informed of medical mysteries, I think you're missing out. Because this show is about a man, not about the final diagnosis. So let's let our man explore what he deserves after a long year of struggle against his inner drug demons and after an even longer struggle of being alone.
Back to the dialogue. Once Cuddy tells House she's ended it, we're given some honesty. It's rare we see both of them being honest with each other, and House asking her "Do you think I can fix myself?" was beautiful. Her not knowing reflects us as viewers. We don't know if House can make it, but what we now know is that Cuddy loves House. Confirms everything I believed from the get-go.
Her lines, "I love you. I wish I didn't. But I can't help it." She loves him in spite of herself, and there's only so much the woman can do to deny her feelings. I love that the camera stayed on her during her confession and loved even more that she had to help him up for them to kiss.
No music in the scene while they were talking until the very end. The music to me felt like an old romance. It reminded me of a classical romantic couple. Nice symmetry with the string instruments to "As Tears Go By" in last year's finale. Their kiss was sweet and both of them looked so at ease with one another and peaceful. It wasn't oversexed like the hallucination. It was understated and sweet.
And House's final address to her commenting on one of his biggest fears, that his key to happiness isn't really happening, was a straight shot to the audience. "How do I know I'm not hallucinating?" he asks. "Did you take the vicodin?" she asks. "No." Then, a line with deeper meaning: "Then I think we're okay." With House not taking it, he's choosing to try feeling. Feeling anything. More pain, more happiness. Cuddy knows that House not taking it means that they at least have a shot.
Her smile to him after that was so genuine and then his short answer back to her of "Yeah," just solidified them for me, as well as the intertwined hands. I can't wait to see how the writers meet the challenge of giving this relationship a shot. It certainly won't be easy. But nothing in House-land ever is.
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Dim 23 Mai - 9:43
Focus série : Dr House, au fond du trou Par Vivien LEJEUNE - 23 mai 2010
La sixième saison de la série imaginée par David Shore s'achève, en plein chaos, sur un dernier épisode impressionnant de justesse et d'émotions.
Dès les premières images, Help Me laisse craindre le pire. Visiblement au plus mal, un House ensanglanté, et plus marqué que jamais, semble sur le point de céder à l'irrésistible appel des petites pilules miracles auxquelles il a pourtant su résister depuis son déstabilisant voyage aux pays des rêves... Après une année aussi riche en rebondissements qu'en désillusions, le plus fascinant des antihéros TV s'offre (littéralement) un voyage vers les sombres profondeurs de son âme cassée et doit faire face à toute une batterie de choix irréversiblement douloureux : un vingt-et-unième épisode en extérieur et à la hauteur des attentes des plus accros, dont l'ultime séquence ravira les fans autant qu'elle leur rendra l'été plus insupportable encore, avant que ne commence enfin la saison 7.
Pour Hanna Un conducteur de grue fait un malaise en plein centre ville est c'est plus d'une centaine de victimes qu'il faut soigner en urgence après que l'engin se soit effondré. Alors qu'il a toujours du mal à accepter l'évolution de la vie amoureuse de Cuddy (Lisa Edelstein), House (Hugh Laurie) accepte de l'accompagner sur site afin d'aider les équipes d'intervention à faire le tri et d'ainsi déterminer au mieux qui a besoin d'être traité en priorité. Entre deux prises de becs un chouïa disproportionnées face à l'ampleur des dégâts, le toujours aussi cynique médecin découvre une jeune femme (China Shavers) retenue prisonnière sous les gravats... Très vite, la question de savoir s'il faut l'amputer ou non d'une jambe est posée. En proie à ses propres démons, House s'y oppose fermement...
"Exceptionnellement située en dehors de son contexte hospitalier habituel, cette saison 6 s'achève en plein chaos pour une meilleure conclusion de l'intrigue principale et la mise en place d'une nouvelle dynamique des personnages pour la rentrée à venir ; à grand renfort d'introspection et de situations extrêmes... Incontournable."
Une fois passée l'évidence de la dimension particulièrement dramatique de ce season finale, c'est bel et bien la notion de choix qui s'impose au cœur de cette intrigue presque exclusivement axée sur les deux personnages principaux de la série. Cuddy est sur le point de se marier et, de son côté, House perd les derniers espoirs qu'il pouvait avoir de vivre un jour une existence "normale" en compagnie de celle qu'il ne se cache désormais plus d'aimer... Sous les débris poussiéreux de l'accident, la détresse de sa patiente agonisante fait douloureusement écho à ses propres traumatismes ; si bien que, même fidèle à son incomparable sens de l'antipathie naturelle, la prise de conscience d'une solitude toujours plus accrue le pousse encore un peu plus vers le désespoir dans lequel il semble désormais las de se complaire. Quitte à commettre l'irréversible.
No future Intégralement de situés de nuit, les lumières sombres et bleutées et l'imposant décor apocalyptique de Help Me plongent Dr House dans une noirceur (aussi contextuelle qu'analytique) qu'elle-même a encore rarement égalée depuis son lancement en novembre 2004. En sortant ainsi du carcan (parfois réducteur) du "maladie inconnue de la semaine / recherches / observations / enquête / analyse / diagnostic... de temps à autres parsemés de bribes d'éléments personnels" si cher au format du show, cet épisode pourrait d'ailleurs tout aussi bien conclure la série en son entier tant il se focalise sur tout ce qui restait jusqu'alors en suspens.
Malgré tout, la série enregistre avec cette sixième saison son plus "faible" taux d'audiences depuis sa création... Avec une moyenne de seulement de 12,6 millions de téléspectateurs américains (contre un pic à 17,6 millions pour sa saison 4 !), le docteur House passe en effet pour la première fois sous la barre des 13 millions. Mais il n'y a pas de quoi véritablement s'alarmer pour autant, la série faisant tout naturellement partie de la grille de rentrée de septembre 2010 sur la Fox. Il n'y a donc plus qu'une chose à faire d'ici là : attendre... patiemment.
Source: excessif.com
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Lun 31 Mai - 9:02
Une tite vidéo "Behind the scenes"
Danacarine Admin
Messages : 5571 Date d'inscription : 06/04/2009 Age : 51 Localisation : Dans le cosmos XD
Sujet: Re: 6x22 - Help me Sam 16 Juil - 12:26
Dr House : l'épisode choc
TF1 diffuse le finale de la saison 6 de la série médicale. À ne pas manquer !
Le 12/07/2011 à 09:02 par Nathalie Chuc (TV Magazine)
La saison 6 de Dr House touche à sa fin ce soir avec un épisode choc - tourné via une technique inédite - qui devrait couper le souffle à plus d'un fan. La relation Cuddy-House prend un tour inattendu en plein drame médical.
Le finale de la saison 6 a des allures de film catastrophe. Une grue s'est écroulée sur un bâtiment dans le New Jersey. Le Dr Lisa Cuddy et le Dr Gregory House sont envoyés en urgence sur place. Entre deux diagnostics dans les gravats, l'ambiance est très tendue, House ne digérant pas le fait d'avoir été rejeté par Cuddy, sa boss bien-aimée. Ce n'est que le début du calvaire pour House.
Ce soir, il va saigner, se maudire, et même tenter de renouer avec son démon préféré : la Vicodine (analgésique surpuissant)... Il va même en perdre sa canne ! « Sauvez-moi ! », titre de l'épisode, concerne en fait plus d'un personnage. D'abord, Hanna, une jeune femme prisonnière sous des tonnes de décombres. Elle va s'accrocher à House comme à une planche de salut. Une relation particulière va se nouer entre eux, conduisant même le médecin boiteux à faire son autocritique.
« Sauvez-moi », c'est aussi ce qu'on pourra lire plus d'une fois dans le regard de House. Il va ôter sa carapace l'espace d'un instant pour parler de sa jambe qui le fait souffrir, avouant que cette blessure l'a changé pour toujours, aussi bien physiquement que psychiquement : « J'ai mal tous les jours, cela m'a fermé aux autres et ça m'a durci »... Cuddy sera témoin de cette prise de conscience désarmante de franchise. Cela va changer la donne entre eux...
Au-delà des révélations, cet épisode a marqué l'histoire de la télévision en étant le premier tourné avec un appareil photo Canon EOS 5D Mark II. Cette technique a permis au réalisateur de tourner, avec le minimum de lumière, dans un espace très réduit (l'endroit où est coincée Hanna). À l'inverse, cet appareil donne aussi une extrême profondeur de champ aux séquences et permet de détacher, à l'image, un personnage de son environnement. Les acteurs de la série ont mis une journée à s'habituer à ce moyen de tournage : « On avait l'air de paparazzis sur le tapis rouge », s'est amusé l'un des caméramans.
À savoir En mai 2010, plus de 11,6 millions d'Américains ont vu cet épisode sur la chaîne Fox, un bon score pour Dr House. Certains critiques américains ont écrit qu'il s'agissait de l'un des plus forts de la série, tant pour le jeu de Hugh Laurie que pour son intrigue haletante. La saison 6 a reçu un très bon accueil en France et aux États-Unis.