I think my tolerance level for House is just super-high. Nothing bothers me as long as I can have Hugh Laurie.
I'm with you, Dana.
And if you like crime fiction, I do recommend Connolly.
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
I think my tolerance level for House is just super-high. Nothing bothers me as long as I can have Hugh Laurie.
I'm with you, Dana.
And if you like crime fiction, I do recommend Connolly.
I liked NCIS! I've not really watched it in real time much, but I caught last season's finale and needed to see how it resolved, and I liked Tony's narration and the eventual resolution, even if Gibbs seems to run like Usain Bolt and not be out of breath. He can cover some distance.
Though it really wasn't a procedural this week.
It isn't like I am going to give up on House.. but 3 or 4 times a season i have to be mad at the show.
I enjoyed House--even though I cringed at some of the Cuckoo's n Nest rip-offs and the anvils. Still--watching Andre Braugher and Hugh Laurie go toe-to-toe was delectable.
Boyz II Men does the theme music for the next Psych. I didn't know they still existed.
The stuff he had to work through was awfully familiar material in my household, and that part rang true.
I should have added an 'IMO' disclaimer. House's story didn't always work for me, and I'm not sure why not. But I think it was partly the number of fascinating characters they'd created, right down to peripherals (the junior psychiatrists, for example). There was so much going on that was interesting, I was less interested in House.
Also, we've seen House's issues used as comedy, portrayed as the source of his genius, etc for several years. Suddenly to have them explained as a problem, in themselves, was jarring and not easy to accept. It was a similar kind of irritating, for me, as when someone is diagnosed with a major condition on the show, and it's explained away as curable or easily treated. Yes, I know it's part of the show's winning formula, and that I get behind that formula most weeks. I still sometimes find the total disconnect from reality difficult to accept.
I do agree that the portrayal of treatment and facilities, nsm, But I'm okay with that.
Ugh. It just irritates me. So often, when there's a portrayal of mental health treatment or psychiatric hospitals on TV, it's really badly done. Buffy did it. Lots of shows do. I don't think there's any need for it (and I think sometimes it can be quite harmful, but that's another issue). I would have got behind House's story far more if I could have believed in the situation he was in.
Still--watching Andre Braugher and Hugh Laurie go toe-to-toe was delectable.
Really, really good.
I liked NCIS LA better than I liked the pilot. Still not sure I'm loving it.
Also, we've seen House's issues used as comedy, portrayed as the source of his genius, etc for several years. Suddenly to have them explained as a problem, in themselves, was jarring and not easy to accept.
Eh, that happens IRL, too. That whole he has to be fucked up to be so brilliant thing has irritated me all along, so to finally address that the toll it's taking on him is unnecessary was just a relief for me.
You're right that all the side characters were a lot more interesting and 3 dimensional than one would expect.
And I'll certainly with everyone on the wonderfulness of Andre Braugher and Hugh Laurie working together. What a treat their scenes were!
so to finally address that the toll it's taking on him is unnecessary was just a relief for me.
I was amazed that they actually had House wake up to the "OK, this isn't working anymore. It's time to actually do something about it."
I know the plot required that he be standing all on his own at the end in his new closer-to-sanity, but damn I wish Wilson had been waiting for him.
I really did like Alvie, House's roommate. At first, I thought he was irritatingly hyper, but the actor did a good job of getting us past that outer layer. I thought Curtis Anderson would have a bigger role when I saw his name in the opening credits--it was strange seeing him just as a background patient with relatively few lines.
Speaking of details, I liked that TPTB on Castle gave the white drug guy a severe case of farmer's tan! Nice touch.