Help Me (House)
"Help Me" | |
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House episode | |
Episode no. |
Season 6 Episode 21 |
Directed by | Greg Yaitanes |
Written by |
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Original air date | May 17, 2010 |
Guest actors | |
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Season 6 episodes | |
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List of House episodes |
"Help Me" is the twenty-first episode and season finale of the sixth season of the American medical drama House. It first aired on May 17, 2010. The episode covers a crane collapse in which House tries to save one of the victims, Hanna, who is trapped in rubble. "Help Me" was positively received by critics.
Plot
The episode begins in the middle of the chronology of the episode, and is interposed with flashes of House (Hugh Laurie), covered in dust and minor wounds, struggling in his bathroom. Eight hours earlier, House gives Cuddy a book written by her great-grandfather as a housewarming present. He then arrives at a downtown building, where a crane collapsed and caused an accident that injured numerous people. House, Cuddy, and House's team roam the area diagnosing and treating victims, until they come across the crane operator, who ostensibly fell asleep despite being overloaded with caffeine. House deduces the operator must have passed out and sends him to Princeton-Plainsboro to be diagnosed. He attempts to go with him, but is held back by Cuddy.
While taking a break, House hears a sound similar to that of a person banging on a steel pipe. He informs the emergency officials, who attempt to communicate with anyone possibly trapped beneath the rubble, but they give up after receiving no response. House decides to go looking himself, and crawls under the mountain of rubble until he reaches a deep cavity and finds a trapped woman named Hanna. He attempts to pull her free, but one of her legs is pinned by a support beam. The emergency officials attempt to drill through the debris to free the woman, but their equipment is insufficient.
As House treats Hanna while waiting for reinforcements, he also begins the differential on the crane operator through the phone and speaks with Cuddy, who reveals that she has gotten engaged to Lucas. House suggests that the crane operator has a brain lesion and orders an MRI. The situation is exacerbated when the emergency official realizes the support beam pinning Hanna (China Shavers), the trapped woman, is also under a mountain of rubble that could collapse. The equipment that can free her is hours away from arriving, so the official suggests amputation. Both Hanna and House refuse.
The crane operator begins bleeding from the eyes during the MRI and House attempts to return to Princeton-Plainsboro to diagnose him, but without his presence Hanna suffers a panic attack. House returns and begins to talk with Hanna. Emergency officials soon arrive with equipment to lift the support beam, but as they attempt to free Hanna, the rubble collapses over them. Too much time has now passed and Hanna is at severe risk for crush syndrome. Cuddy and the emergency officials bring up amputation again, but House refuses.
House then gets into an argument with Cuddy. Cuddy claims House is only refusing amputation to oppose her, bitter over her engagement with Lucas, at which point House calls her a pathetic narcissist. Cuddy then tells House to move on with his life, and House insults her. Cuddy in turn, says she's sick of dealing with House and putting up with him. She then tells him that she and Wilson are moving on with their own lives and the only one left behind is House, who has nothing. She then goes to attempt to convince Hanna to allow the amputation of her pinned leg.
Hanna refuses the amputation, listening to House's earlier advice, but House soon arrives. To Cuddy's surprise, House tells Hanna she should amputate. He then answers her earlier question of what had happened to his own leg, by telling the story of his infarction and his own refusal of the suggested amputation. He reveals presently that he wishes he had amputated his leg at that time, because the risky procedure left him with a mutilated useless leg and constant pain that changed him into a worse person causing him to be completely alone. He tells Hanna she still has a life and people who love her and that a leg is not worth those things; Hanna then consents.
House brings the electric saw and a scalpel to the scene, and explains that he cannot give her anesthesia, since it is too risky, forcing him to amputate the leg with her awake, followed by her screams. She is immediately taken to an ambulance, which then departs for Princeton-Plainsboro. On the ride back, House continues the differential on the crane operator through the phone and deduces that he has a spinal cyst. Hanna suddenly has trouble breathing. House at first thinks she has a pulmonary embolism, but soon realizes she has a fat embolism, caused by the amputation. By the time the ambulance arrives at Princeton-Plainsboro, Hanna is dead. Foreman attempts to console House, but he lashes out in rage and orders him to get out of his way as he returns home.
Thirteen leaves a letter on House's desk and tells Taub that she's asking for time off. He asks if she is okay and she replies, "Obviously not."
House arrives home. In pain from his leg, various wounds, Hanna's death and Cuddy's earlier comment, he rips his bathroom mirror out of the wall revealing a hidden cavity behind it, where he had a final stash of Vicodin. Collapsing, he opens a bottle and takes out two pills, thinking that vicodin is his only way of feeling better. As he is getting ready to take them, Cuddy arrives. She reveals that she ended the relationship with Lucas, because she realized that she truly loves House. Despite having a new fiancé, all she can think about is House, and couldn't live in peace without knowing if they could ever work as a couple. House stands up and walks over to Cuddy and then they share in a tender kiss. House stops and asks if he is hallucinating this and she asks if he took the Vicodin. Realizing it was still in his hand, House drops the pills on the floor. They both smile at each other, sharing another kiss and joining hands.
Production
Filming
This episode was shot entirely using Canon EOS 5D Mark II cameras.[1] These digital SLR cameras are primarily designed for still-picture photographs, but are one of the first to include high-definition video recording capability. These allowed the production team to work in very tight spaces, using minimal lighting, while also offering a very shallow depth of field putting the backgrounds out of focus, and making the work very challenging for the focus pullers. Original plans only included some scenes to be shot digitally, but eventually the Canon 5D cameras were used for the entire episode. After successfully using the cameras for scenes on the episode "Lockdown" director of photography Gale Tattersall convinced producers to film an entire episode using the cameras. The episode was filmed using a wide variety of lenses, on loan from Canon. Motion stabilization rigs were also used to make the cameras more like motion picture cameras.[1][2]
Notes
This episode does not contain the usual opening credits sequence. Instead, the credits are shown during scenes of the show. This was previously done in the episodes "Pilot", "Half-Wit", and "Broken". Also, this is the first episode not crediting Jennifer Morrison since her departure from the series.
Reception
Ratings and viewership
The episode was watched by 11.06 million American viewers, the 17th highest watched program of the week.[3] Between the 18–49 category, the show received 5.6 million viewers and was the 9th most watched program within the 18–49 viewers.[3] The program, broadcast by Global Total, was watched by 2.55 million Canadians, making it the 4th highest watched program of the week in Canada.[4]
Critical response
The critical response to the episode was highly positive.
Jonah Krakow of IGN gave the episode an "Incredible" rating of 9.5 out of 10, calling it "fantastic".[5] Jonah Krakow praised the episode's pacing by saying: "This episode didn't let up for one minute, because even while House was trying to save Hannah under threat of the building shifting and crushing him, he had to deal with his personal feelings for Cuddy (who had just gotten engaged to Lucas) while also trying to diagnose the crane operator (at the hospital with his team) via cellphone. In a way, this episode reminded me of one of my favorites from this season, "5 to 9", where Cuddy's jam-packed day at the hospital was spotlighted. Like that episode, just when you thought House and his team were in the clear, there was another speed bump in the road. For example, that amputation was as riveting and horrifying a scene as I can remember... and there were still 20 minutes and plenty of brutal twists and turns left in the episode.[5]
Unrealityshout.com praised the episode and said that: "...it must be said, Hugh Laurie acts his socks off in this episode. I think this is one of the few times another human being has seen House at his most vulnerable. He develops an attachment to Hannah, and I think a lot hinges on his ability to save her. In a series where House has virtually phoned in his diagnoses, here he is with his sleeves rolled up amputating a woman's leg. And still he can't save her. And Hugh Laurie had sheer desperation in his eyes throughout those scenes which actually connected with me as a viewer."[6]
Zack Handlen of The AV Club gave the episode a B rating.[7] Handlen wrote: ""Help Me" is strong, no question. I cared about the Patient Of The Week for the first time in a very long while (I'm talking about Hanna, not the crane operator, who was only there to give Coke Zero something to do), and while it was easy to predict at the outset she wasn't going to make it, I was still upset when she died. Partly that's because, once she was rescued from under the building, I assumed she was going to be okay—it's an obvious fake out, but an effective one. Plus, as familiar as so much of this was (how many medical dramas have had an episode with a patient trapped under rubble?), it was done well, and Hugh Laurie was so strong, that it really made Hanna's fate matter."[7]
TVFantatic.com gave the episode a 4.6/5.0 and said that "...after Cuddy's cutting diatribe on "Help Me" ("You're gonna risk her life just to save her leg? Really worked out well for you, didn't it?"), House finally realised... he's miserable and alone, no matter how he tries to analyze it... this vulnerability didn't just guarantee Hugh Laurie an Emmy, it made Cuddy fans around the globe celebrate."[8]
Screenrant.com reviewed the episode very positively saying: "Tonight's season finale of House however, was not only beautiful masterpiece in both acting and writing, but also a refreshing return to basics. It included so many jaw-dropping, heart stopping moments that this episode could easily be considered one of the best episodes of House to date because it not only gave fans what they've always wanted (House and Cuddy – together), but it also provides an amazing platform to start off the seventh season."[9]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Bloom, Philip (April 19, 2010). "EXCLUSIVE: In depth interview with Greg Yaitanes, Executive Producer and Director of "House" Season Finale shot on Canon 5DmkII". Retrieved 2010-05-23. Interview with Greg Yaitanes about Season Finale of House by PhilipBloom (m4a). Retrieved 2010-05-23.
- ↑ Jefferson Graham (May 14, 2010). "'House' director producing episode with digital camera, memory card". USA Today. Retrieved 2010-05-23.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Seidman, Robert (May 25, 2010). "TV Ratings Top 25: Dancing Tops Idol With Viewers Again, Lost Finale Wins With Adults 18-49". TVbythenumbers.com. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
- ↑ http://bbm.ca/_documents/top_30_tv_programs_english/2010/nat05172010.pdf
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Jonah Krakow (2010-05-18). "House: "Help Me" Review. The season comes to a close, but not without a fight.". IGN. News Corporation. Retrieved 2010-05-23.
- ↑ "Unreality Shout review". 21 September 2010.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Zack Handlen (May 17, 2010). "House "Help Me"". The AV Club. The Onion. Retrieved 2010-05-23.Rating B
- ↑ "TV Fanatic Review". 21 September 2010.
- ↑ "Screen Rant Review". 22 September 2010.
External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Help Me |
- "Help Me" at Fox.com
- "Help Me" at the Internet Movie Database
- "Help Me" at TV.com
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