teamhilson edit: I snatched these from house_cuddy. One of the people over there responded about the source, which is
here . Not much about Hilson, but probably mostly because they don't care about our ship. :)
omg you guys. SPOILERS.
Ever wondered what happens when the doctors of House are off the clock? Find out this Monday by watching the brilliant “After Hours” that I can assure will take you on a couple of rides during the night we spend with them.
Spoiler alert: Here are a few examples of what can be expected in “After Hours:”
Everybody has a lot on their plates especially House (Hugh Laurie) as he becomes aware that the experimental drug he’s been taking since “The Fix” is far from the miracle cure he hoped would improve his leg and his life. It leads him to go over any limit he’s ever crossed when he goes out of his mind by doing his craziest move yet: playing doctor and patient simultaneously.
Meanwhile, Thirteen (Olivia Wilde) lends a gloved hand to her seriously injured pal from jail when she shows up at her doorstep.
Thirteen and Chase are going through a very significant evolution in their relationship that puts them closer than ever physically and emotionally at the end beginning of the day.
Cuddy (Lisa Edelstein) and Chase (Jesse Spencer) prove to be the most reliable and caring as they give a strong support and help to House and Thirteen in their crisis;
Somewhere else in Princeton, Taub (Peter Jacobson) gets unexpected news from his hospital red head conquest that forces him to put his life in perspective after booze, ladies and gun but not after Foreman’s (Omar Epps) good advices.
Back to House; prepare yourselves for a Dexterian moment of cleaning ‘the crime scene’ pre-op that serves only to raise the tension as House sets his bathroom for his self-surgery. His bathtub will have to pass for an operating table. The procedure is so raw and messy that it feels like a clandestine operation. What Hugh Laurie does in this scene might just be his most outstanding performance yet as he conveys the toughness of the act in all aspects impressively. Brace yourself for the visuals and the sounds.
Both Cuddy and Rachel play a significant part in supporting House through this life threatening emergency as they are there for him either medically, caringly or playfully in a genuine way. The different settings these three people have to spend time together in makes room for truth, trust, feelings, emotions -and pirate talk-, sadly and bitterly almost looking like a family.
It’s raw, sometimes sweet but powerful and the end is very much Housian.
House gets an noteworthy message from a couple of people who mean a lot to him.
Wilson (Robert Sean Leonard) makes a point in “After Hours” that, for once, House picks up on instead of deflecting. The season finale “Moving On” is set up. What does this mean for House as a doctor, for his leg and with regards to his relationship with Cuddy and Wilson?