[News] 2 articles

Apr 22, 2008 09:53

Oulalala! Il y a un long moment qu'on n'a pas posté d'infos sur cette communauté!

Plusieurs infos donc:

- Reprise de la saison 4 LUNDI PROCHAIN! YAY!!

'House' creator speaks: Cameron and Chase fans may not want to hear it


"House" doesn't return until April 28, but there's plenty to talk about before then.
For one thing, there’s a vocal subset of “House” fans who are not pleased with the lack of screen time that Allison Cameron (Jennifer Morrison) and Robert Chase (Jesse Spencer) have gotten thus far in Season 4.
In what I found to be an entertaining story line, last fall 40 potential candidates for House’s diagnostic team were winnowed down to three new staffers over first half of the season. “House” viewers will recall that Chris Taub (Peter Jacobson), Lawrence Kutner (Kal Penn) and Thirteen (Olivia Wilde) made the cut, and that the driven candidate Amber Volakis (Anne Dudek) remains on the scene as James Wilson’s girlfriend.
But the introduction of all those new faces meant that Chase and Cameron, who are working elsewhere at Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital, haven’t been around much. The show’s producers said last summer and fall that the characters would still be around in Season 4, but I was surprised by how little we ended up seeing them (as were many other loyal “House” viewers, apparently).

Having said that, I didn’t necessarily mind their reduced exposure, and I thought that most of the new characters reinvigorated an already excellent show. But after I mentioned in last Friday’s Web chat that I’d be talking to "House" creator/executive producer David Shore on Monday, I heard from many disgruntled Cameron/Chase fans.
Well, those folks are probably not going to be gruntled any time soon.
Shore said there are no immediate plans for either doctor to rejoin House’s team, and he added that putting Cameron and Chase back in the forefront is not necessarily “what the show needs.” Though they may get a little more attention in the next round of episodes (they’d had little or no screen time some weeks), the show will still have a large cast of characters to deal with.
“Cameron and Chase are certainly not on screen as much as they used to be, but the stuff they’re doing, I think, takes on a different weight and a greater weight,” Shore said.


“I’m going to say something your readers aren’t going to like, but as someone running a television show, you have to be very careful - people think they want something and they do want something, but it’s not what they need, shall we say, and it’s not what the show needs,” Shore said later in the interview. “It’s great that they like those characters. … You want people to want more of things. You have to be careful on what you deliver.”
If anything, I’ve thought that the “House” writing staff needs to decide who to cut from the list of ongoing characters. The show feels a little crowded with so many characters to service each week.
I asked Shore if any cast members would be leaving the show, but he was cagey on the topic, and would only say that something “pretty significant” happens in the two-parter that closes out the season. (“House” will air four episodes starting April 28; for more on what will happen in those episodes, go here; you can also go to the end of this item, where I've posted Fox's plot summaries for the four episodes).
I’ll be posting the complete transcript of my conversation with Shore as “House’s” return date gets closer, but here’s the part of the interview that touched on Chase and Cameron situation (and this part is not spoilery).
Photos: Hugh Laurie as Gregory House, Jesse Spencer as Robert Chase and Jennifer Morrison as Allison Cameron.
MR: There are a whole lot of people on the show now. Has that been challenging, trying to integrate all those characters?
DS: Yeah, like Cameron and Chase are certainly not on screen as much as they used to be, but the stuff they’re doing, I think, takes on a different weight and a greater weight. We are a strange hybrid of a show -- we’re fundamentally a procedural, but there are all of these characters people want to find out more about. And I do too. But I don’t want to change the fundamental nature of the show and there’s only so many pages for us to deal with [character stories]. We’ve got a lot of bodies.
MR: So does that mean some of those bodies will leave the show, that there will be attrition at some point?
DS: Oh, I don’t want that to happen. I like them all.
MR: I happened to mention that I’d be talking to you today in a Web chat last Friday, and I told people to send in their “House” questions. I didn’t expect a lot of them, but I did get quite a few - and a lot of them were from readers who were unhappy with the Chase/Cameron situation. “Where are they? When will they be on screen more?” It sure seemed like some fans were missing those characters.
DS: Well, that’s great. Meaning, that’s what you want to hear. That’s what I mean by being ahead of the curve a little bit [earlier in the interview, we talked about the writers doing the Season 4 "Survivor" challenge as a way to shake up the show before it got too set in its ways].
When you use a character a little less, you don’t want to hear, "Well, it’s about time you did that." It’s good that people want more. We are trying to give all the characters [screen time], all the characters have their fans and we’re trying to give them what they want.
There are no plans to change [Cameron and Chase’s] fundamental roles, we’re not bringing them back into [House’s] team so fast.
I like the fact that they’re not answerable to House anymore, and as a result of that, what they tell House takes on a greater significance. There’s no sense of intimidation. They have grown up, in a way, and we’re having fun with that and we’re trying to do [more of] that. So we’re not losing them. Hopefully we’ll be getting a little more of them than you were getting in the last batch of episodes
MR: In the last bunch of episodes, it seems that one of them might have one scene, and the other one might not be on at all.
DS: Yeah, we’re trying to avoid that. We certainly want them each to have a significant presence [in each episode].
MR: But they aren’t going to be rejoining House’s team, right?
DS: Mmm-hmm [they are not rejoining the team].
MR: It is interesting to see them with this autonomy. There’s a lack of cowering when they interact with House. They’re on a completely different footing.
DS: It does. I don’t think they cowered in fear, but it does change the dynamic. They are now peers, rather than employees.
The other thing is trying to stay true to the reality of the show. They were hired for three-year fellowships to begin with. Both Cameron and Chase had been there for a while at the time of the pilot. And it’s sort of something that becomes I think fake on TV - that people stay in these roles forever. People’s roles change, especially if they’re competent, and these people are competent.
MR: Are the actors restive -- are they wanting more screen time?
DS: They haven’t complained to me. I’m sure they’d like it. They do a good job and they like being here. But I think they also are enjoying [the fact that their characters are] not intimidated by House.
MR: I have to say, when I got to the end of an episode this season, I wasn’t saying, “Boy, I wish there was more of Chase.” I don’t dislike the characters, but there was so much else going on that interested me that I didn’t find myself thinking we should have gotten more of them.
DS: There’s also … I’m going to say something you’re readers aren’t going to like, but as someone running a television show, you have to be very careful - people think they want something and they do want something, but it’s not what they need, shall we say, and it’s not what the show needs. It’s great that they like those characters.
The most obvious [comment] is people saying, “I love the show, can’t you just make House a little nicer?” No. That’s sort of the most egregious example. No, you like him because he is who he is. And if he wasn’t who he is, you wouldn’t like him as much. He wouldn’t be the same person.
And the show as a whole falls into that. And so yes, I changed it. A little bit. And you have to be really careful with these things. It’s a real challenge. You want people to want more of things. You have to be careful on what you deliver.
MR: If the show was going into Season 7 and we were still talking about this crush that Cameron has on House - we’d both be like, “Why are we still talking about this?”
DS: Been there, done that. Yeah, we felt that that had played itself out.
[From later in the interview...]
MR: Are there going to be any major cast changes, in terms of people leaving? Will someone exit the roster of ongoing characters?
DS: Something is happening at the end of this year which I think is pretty significant. I’d rather not say what it is.
MR: You can cut anyone but Wilson.
DS: [Laughs] OK.

Spoilers ahoy from here on out. Below are Fox's summaries for the next four "House" episodes":

April 28, "No More Mister Nice Guy": "House thinks an emergency room patient has a bigger problem than the E.R. initially diagnosed based on the fact that the patient is 'too nice.' Meanwhile, House and Amber (guest star Anne Dudek) are at odds vying for Wilson’s (Robert Sean Leonard) time and attention in an all-new episode."
May 5, "Living the Dream": "In an all-new episode, House is convinced that one of the actors (guest star Jason Lewis) on his favorite soap opera, 'Prescription Passion,' has a serious medical condition, but has to take matters into his own hands when both the actor and House's own team dismiss his assessment, believing that nothing is wrong with the soap hunk."
May 12, "House's Head": "In Part 1 of the two-part season finale, House is in a bus accident and loses four hours of his memory. He slowly pieces together that a fellow bus passenger was exhibiting signs of a deadly illness. But the details of who it is or how House got on the bus in the first place are locked inside his brain, and he’s desperate to add up the fleeting flashes in order to save someone who might not even know he or she could be dying."
May 19, "Wilson's Heart": "In Part 2 of the two-part season finale, clues inside House's head hold the key to a patient's condition, and House's friendship with Wilson is tested beyond limits as murky memories from the bus accident the night before threaten to change their lives forever."
Dun-dun-dun!
Source: The watcher

Question: I know there is to be a division of 'shippers in any fan base, but I have to say, I just don't get the Hameron 'shippers on House. I was a Hameron 'shipper all the way through the second season, but right now it seems not only unlikely, but also out of character. House pays prostitutes for sex and even slept with a married woman, so we know that he has very little qualms about getting his rocks off when he feels like it. So why would House not have had sex with the beautiful Cameron when he had the chance all the way back in Season 1? I think he knew, given her feelings for him, that it would be wrong to do so while having absolutely no feelings for her - one of the few decent things he's ever done. Also, Cameron is clearly not House's type. I'm not saying House doesn't care about her on some level, but I really think it's in more of a fatherly way, despite his inappropriateness towards her (and all females). He's nurtured her into being a much better doctor and, quite frankly, less of a wimp. They are just completely wrong for each other romantically. I think, if anyone, Doctor Cuddy is more of his type. Hugh Laurie and Lisa Edelstein have great chemistry, and their scenes together are funny and interesting. I'm looking forward to that being explored next year, and I can only hope that it doesn't end too soon for the writers to satisfy the vocal Hameron minority. That would be a shark-jump.- Reina
Matt Roush: And you think I'm going to jump into the middle of this debate why? You'd think the fact they've marginalized Cameron so much this season would have already put the kibosh on the notion of ingénue and former mentor becoming a serious item. But Cuddy and House? So much more fun to contemplate, not that I'm pining for the grouchy doc to get serious (if that's even possible) with any of the regulars. Personally, I still miss Sela Ward.
Source: Ask Matt

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jesse spencer, hugh laurie, house, jennifer morrison, news, cameron, chase

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