Articoli Web HL/House, occhio agli spoiler

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view post Posted on 25/4/2007, 22:37
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primario

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Ho trovato un articolo interessante riguardo all'asta per le House-ism T-shirt ,l'ho messo sia qui che nel tread di quell'evento... uno o l'altro magari verranno eliminati... sorry.... :P

'House' summed up on a T-shirt
By Joel Stratte-McClure

image

Just how sick is Dr. Gregory House, the drug-addicted and misanthropic diagnostician portrayed by Golden Globe winner Hugh Laurie on Fox's TV medical drama "House"?
Ill enough that the cast held a press conference at the Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital on the 20th Century Fox lot on Monday to assess the situation. Turns out House/Laurie not only has mental, physical and emotional problems but is also in denial.

"House probably could be a happier, saner individual, but he's really not that bad," Laurie told the cynical press in the clinic waiting room. "He's a 7 on a scale of 23."

And that means?

Cast members Lisa Edelstein, Omar Epps, Robert Sean Leonard, Jennifer Morrison and Jesse Spencer came to the defense of the brilliant but crazed infectious-disease specialist.
"I've dated many guys off the set in much worse shape than House," said Edelstein, who joined Laurie in modeling a range of T-shirts with the phrase "Everybody Lies" -- one of House's favorite one-liners -- to raise awareness and funds for mental-health issues.

Admittedly, House has diagnosed many rare conditions without completely losing it.

"However messed up he is, you've got to let it go because he saves lives," said Morrison, who just bought an Elie Saab dress for her upcoming wedding to Spencer.

Dr. David Foster, a physician and writer on the show, insists House won't be institutionalized.

"He's got very serious issues," Foster agreed. "But we've just begun to plumb the depths of medical textbooks and can keep him going for several more seasons."

And, after all, it's just acting.

"Actually, I'm a very happy and sunny individual," Laurie insisted.

Everybody lies.
 
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LaurieLo
view post Posted on 26/4/2007, 09:29






sunny.... come no....
 
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view post Posted on 30/4/2007, 23:35
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primario

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grazie... io e il tedesco proprio non ci conosciamo...!!! :P

trovato questo articoletto su J&W on-line...

FRY WANTS JEEVES AND WOOSTER REVIVAL
Former JEEVES AND WOOSTER star STEPHEN FRY wants to revisit the show - and is hoping his co-star HUGH LAURIE will join him for the revival. The 90s British show, which is based on the PG Wodehouse adaptation, was a huge hit in the UK and funnyman Fry feels its time to see the characters again. He says, "It has been so many years but I have a great affection for that show. "It would be nice to see them in older years."


---non so.. voi che dite??? Oddio, Bertie sarebbe ancora caruccio da vedere.. ma un Jeeves con quella stazza... non sembrerebbe il maggiordomo di ''3 nipoti e un maggiordomo''??... (citazione di tf da vecchietta... scusate!!! :P )... però sarebbe carino vederli ''vecchietti''..eheheh :D ----

 
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Doriana Luthor
view post Posted on 1/5/2007, 11:13




Vedere Hugh in qualsiasi veste è sempre un piacere, ma questi revival non è che mi ispirino molto, hanno sempre quel non so che di malinconico, i tempi che furono lasciamoli dove sono..
 
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faby63
view post Posted on 1/5/2007, 13:38




CITAZIONE (m-ouse @ 1/5/2007, 00:35)
---non so.. voi che dite??? Oddio, Bertie sarebbe ancora caruccio da vedere.. ma un Jeeves con quella stazza... non sembrerebbe il maggiordomo di ''3 nipoti e un maggiordomo''??...

Madò, M-ouse, come c'hai azzeccato!!! :Azzurro07: :Azzurro07:

Dori, la penso abbastanza come te...
 
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mersil
view post Posted on 1/5/2007, 16:17




CITAZIONE (Doriana Luthor @ 1/5/2007, 12:13)
Vedere Hugh in qualsiasi veste è sempre un piacere, ma questi revival non è che mi ispirino molto, hanno sempre quel non so che di malinconico, i tempi che furono lasciamoli dove sono..

Quoto parola per parola!
 
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LaurieLo
view post Posted on 6/6/2007, 16:49






Articolo su Hugh da "The Envelope":



Article from The Envelope
TV's endearing grouch
Hugh Laurie says he's nothing like his alter ego.

HUGH LAURIE isn't too worried that Gregory House will steal his soul. Often, when a character becomes as entrenched in popular culture as House has, people forget there is an actual actor in there somewhere.

An actor who may not share many, or any, of the characteristics, tendencies and tics the writer — yes, there's usually one of those too — has bestowed upon said character.

Fortunately for Laurie, all he has to do is walk across a room and open his mouth to make that pretty clear. He is tall and lanky like House, but able-bodied and, in casual conversation, not prone to insults.

The blue eyes are very much in evidence though they are not nearly as lamp-like as Laurie makes them when House is focusing his attention, or venom, on some poor suffering soul.

There is a certain sarcasm and assorted dry asides, but then he's British and that accent — high Cambridge to a non-native ear — is what finally pries him away from House's shadow.

"I don't talk like House, or walk like him," Laurie says, settling into a chair on the set of Dr. Cuddy's office after wrapping production for the day. "I certainly don't think like him. I don't like to think for more than 15 minutes at a stretch actually; I am a fragile flower."

A fragile, tired yet highly professional flower. It is after 5 and he has been working all day and now here's this interview, another thing to which he must turn his considerable attention. But if House is a man ready to spring out of his skin at any moment, Laurie is at least a bit more relaxed. Comfortable may put too fine a point on it, but at least he's not noticeably fraying at the edges.

Portraying someone else is, after all, the point of acting. Or at least where Laurie comes from. "In Britain, the tradition involves creating a character that isn't like you," he says. "In America, there's more imagining, how I would react if this thing happened to me. So often here, one gets cast for who you are rather than who you can become."

Two Golden Globes and a SAG award later, it's a darn good thing that, in 2004, creator David Shore and producer Paul Attanasio were casting their new medical detective series in the British tradition. Because House is famously based on Sherlock Holmes, there is poetic justice in this.

But certainly Laurie, with his pop-eyed comedic past — there remain some public television die-hards who cannot think of him as anyone but Bertie Wooster — wasn't the first image anyone had for the sardonic, irascible lead of Fox's "House."

House is a Vicodin addict so far from the carefully carefree world of P.G. Wodehouse that he sees nothing amiss in eating other people's food or giving himself a catheter to relieve the drug's side effects.

"Oh, that holds no terror for me," Laurie says with a small sideways smile when asked about scenes that included him sitting on the toilet and wetting the bed.

"I have no sense of personal beauty. What I found more bizarre," he adds, leaning back with watchful humor, "was the application of an ice pack to the scrotal area. Every man on set seemed to be familiar with this procedure but me. I still don't understand its purpose."

As it turns out, it is precisely this comedic timing that saves House from the one characteristic that is the death knell for a TV character: being unlikable. For all his cold and callous ways, House, as played by Laurie, is likable. At least in an at-arm's-length kind of way.

"As a real person, he wouldn't last a minute, would he?" Laurie says. "But drama is about imperfection. And we've moved away from the aspirational hero. We got tired of it, it was dull. If I was House's friend, I would hate it. How he so resolutely refuses to be happy or take the kind-hearted road. But we don't always like morally good people, do we?

"I was just thinking about a big movie star," he adds, refusing to name him, "whose entire career seems to have been about finding moral perfection. And it just drives me mad."

House may not care if no one likes him, but Laurie is not one of those "audience be damned" type performers. He is invariably self-deprecating — the only glimpse of fame he claims to have seen is that, occasionally, when he forgets his Fox ID, "the guard will let me on the lot anyway."

Although he has been spending most of the past three years in L.A. — "they say eight months, but now it's closer to 10" a year — he still considers London his home. Not surprising, as his wife and three children still live there.

"I suppose somewhere there is a group of Brits out here who get together and eat roast beef," he says, "but I'm not one of them. I don't really see anyone who doesn't work on the Fox lot."

Popularity, however, is not really a concern — "House" will close the season as the No. 2 scripted drama for the season and recently scored the enviable post-Super Bowl spot for 2008.

Still, Laurie is not what you would call light-hearted; he is aware of, and quickly brings up, criticism that the show has received amid all the awards and hype.

Criticism that any big hit medical show should expect — the cases aren't believable, the diagnoses are either too miraculous or too pat, there's not enough House, there's too much House.

"You can't win," Laurie says. "The audience either finds it unrealistic that the doctors always solve the case or wretched when they don't."

And although, he dryly observes, this can be irritating to a person plagued by self-doubt, Laurie believes it is an actor's job to like the audience.

"It's easy to be thrown, to think of them as something to be outwitted. If you start to think of the audience as capricious, then they become something like a fat baby prince, unpleasable," he says. "But just like actors need to like their character, they need to find a way in to respect their audience."

An end to poker

LAURIE does like his character and knows him about as well as he knows himself: "Which is to say, not really." The draw of House, Laurie says, is his skill; he has an ability that is undeniable. And in a time when many feel powerless, that is very attractive.

"With the growing power of the state and social conformity," he says, "we're very constrained. So we like people who break the rules."

Laurie is, publicly anyway, less confident in his own ability, last year's SAG and Golden Globe wins notwithstanding. This past season, with its 24 episodes, was "very, very loooonnnnnngggg." Partly because he spends hours preparing for each scene — "you'd be amazed," he says.

"It actually does involve more than just reading the lines out. It involves knowing how a person will move, how he will hold his coffee cup" — but it never seems to be enough.

"I wilt at the end of the day," he says. "It's why I had to give up playing poker — the good poker players are the ones who outlast everyone. And then I make mistakes, go to bed cursing myself and don't sleep. Thinking of all the things I should have done differently. Little things that no one would notice but me, of course.

"It's completely pointless," he adds. "Because the time would be better spent either sleeping or preparing and instead it's spent in self-recrimination."

So he is as obsessive as the character he plays, even if he is obsessing in a slightly different way.

"Yes, when I start to sleep through the night, House will find peace," he says with a tucked-in grin. "House will find peace somewhere in Season 7. But that's not really much of a headline, is it?"




Fonte




***


Nel thread dedicato alla Morrison ho postato un'intervista interessante sul personaggio di Cameron, è un po' spoiler della season 3. Ecco il ink diretto: qui!
 
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gregorylover
view post Posted on 6/6/2007, 16:57




grazie!!!

l articolo postato da marita poi :wub:
è sempre un sacco bello vedere "il dietro le quinte".
 
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faby63
view post Posted on 6/6/2007, 21:15




Wow! Grazie mille, Lo e Marita!! :AngelStar14:
 
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mersil
view post Posted on 6/6/2007, 22:49




Grazie anche da parte mia!
 
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LaurieLo
view post Posted on 22/6/2007, 15:17






Da: http://www.buffalonews.com/entertainment/story/98438.html

Laurie feels at home in ‘House’
By Mary McNamara - LOS ANGELES TIMES
Updated: 06/14/07 6:51 AM


Hugh Laurie isn’t too worried that Gregory House will steal his soul. Often, when a character becomes as entrenched in popular culture as House has, people forget there is an actor in there somewhere. An actor who might not share many, or any, of the characteristics, tendencies and tics the writer — yes, there’s usually one of those too — has bestowed upon said character.

Fortunately for Laurie, all he has to do is walk across a room and open his mouth to make that pretty clear. He is tall and lanky like House, but able-bodied and, in casual conversation, not prone to insults. The blue eyes are very much in evidence though they are not nearly as lamplike as Laurie makes them when House is focusing his attention, or venom, on some poor suffering soul. There is a certain sarcasm and assorted dry asides, but then he’s British and that accent — high Cambridge to a non-native ear — is what finally pries him away from House’s shadow.

“I don’t talk like House or walk like him,” Laurie says, settling into a chair on the set of Dr. Cuddy’s office after wrapping production for the day. “I certainly don’t think like him. I don’t like to think for more than 15 minutes at a stretch actually; I am a fragile flower.” :P

A fragile, tired yet highly professional flower. It is after 5 and he has been working all day and now here’s this interview, another thing to which he must turn his considerable attention. But if House is a man ready to spring out of his skin at any moment, Laurie is at least a bit more relaxed. Comfortable might put too fine a point on it, but at least he’s not noticeably fraying.

Portraying someone else is, after all, the point of acting. Or at least where Laurie comes from. “In Britain, the tradition involves creating a character that isn’t like you,” he says. “In America, there’s more imagining, how I would react if this thing happened to me. So often here, one gets cast for who you are rather than who you can become.”

Two Golden Globes and an SAG award later, it’s a darn good thing that, in 2004, creator David Shore and producer Paul Attanasio were casting their new medical detective series in the British tradition. Because House is famously based on Sherlock Holmes, there is poetic justice in this. But certainly Laurie, with his pop-eyed comedic past — there remain some public television diehards who cannot think of him as anyone but Bertie Wooster — wasn’t the first image anyone had for the sardonic, irascible lead of Fox’s “House.”

House is a Vicodin addict so far from the carefully carefree world of P.G. Wodehouse that he sees nothing amiss in eating other people’s food or giving himself a catheter to relieve the drug’s side effects.

But for all his cold and callous ways, House, as played by Laurie, is likable. At least in an at-arm’s-length kind of way.

“As a real person, he wouldn’t last a minute, would he?” Laurie says. “But drama is about imperfection. And we’ve moved away from the aspirational hero. We got tired of it, it was dull. If I was House’s friend, I would hate it. How he so resolutely refuses to be happy or take the kind-hearted road. But we don’t always like morally good people, do we?

House might not care if no one likes him, but Laurie is not one of those “audience be damned” type performers. He is invariably self-deprecating — the only glimpse of fame he claims to have seen is that, occasionally, when he forgets his Fox ID, “the guard will let me on the lot anyway.” :rolleyes:

“House” closed the season as the No. 2 scripted drama for the season and recently scored the enviable post-Super Bowl spot for 2008. (Tiè, Grey's Anatomy, la vendetta del Super Bowl è arrivata!)

Still, Laurie is not what you would call lighthearted; he is aware of, and quickly brings up, criticism that the show has received amid all the awards and hype. Criticism that any big hit medical show should expect — the cases aren’t believable, the diagnoses are either too miraculous or too pat, there’s not enough House, there’s too much House. “You can’t win,” Laurie says. “The audience either finds it unrealistic that the doctors always solve the case or wretched when they don’t.”

And although, he dryly observes, this can be irritating to a person plagued by self-doubt, Laurie believes it is an actor’s job to like the audience.

“It’s easy to be thrown, to think of them as something to be outwitted. If you start to think of the audience as capricious, then they become something like a fat baby prince, unpleasable,” he says. “But just like actors need to like their character, they need to find a way in to respect their audience.”

Laurie does like his character and knows him about as well as he knows himself: “Which is to say, not really.” The draw of House, Laurie says, is his skill; he has an ability that is undeniable. And in a time when many feel powerless, that is very attractive.

“With the growing power of the state and social conformity, we’re very constrained. So we like people who break the rules,” he says.

Laurie is, publicly anyway, less confident in his own ability, last year’s SAG and Golden Globe wins notwithstanding. This past season, with its 24 episodes, was “very, very loooonnnnnngggg.” Partly because he spends hours preparing for each scene — “you’d be amazed,” he says. “It actually does involve more than just reading the lines out. It involves knowing how a person will move, how he will hold his coffee cup” — but it never seems to be enough.

“I wilt at the end of the day,” he says. “It’s why I had to give up playing poker — the good poker players are the ones who outlast everyone. And then I make mistakes, go to bed cursing myself and don’t sleep. Thinking of all the things I should have done differently. Little things that no one would notice but me, of course. -_-

“It’s completely pointless,” he adds. “Because the time would be better spent either sleeping or preparing and instead it’s spent in self-recrimination.”

So he is as obsessive as the character he plays, even if he is obsessing in a slightly different way.

“Yes, when I start to sleep through the night, House will find peace,” he says with a tucked-in grin. “House will find peace somewhere in Season 7. But that’s not really much of a headline, is it?”



 
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LaurieLo
view post Posted on 25/6/2007, 11:35







Per la nuova stagione, metto qua gli articoli relativi a HL e House qua, e in un altro thread quelli SCANNERIZZATI!


Fonte




House S3 Wrap-Up


By D. W. O'Dell

The TV series House M.D. ended the season with a bang, audience-wise. Its season finale (admittedly held by FOX until after the end of May sweeps) drew over 17 million viewers, more than 5 million more than the second highest rated show of the week. House, which began with feeble ratings but started drawing larger audiences once it followed American Idol, is certainly one of the colossuses of FOX's TV line-up.

But changes may be in the offing for next season, as the future status of all three "House-lets" (known on other sites as 'Cottages,' which is cute but not quite there) was called into question by the season finale. Both Dr. Eric Foreman (Omar Epps) and Dr. Allison Cameron (Jennifer Morrison) submitted their resignations, while House (Hugh Laurie) fired Dr. Robert Chase (Jesse Spencer). I'm not exactly a Hollywood insider but the word I've heard is that all three actors plan to be back next season, possibly with their characters in a different capacity.

Dr. House's firing of Chase is the easiest to understand. It happened after Chase finally stood up to House; okay, it was about House's relationship with Foreman, but backbone is backbone whether it's concerning a medical diagnosis or House's feelings. House immediately told Chase that Chase had learned all he needed to learn from him, and House was right. What House has been teaching his staff isn't medicine, it's a philosophy that once you determine the best course of action you jump all in, feet first. Be convinced of your own infallibility; take half-measures and you increase the likelihood that something will go wrong. Once Chase had enough backbone to challenge House, to believe (or be sure) that he was right and House was wrong, Chase was ready to be pushed from the nest.

On the flip side, House needs to believe in the fallibility of his staff's opinions, which may explain why House (seemingly) is okay with Foreman and Cameron leaving. House operates on Sherlock Holmes' precept that once you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be true. House needs his minions to feed him all the wrong answers so he can find the right one. Once he starts respecting their opinions, the system breaks down. In the season finale, Dr. Cuddy suggested that Foreman botched a procedure, hence the episode's title, "Human Error." House immediately rejected the suggestion, preferring instead to believe that the error was God's - a defect in the patient's circulatory system - and not Foreman's. Once House has that kind of faith in his staff, their usefulness to him is over.

This third season finale for House M.D. wasn't as gaudy as the first two. Season one's final episode, "Three Stories" (okay, there was an episode after "Three Stories," but like Rush Limbaugh I'm ignoring the facts to make a point) deservedly won the Emmy for best dramatic writing, won a Humanitas Award, featured time-trippy editing, received a Director's Guild Award nomination, and gave the audience insight into one of House's defining features, his limp. Season two ended with the episode "No Reason," another 'through the looking glass' story in which House is shot (by someone named Moriarty!), realizes through pure deductive reasoning that he's hallucinating, then realizes that he's hallucinated having the hallucination, and so on ad infinitem. That episode ended with the possibility that House might lose his limp...which is about as likely as all three of his minions leaving.

House M.D. has managed to maintain an air of freshness despite an incredibly formulaic approach. In every episode, someone has mysterious symptoms; House decides on a course of action, but the patient gets worse; House decides on a second course of action, and the patient almost dies; with five minutes left in the episode House realizes why he was wrong - usually because the patient followed House's credo, "Everybody lies" - and saves the patient's life. There are minor variations (patients have occasionally died) but the general theme is always the same.

The producers have tried to vary the show's format by giving House a worthy adversary - once it was obvious that he and Dr. Lisa Cuddy (Lisa Edelstein) had WAY too much chemistry to ever truly be adversaries - but it has proven difficult. In season one a billionaire named Vogler (Chi McBride) became head of the Board of Directors at House's hospital and tried to make House more of a conformist. Yeah, some uber-rich guy has nothing better to do than make a rogue doctor wear his lab coat at work. Season three introduced a fanatical police officer named Tritter (David Morse), who hounded House to the point where he was up on charges of stealing drugs. This plotline got so thin that it was summarily wrapped up with nary a look back.

Yet, House M.D. not only endures, it has triumphed. This is due in large part to Hugh Laurie's remarkable performance. If you had told me three years ago that the actor who played Bertie Wooster to perfection could play an irascible, misanthropic American doctor, I would have laughed at you. Laurie is willing to push his character far beyond the bounds of what other actors would be willing to do, whether it be frequent "Mandingo" jokes about Foreman or trying to fake having cancer to get in on an experimental pain medication trial.

It is satisfying that in a television culture where shows like American Idol and America's Funniest Home Videos can thrive, that a medical show featuring more polysyllabic words than a Dennis Miller monologue can be a ratings winner...although, deep down, I suspect the really gross medical symptoms help the show's popularity more than its vocabulary.
 
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faby63
view post Posted on 25/6/2007, 21:17




Giuro che l'ho letto tutto! :lol: Ma se qualche anima pia, a grandi linee, facesse capire il piu'... :D
 
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Minic@t
view post Posted on 25/6/2007, 22:33




più o meno dice che:
La serie tv House M:D: è finite con un botto ( letteralmente ), dal punto di vista dell’odience..
Il finale ha portato più di 17 milioni di spettatori, più di 5 milioni oltre il secondo show con i migliori ascolti della settimana.
House, che era cominciato un po’ in sordina, ma che ha cominciato a prendere spettatori col traino di American idol, è senza dubbio uno dei colossi della programmazione FOX.
Ma per la prossima stagione, si prevedono cambiamenti, come riguardo al futuro ruolo dei 3 paperi ( qui si riferisce ai paperi con una metafora immobiliare..House-Casa..ci sta..loro sono i Cottages-Dependence..sono cose belle e umoristiche..vabè..), che è stato messo in dubbio dal finale.
Sia Foreman che Cameron si sono licenziati mentre House ha silurato Chase.
Non essendo esattamente uno addentro alle dinamiche holliwoodiane, posso tuttavia affermare che si dice-si mormora che i 3 attori torneranno, ma con i loro personaggi in altre vesti.
House che licenzia Chase è piuttosto semplice da capire. E’ successo quando Chase finalmente si è ribellato ed ha affrontato House, vabè, era a proposito del rapporto House/Foreman, ma quando uno ha spina dorsale, ce l’ha e basta, che riguardi le diagnosi o i sentimenti di House. House ha immediatamente detto a Chase che lui aveva davvero imparato tutto ciò che c’era da imparare, ed House aveva ragione. Ciò che House ha insegnato finora al suo staff non è medicina, ma una filosofia secondo la quale una volta che determini il miglior corso degli eventi, semplicemente ti ci butti a capofitto. Se sei convinto della tua infallibilità, se prendi mezze misure , molto verosimilmente qualcosa andrà male. Una volta che Chase ha mostrato abbastanza forza per contrastare House, tanto da credere o essere certo dia vere ragione e House torto, Chase era pronto per essere spinto fuori dal nido.
D’altro canto, house ha bisogno di credere nella fallibilità delle opinioni del suo staff, il che potrebbe apparentemente spiegare il perché accetti le dimissioni di Foreman e Cameron.
House opera secondo il precetto di Sherlock Holmes per il quale una volta che hai eliminato l’impossibile, ciò che resta, non importa quanto improbabile, deve essere la verità. House ha bisogno che i suoi sottoposti gli forniscano tutte le risposte sbagliate, così può trovare quella giusta.
Cuddy ha suggerito l’eventualità che Foreman sbagliasse procedura, da cui il titolo dell’episodio Human Error. House immediatamente rifiuta questa suggerimento, preferendo invece credere che l’errore era di Dio e non di Foreman ( un difetto nel sistema circolatorio del paziente ). Quando House raggiunge un tale livello di fiducia per il suo staff, la loro stessa utilità ( per lui, all’interno del complicato schema illustrato )finisce..
Questo finale della 3° stagione non è stato pomposo come gli altri due. 3 stories, il finale della prima stagione, ( ok c’è stato un altro episodio dopo 3 stories, ma lo ignorerò, come Rush Limbaugh, per sostenere la mia tesi.. ), ha vinto meritatamente l’Emmy per migliore sceneggiatura drammatica, e la qualunque..e ha dato al pubblico modo di guardare dentro House e una delle peculiarità che lo definiscono, la sua gamba “offesa”.
La seconda stagione è finita con No Reason, un’altra storia “ attraverso il vetro” in cui sparano ad House ( da un tizio di nome Moriarty! ) e realizza, attraverso un puro ragionamento deduttivo, che sta delirando, quindi che sta avendo allucinazioni nell’allucinazione, e così via ad libitum.
L’episodio finì con la possibilità che House potesse ritrovare l’uso della gamba…il che è veritiero tanto quanto i 3 paperi che se ne vanno..
House md. è riuscito a mantenere un aria di freschezza, malgrado un approccio incredibilmente di “formula”. In ogni episodio, qualcuno accusa misteriosi sintomi; House decide di partire con la rumba, ma il paziente peggiora; House decide una seconda rumba e chachacha, e il paziente quasi stramazza; negli ultimi 5 minuti, House ha l’epifania, generalmente legata a qualche cosa che il paziente ha omesso, fedele al motto Housiano che Tutti Mentono, e gli salva la vita. Ci sono piccole variazioni ( tipo qualche paziente che c’è rimasto, occasionalmente… ), ma il genere è più o meno sempre lo stesso.
I produttori hanno provato a variare il format dando ad House un degno avversario-una volta che è stato ovvio che Cuddy aveva pure troppo ormone condiviso con Greg, per poter essere un avversario credibile-ma è stato difficile. Nella prima stagione un miliardario di nome Vogler ( detto simpatia…) divenne il Capo Supremo nel PPTH ed ha provato a rendere House più conformista. Si come no, un tizio ultra ricco non ha niente di meglio da fare che accanirsi sul fatto che un dottore scorbutico non indossi il suo camice..La terza stagione ci ha proposto un poliziotto fanatico, Tritter, che ha dato la caccia ad House fino a farlo incriminare per furto di droga ( e spaccio ). Questa storia era talmente poco credibile, che è stat sommariamente portata ad una fine un pò misera…eppure House non solo resiste, ma trionfa. Questo è in larga parte dovuto all’interpretazione notevole di Hugh Laurie. Se mi avessi detto 3 anni fa che un attore che interpretava bertie Wooster alla perfezione avrebbe recitato nei panni di un irascibile, misantropo dottore americano, ti avrei riso in faccia. Laurie vuole spingere il suo personaggio ben oltre i limiti che qualsiasi altro attore avrebbe rispettato, che sia nelle battute frequenti a Foreman ( “mandingo”) o che sia di fingere di avere il cancro per accedere ad un programma sperimentale di trattamento del dolore.
Dà soddisfazione che in una cultura televisiva nella quale shows come American Idol o American Funniest Home Video ( Paperissima… ) prosperano, un medical show che contiene più parole polisillabiche di un monologo di Dennis Miller possa essere vincente con gli ascolti…anche se, nel profondo, sospetto che i sintomi medici tanto truculenti riscuotano più successo del vocabolario forbito.






 
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gregorylover
view post Posted on 25/6/2007, 23:13




grazie mille minicat!!! image
 
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250 replies since 25/4/2007, 22:37   4688 views
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