ET on Fox. With the episode titled "Everybody Dies" -- a spin on House's veritable catch-phrase, "Everybody lies. And there was a death. And a funeral. But not as anyone might have expected.
House spent much of the episode in a drug-induced state, hallucinating various people who've meant something throughout his life. It was a way to bring back both Kutner and Amber who've died along the way. The Warren Zevon song that we used before it, I had wanted to use that; it just felt really nice. So going with this weird, uplifting song [about] dying had a really nice feeling to it. Does he know House is alive? The notion is that Foreman had pieced it together and figured it out.
The story is the story. And the story ends when the story ends. I love this character. Back at the burning building, House says the patient is happy. Amber replies that the patient is dead. House says he was, since his initial plan had failed. He has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis which is progressing quickly. Amber highlights a gap in the story and wants to know what happened.
House says the patient was just saying he was going to live life the best he could in the time he had left. He goes to get the ultrasound machine. The team operates to remove a small branch. The patient probably inhaled it while outside. Most people would have coughed it up but the cough reflex in addicts is suppressed. It set off an autoimmune reaction that mimicked ALS. Amber notices House is smiling. Amber tells him it does - House will cry over Wilson for a while and go back to work because he loves it.
House says that despite that, in seventy years all of his patients will be dead too. Amber reminds him that when he solves a puzzle, it makes the world make sense, and there will always be more puzzles. They make him happy. She tells him to go home.
House gets up off the floor, gets his cane , and heads for the door. However, the exit is blocked by fire. Wilson and Foreman are at B Baker Street.
Wilson is worried because House has left food out for several days which he never does. Wilson is worried that they screwed up but Foreman assures him they have done the right thing. Foreman answers it. Back at the burning building, House is looking for a way out. The floor gives out under him and he falls through it to the burning floor below. Nolan reminds them anything he could say would be a breach of confidentiality.
Nolan excuses himself. Foreman tells Nolan that House left without taking anything, even his phone. Foreman notes House would have used Vicodin but suddenly remembers his last patient was a heroin addict. She says falling through the floor may have been a sign. She says she knows he believes in love. House is asking Wilson to take the fall for the flooding. House figures that the court will never send Wilson to jail. Wilson is also worried about his reputation.
Wilson finally agrees and House thanks him. House figures Wilson will cave and goes to leave but Wilson runs after him and stops him.
Wilson finally turns him down. Stacy tells House Wilson was right. House stands up again. He hallucinates that Stacy is handing him their child. House says this is merely what his life could have been but Stacy tells him his life can still be like that. She motions him towards the couch where he and Dominika are sitting. House then raises the stakes and sees himself surrounded by a group of cheerleaders.
He sits back down again. House sees another figure around him and asks if hell is a series of people telling him to live. He asks why she thinks he deserves to die. Wilson thinks he smells smoke. They run and see a building on fire. Cameron is urging House to let go.
House is saying he had a choice to avoid this. He goes back to the conversation with the patient and admits he skipped a part. The patient countered that House tried to save him. House said he failed. The patient wants to know why House is trying to talk him out of it. The patient even has a plan - they will falsify the records to say the patient came in before the flood, House treated him badly so he stole the tickets and flushed them. House agrees and thanks the patient.
Cameron wonders what the point is - that House cared more about the patient than about himself? She knows the truth is that he cared more about the puzzle than about himself. House admits it but says he can change. House stands up again and starts walking towards the door. Foreman and Wilson see House in the building just as the ceiling crashes down. The building then explodes. The next morning the entire team is at the site of the smouldering ruins.
Adams hopes that House could have gotten out. Park is still optimistic; some people are found even in collapsed buildings. Taub sees the firemen remove a body. Park tells those at the memorial service that House hired her when no-one else would.
Adams tells how House got her fired. Masters tells the audience how House gave her the courage to quit. His mother tells them House was a good son. Stacy tells them he was a trying boyfriend who she never stopped loving. Foreman says House was his boss, his employee and someone from whom he always learned.
Taub says House made him a better parent. Thirteen states House was willing to kill her, a fact for which she will always be grateful. Cameron says that somewhere inside him he knew how to love.
He could change. He did change. And at the same time, some things never change. My take? Perfect from start to finish. Bonus points for all the fan treats, like the Dead Poets Society reference. Home Article 'House' finale recap: 'Everybody Dies' Save FB Tweet More.
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