House Season 2, Ep. 1 "Acceptance"

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House makes a trip to Death Row and Stacy returns to the hospital.
  • Starring: Sela Ward, LL Cool J
  • Directed by: Dan Attias
  • Runtime: 44 minutes
  • Original air date: September 13, 2005
  • Network: David Shore
 
 
 
 

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  Episode   Original Air Date
Synopsis
    Price  
1. Acceptance
  September 13, 2005
House makes a trip to Death Row and Stacy returns to the hospital.
 
NOW PLAYING
$1.99  
 
2. Autopsy
  September 20, 2005
A girl's unimaginable bravery toward her terminal illness makes House suspicious as he puts a life-or-death decision about her case in her young hands.
  $1.99  
 
3. Humpty Dumpty
  September 27, 2005
Cuddy struggles with a case of guilt when her handyman is injured while at her place, and House and his team have to work fast to save the young man's pursuit of the American Dream.
  $1.99  
 
4. TB Or Not TB
  November 1, 2005
House's patient is willing to die in order to further his social cause.
  $1.99  
 
5. Daddy's Boy
  November 8, 2005
Lies between a father and son may prevent House and his team from saving their patient.
  $1.99  
 
6. Spin
  November 15, 2005
House's wheels start turning when a pro-cyclist admits to taking performance-enhancing drugs.
  $1.99  
 
7. Hunting
  November 22, 2005
A patient with AIDS stalks House to get him to take his case; House and Stacy stalk a mouse in her attic; and Cameron faces a health scare of her own.
  $1.99  
 
8. The Mistake
  November 29, 2005
A patient's death prompts an investigation into whether Chase or House may have been responsible for her death.
  $1.99  
 
9. Deception
  December 13, 2005
House and the team must decipher whether a patient who has cried wolf too many times now has a deadly illness.
  $1.99  
 
10. Failure to Communicate
  January 10, 2006
A journalist's head injury results in unintelligible speech, leaving House and his team at a loss; and the heat is turned up between House and Stacy when they're out of town.
  $1.99  
 
11. Need to Know
  February 7, 2006
A young mother on fertility medication reminds House and the team that everybody lies; House and Stacy rekindle their relationship.
  $1.99  
 
12. Distractions
  February 14, 2006
House and his team resort to unusual diagnostic methods to treat a young man with extremely severe burns and House strikes back at a former med school colleague.
  $1.99  
 
13. Skin Deep
  February 20, 2006
House and his team treat a young model for a drug addiction but discover shocking surprises about her in the process.
  $1.99  
 
14. Sex Kills
  March 7, 2006
House and his team race against the clock to diagnose a dead woman in order to save a dying man.
  $1.99  
 
15. Clueless
  March 28, 2006
When House and his team race against the clock to diagnose the source of a man's illness, the clues point to a shocking suspect.
  $1.99  
 
16. Safe
  April 4, 2006
A teenage heart transplant patient is rushed to the hospital when she has an allergic reaction while living in a "clean" room, and House and Wilson work out the kinks of their new living arrangement.
  $1.99  
 
17. All In
  April 11, 2006
House and the team race to prevent a young boy from suffering the same fate as a former patient with identical symptoms who lost her life.
  $1.99  
 
18. Sleeping Dogs Lie
  April 18, 2006
When a patient needs a liver transplant to give House and the team more time to solve the case, an ethical dilemma arises that may eliminate the patient's chance of survival.
  $1.99  
 
19. House vs. God
  April 25, 2006
A teenage faith healer challenges House and the team's beliefs about faith and God and whether either has a physical effect on a patient's condition.
  $1.99  
 
20. Euphoria; Part 1
  May 2, 2006
A wounded police officer with uncontrollable laughter has House and the team baffled; when Foreman starts showing the same symptoms and the officer's illness takes a fatal turn, they must race to figure out the cause before it's too late to save Foreman's life.
  $1.99  
 
21. Euphoria; Part 2
  May 3, 2006
Foreman faces his own mortality as House and the team struggle to figure out how to stop the progression of his deadly illness.
  $1.99  
 
22. Forever
  May 9, 2006
House and the team take on two cases at once when they attempt to save the lives of a young mother and her newborn son.
  $1.99  
 
23. Who's Your Daddy?
  May 16, 2006
House and the team take on the case of a hurricane Katrina victim and Cuddy searches for a sperm donor.
  $1.99  
 
24. No Reason
  May 23, 2006
House is shot by a former patient and must share a recovery room with the gunman.
  $1.99  
 
 
 
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Product Details
Episode 1, "Acceptance"
Synopsis: House makes a trip to Death Row and Stacy returns to the hospital.
Original air date: September 13, 2005
Runtime: 44 minutes
ASIN: B000WE4YRO
Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #26,369 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
House Season 2
Synopsis: House is an innovative take on the medical drama in which the villain is a medical malady and the hero is an irreverent, controversial doctor who trusts no one, least of all his patients.
Starring: Hugh Laurie, Lisa Edelstein
Supporting actors: Omar Epps, Robert Sean Leonard, Jennifer Morrison, Jesse Spencer, Tom Verica, Cameron Richardson, James DuMont, Stephanie Venditto, Karis Campbell, Donzaleigh Abernathy, John Burke, Jim Hoffmaster, Julie Michaels
Season year: 2006
Genre: Drama, Mystery
Executive producer: Paul Attanasio
Network: David Shore
ASIN: B000WECFD4
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Purchase rights: Stream instantly and download to 2 locations. Details
Compatible with: Mac and Windows PC online viewing, compatible instant streaming devices, TiVo DVRs. System requirements
Format: Amazon Instant Video (streaming online video and digital download)

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House, M.D.: Season Seven DVD ~ Hugh Laurie

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5.0 out of 5 stars Is There a Doctor in the House? You Bet!, January 9, 2012
This review is from: House Season 2 (Amazon Instant Video)
What can be said about a series that must certainly be ranked as one of the most compelling to have ever appeared on television? It is easy to view the slew of awards that House, M.D. has been nominated for (and won), to recall the litany of accolades the show has garnered from news, entertainment, and magazine critics, and even to review the endless series of online postings concerning the show (like this very one, here, on Amazon), and conclude that, "Yes, House, M.D. is probably a good show." But in fact, House, M.D. is more than a good show. For many viewers, the series is easily one of the most fascinating and unusual to have ever been aired on television. Moreover, and dare I say it, the series will likely eventually be ranked amongst the top television shows ever produced on network television.

But before I say any more about House, MD., let me briefly for the reader summarize the show. House, M.D. is a medical drama that takes place at a fictional teaching hospital ("Princeton-Plainsborough Hospital"). The story revolves around a particular doctor, Dr. Gregory House, an individual who has established himself as a medical genius able to solve difficult medical mysteries that other doctors have been unable to solve. Dr. House works with a small group of internists who are serving in residence under him, and who, despite their much less experience, actively work with House to solve medical problems through a technique called a "Differential Diagnosis," a kind of group-based brainstorming session where diagnostic ideas are presented, written on a white board, and systematically eliminated by comparing each hypothesis with the ongoing list of patient symptoms. But Dr. House is more than just a diagnostic genius: he possesses a debilitating leg injury that keeps him in perpetual pain, and he regularly uses powerful prescription painkillers to the point where there is genuine concern that he may, in fact, be a pain medicine addict. But there's more. Along with his genius, House has an incredibly insensitive and offensive demeanor, and seemingly has no concern for social norms, courtesies, or sometimes, even common decency. His unparalleled genius at helping patients is probably what keeps him employed in spite of his incredibly ongoing offensive behavior.

What makes this show so compelling, so unique, and so interesting? There is probably no one answer to this question. At the core of it is likely House himself, a character who is fundamentally a contradiction, a walking incongruity, a person that we desperately and increasingly wish to understand, and perhaps, even wish to control to correct his unacceptable behavior. We find ourselves watching this man and so strongly wishing that we can figure him out, to come to a true understanding and belief about him, to solve the mystery of who he really is, and by that knowledge, settle the manifold open questions surrounding him and his relationships to others that each episode more fully presents.

Unfortunately, or should I rather say, "fortunately," such an understanding is not easily developed. The complexities, ambiguities, and open questions surrounding the character of House come tantalizingly close to being solved time after time, only to be later shown that what we thought was the answer to this man was really just another false lead, another misunderstanding, another fact to add into this increasingly difficult puzzle. Part of the show's allure is this ongoing dissonance, not only between House and his coworkers, but deeply within House himself. Is he truly an uncaring person? Is he truly a person who views his entire medical career as simply a series of puzzles to be solved, and where people who recover are simply a side effect of the solved puzzle? Does he really look at every social, religious, or ethnic factor as a legitimate target of derision? Is he truly hostile to people's religious convictions? Does he truly believe that his drug addiction is an irrelevant issue to his work? Each episode faces us with House's reaction to these questions to varying degrees, and over time, we may find that we build an increasing understanding of this man, but we often find those understandings torn apart in a later episode, where new observations on House make us rethink what we think we knew.

In spite of House's problems and deficiencies, we often find him an imminently likeable character, and we often see hints of goodness in him that he desperately tries to keep hidden from others. Often, it is hinted in the subtilest of ways that House himself wishes to hide from others the fact that he truly does care, but this hint is just as quickly dashed as we witness his next immature toy kicking. (It can sometimes seem that House is more of a four year old in a nursery who is testing his fellow nursery members for territorial markers. In other cases, he is the genius child who seeks to use others as fodder for his most recent theories on human and animal behavior.)

House, M.D., if the truth be known, does not start out in Season One as a soap opera, but by Season Five for the series run, I think a defensible case can be made that the show takes on many of the trappings of a soap opera, curiously and ironically enough, mirroring the very soap operas that the character House in the show is seen so frequently watching (often, on an old, 1990's style portable television located in his office). This morphing into the arena of the soap opera doesn't really matter, though, for the viewer who has gone through the entire set of previous episodes in order. With no attempt to defend this shift in style, the show uses its first three seasons to genuinely establish itself as a puzzle solving, medical mystery show, with House serving as a medical Sherlock Holmes (sans the hat and the pipe, but plus the strange personality and temperament issues), and the stories are easily carried with each individual episode standing as a mental gymnastic exercise that keeps the viewer wanting more. But strewn through these episodes are myriads of strange, and often, very awkward character interactions that are left unfinished and unexplored, tantalizing us with seeming keys to unlock the mystery of House. It is perhaps inevitable that a show lasting so many years (now in its sixth season) and having such strong characters and unusual trappings would be inevitably drawn to revisit and examine such unfinished business. These "explorations" begin to occur more repeatedly in Season Four, and by Season Five, we see the exaggeration of much of this at the expense of series' original, focal point of medical mysteries to be resolved, which by this point in the series often take back seat to the ever growing personal dramas. But even this doesn't matter. The issues and themes explored in Season Five, while taking on the feeling of a soap opera, are still handled with great expertise and generally fascinating ways, so that we still find ourselves focused on each event, all the time still (unconsciously at times, I must admit) wishing that we can figure House out, get the mystery of House solved, and have some type of a resolution that fits our conception of the real world. By the end of Season Five, we still do not have an answer for this dilemma, and the show uses this dilemma to hold the audience's attention in a powerful manner.

The basic premise of the show is so startling unique and fascinating in its own right that the show does not need to rely on cheap "shock" tricks to maintain attention. It is true that there are a number of "shocking" events to occur through the series, and there can be no doubt that the show, being first and foremost a network based television format production, employs "cliffhangers" to hold the viewer through the regular commercial breaks, but it is amazing to see how the show is regularly worked into individual episodes that are artfully crafted into stories that flow, and work, from beginning to end.

Quite some time ago, I wrote a long review for The Rockford Files, a television show in the 1970's that, in my own thinking, achieved the status as being one of the best television shows ever produced. I had written my review at a time when the first Rockford Files DVD's were being released, and the opportunity to re-watch these shows reminded me again of the superior writing, the acting, and the impressive interworking of the cast which made this show, not just a cut above the average television show, but a true classic, one that could almost not be challenged in the realm of television. I still feel that way about The Rockford Files, and, truth be known, another very different show from a decade earlier, The Dick Van Dyke Show, had many of these same characteristics, all coalescing to make what eventual became in both cases a classic production. The Rockford Files and The Dick Van Dyke Show reached such pinnacles of performance that they remain examples of the very best television ever made, and even the ravages of 30 and 40 years of time have done little but solidify that achievement.

House, M.D. is, in my opinion, is likely destined for that same level of accolade. In the show, we find that same coalescing of features - a truly unique character creation, excellent writing, and a cast that works well together - that will argue for the show's inclusion in that highest level of ranking. But whether that specific claim turns out to be true or not, the fact remains that House, M.D. is one of the most fascinating, intriguing, and enjoyable shows to watch. We witness medical problems and the difficult procedure in diagnosing and treating those problems; we witness the struggles, oddities, and offensiveness (and yes, there are many parts of the show that are incredibly offensive) of a main character who remains both a genius and an enigma, an inscrutable person who is endlessly fascinating... Read more ›
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