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As he begins to piece together his slowly resurfacing memories, he makes a shocking discovery about events just before the crash that could destroy his relationship with Wilson forever. Tormented with guilt over something he can't remember, House puts his own life in danger to save Amber from something that may have been his fault. House vehemently protests, believing an amputation could make the problem worse. In addition, the crane operator who apparently fell asleep on the job and caused the accident is in need of help, but nobody can reach him. House's team gets in touch with the man over the phone and House begins to fear there's more going on than a simple case of fatigue. Dr. House will do whatever it takes to get to the bottom of the case — but when he pulls a handgun, nobody quite knows what he has planned.
One Day, One Room
In the first half, "House's Head," Dr. House gets caught in the aforementioned devastating bus accident, and suffers a concussion that gives him a bad case of retrograde amnesia — leaving him unable to recall the events immediately leading up to the crash. In the Season 6 finale, "Help Me," Dr. House finds himself called to the site of a crane collapse to perform field triage medicine. House attends to one victim, a woman pinned beneath debris, and some believe that amputating the woman's leg may be the only way to save her. As House listens to the shooter blame all his problems on him, he's forced to confront his own weaknesses as his mental state deteriorates. Meanwhile, doctors struggle to deal with a patient who won't respond to treatment even as his symptoms worsen.
Hugh Laurie
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After a work-over and a discussion with the patient, it's revealed that he had been trying to remove his own foreskin when his new girlfriend was disgusted by her uncircumcised lover. Meanwhile, Wilson is dealing with the challenges of his chemo treatment, and wonders whether he wants to keep trying. House wants to keep his friend around as long as possible, but Wilson feels it would only lead to an undignified death. Taken off the case for violating medical ethics, House is forced to confront delusions of Wilson's dead girlfriend Amber.
House: The best episodes of Hugh Laurie's medical mystery drama
Wilson winds up getting into trouble while trying to talk House into doing the right thing, as police discover an old search warrant for an incident in Louisiana. He is further frustrated when an unknown person steals his guitar and demands a ransom for its return. Back with his patient, tracking down the victim's family leads to an astonishing revelation that nobody could have expected. And since the House/Cuddy relationship was yet to be run into the ground, there's some actual thrill in watching things escalate between them here, albeit leading up to a reveal that recalls the reality-bending twist in 'No Reason'.
'Three Stories' (Season 1, Episode
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I am still on season 5 and watched The Social contract and I think it’s the best House and Wilson episode yet. One one level, giving Wilson terminal cancer is about the cruelest ending Shore could have written both for his hero and his fans, and coming after so much relentless suffering for House it might have felt like overkill. This underrated early highlight sees House become fixated on the afterlife after he witnesses the electrocution of a patient, who later claims that his near-death experience was "the best 97 seconds of his life".
Best House and Wilson Episodes
Between the 2007 writers' strike and the departure of House's original team, season four could easily have been a disaster, but the 16-episode run is actually one of the show's most consistent. This is one of the first episodes to flesh out Wilson as a complex, flawed character in his own right, and by extension one of the first that allows Laurie and Robert Sean Leonard to really spar – always a recipe for gold. House treating a 15-year-old faith healer is initially just an excuse for him to rant about the futility of faith, but the debate gets an intriguing twist after a cancer patient actually shows signs of improving after being "healed". Below, Digital Spy looks back on the very best of Laurie's tormented diagnostician, naming our favourite 13 episodes in chronological order. In celebration of House’s 15th anniversary on November 16, we’re spotlighting the 10 best episodes of the series, as rated by IMDb voters. Check out the gallery above to see those 10 standout installments in chronological order.
Where House is concerned, though, his staff has learned to expect apparent insanity. Despite House's best efforts, whatever is affecting the officer begins to spread to others, to everyone's dismay. "Birthmarks" sees Dr. House dreading the impending funeral of his father, Colonel John House, and going to great lengths to find any excuse to avoid it.
Three Stories
Viewed as a two-parter, the season four finale rivals 'Three Stories' as the show's finest hour. As the episodes' titles imply, they're a perfect one-two punch, with the first boggling your mind just in time for the second to break your heart. During a lecture on diagnostics, House presents three scenarios in which a patient complains of leg pain and challenges his students to diagnose them. After lots of enjoyably snarky but essentially predictable back-and-forth with House and his students, the episode flips completely with the revelation that the third scenario is about House, and the infarction that left him crippled. Reflecting on the top House episodes, it's clear that each of these narratives represents a critical juncture in the show's trajectory. These episodes have undeniably enriched the series and contributed to the show's status as a beacon of sophisticated storytelling within the television panorama.

Two Stories
A two hour special, "Broken" sees House finally get the help he so sorely needs. He is admitted to the Mayfield Psychiatric Hospital and deals with his fellow patients there. But while he's technically there voluntarily, it's also under duress — the doctors and staff in the psychiatric hospital threaten to have his medical license pulled permanently if he doesn't stay to see through his treatment. The Season 2 finale "No Reason" is a particularly trippy episode with a bizarre twist ending, but begins with Dr. House being shot in a confrontation with an embittered former patient.
The Season 2 episode "Lines In The Sand" introduces House to an autistic child named Adam, who struggles to articulate what's wrong with him after crying out in apparent pain. The staff runs through a litany of different tests to try to get to the cause of his current medical crisis, but the boy's existing condition makes working with him more difficult. Elsewhere, Cuddy replaces the blood-stained carpet in House's office, but House isn't happy, and demands that Wilson solve the issue by getting his old one re-installed. One of television all-time most prominent medical dramas, "House" was created by David Shore in 2005 and ran for eight strong seasons. With no familiar supporting characters (save a brief appearance from Wilson) the focus is solely on Laurie's spectacular performance, and though the episode veers slightly into sentimentality, it's no bad thing after the unremittingly bleak fifth season. Similarly after season five ended with House checking into a psychiatric hospital, six doesn't begin with him being conveniently called back to Princeton for a mind-boggling case only he can solve, easy though that kind of status quo reset would have been.
Never was there ever a TV doctor so grumpy, so misanthropic, so antisocial as Dr. Gregory House of Princeton–Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. This Episode was incredibly dark, both in the topics it covered and the lighting and mood of the scenes that take place. The three stories that take place during the episodes are all brillian but the best one is no doubt House's Self Surgery scene in his bathtub, that was the highlight of the episode and this perfectly showcased Hugh Laurie's Unparraleled acting skills. House tries every delaying tactic available when Wilson forces him to attend his father's funeral.
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