Damned If You Do
- Episode aired Dec 14, 2004
- TV-14
- 44m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
A nun suffering from acute dermatitis and asthma treated by House with possibly the wrong medication comes dangerously close to death.A nun suffering from acute dermatitis and asthma treated by House with possibly the wrong medication comes dangerously close to death.A nun suffering from acute dermatitis and asthma treated by House with possibly the wrong medication comes dangerously close to death.
Peter James
- Priest
- (as James Symington)
Holly Daniels
- Debbie
- (uncredited)
Alexander Hall
- Doctor
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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I was ready to cringe at this episode. I know there are people out there who look at a TV show and are offended if people act in a perfectly human way. Not everyone is a believer and many who say they are only use religion at their convenience. If God is perfect and pure, then what we do on earth would be in God's name, including wanting to live to make things better. House's character spends so much time wading through deception and subterfuge. He sees his role as the healer. It seems to me that should be enough to be accepted unequivocally. Yes, spouts off disrespectfully (as he does with people who have no religious affiliation), but it is often when they are shortsighted and have done things that are destructive. Instead of sugar coating, he lays it on the line. I have struggled with religion my whole life. I could go on, but this is not the place.
Another unpleasant and extremely serious episode, as House works on a nun who exhibits a scary bunch of symptoms. She has a secret House must wrest from her in order to save her. But she would rather fly into the arms of her loving God than help House. This is one of those episodes that is so intense, I am amazed the show has any audience. But the truth is, it represents drama of the highest order, as House and the nun go at each other. The acres playing the nun is first-rate and quite believable. This is the kind of episode that makes me flashback to my days as a hospital orderly and nurse's aide, something I would rather not dwell on.
Do you wanna see an addict doctor tell a nun she is looking at him with lust? Do you wanna hear jokes about people hating nuns? Do you wanna hear a doctor call a nun a liar? Do you wanna see a nun looking at a couple at the beach like she is enjoing seeing people with beach clothes? Well i dont like to see my faith beeing mocked by some moronic show from those creeps from hollywood. I was disliking the show already and now im disgusted. I bet a show mocking muhammed wasnt made right? I guess Our Lord Jesus Christ line at the Cross fits here:FATHER FORGIVE THEM,CAUSE THEY KNOW NOT WHAT THEY DO.
At some point, religion ends up being being discussed in most hospital shows, usually through a minor character (James Cromwell's priest in ER, the religious nurse in Scrubs). House is no exception, only this time the subject is closely linked to the medical science, a contradiction that makes for an utterly fascinating watch.
The diagnostic case is that of a nun (Lost's Elizabeth Mitchell) seemingly suffering from an allergy of some kind. When she doesn't respond to treatments, but instead gets worse as time passes, the enigma becomes a direct confrontation between the nun's spirituality and House's belief that he has a better chance of saving her life than any higher power that might be.
The topic of faith provides interesting insight into the character of House, who has his own set of beliefs - chiefly the "everyone lies" mantra, which plays an important part in the episode's outcome - and comes off as a very complex man beneath the misanthropic mask he wears at work. Mitchell is a nice contrast to that attitude, and their interactions are the emotional and philosophical core of a story that manages to go beyond its formulaic plotting to tackle something deeper, and does so with great care.
The diagnostic case is that of a nun (Lost's Elizabeth Mitchell) seemingly suffering from an allergy of some kind. When she doesn't respond to treatments, but instead gets worse as time passes, the enigma becomes a direct confrontation between the nun's spirituality and House's belief that he has a better chance of saving her life than any higher power that might be.
The topic of faith provides interesting insight into the character of House, who has his own set of beliefs - chiefly the "everyone lies" mantra, which plays an important part in the episode's outcome - and comes off as a very complex man beneath the misanthropic mask he wears at work. Mitchell is a nice contrast to that attitude, and their interactions are the emotional and philosophical core of a story that manages to go beyond its formulaic plotting to tackle something deeper, and does so with great care.
Elizabeth Mitchell ("Lost", 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story, The Santa Clause 2) plays Sister Mary Augustine, who came in with what looked like a simple allergic reaction.
The whole issue of nuns, belief in God, and belief that House may make mistakes comes up at various times.
What was interesting was the fact that the solution came in the patient's past life. The initial story was not the whole truth as it usually isn't Everybody lies, as House always says. Once the lie is exposed, then a solution is found.
Faith may be a wonderful thing, but reality is what gets us through life.
The whole issue of nuns, belief in God, and belief that House may make mistakes comes up at various times.
What was interesting was the fact that the solution came in the patient's past life. The initial story was not the whole truth as it usually isn't Everybody lies, as House always says. Once the lie is exposed, then a solution is found.
Faith may be a wonderful thing, but reality is what gets us through life.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaA chocolate bar House eats in the hospital chapel is Cadburys Dairy Milk, an English chocolate company that Hugh Laurie did voiceovers for.
- Goofs(at around 6 minutes) 06:38 Dr. Foreman refers to a patient's "eosiphonil" count. The word he's after is "eosinophil" (a type of white blood cell).
- Quotes
Dr. Gregory House: [sees bowls of candy canes set out for Christmas] Candy *canes*? Are you mocking me?
- ConnectionsFeatures North Shore (2004)
- SoundtracksSilent Night
(uncredited)
Performed by Hugh Laurie on the piano.
Music by Franz Xaver Gruber
Lyrics by Joseph Mohr. (1818)
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