The thing that bothers me the most was how, as soon as Wilson figured out Amber was the person who had been on the bus, it was like House who?
Oh that and the incredibly manipulative expression on his face, when he went back into House's office to ask him to do the DBS, and how unconcerned he seemed to be, about House's health and safety, during the procedure itself.
Yeah, that bothers me terribly too. One minute he was telling House to rest and the next minute he was telling him to do something that could kill him. He was choosing someone he dated for 4 months over the man he's been friends with for, what, 10 years? The man had a fractured skull, concussion, bleeding from his ear, and a heart attack yet Wilson felt it was OK to ask him to submit to a DBS. Wilson manipulated House constantly (and successfully) once he found out it was Amber. Walking away from House at the end was just a horrible thing to do. (I'm still waiting for an apology for all of this. He admitted in Saviors that he handled the aftermath of Amber's death badly, but he never admitted to or apologized for putting his friend in mortal danger to save her. I'm crossing my fingers - though I doubt it will happen - that House's breakdown involves telling Wilson just how much he's hurt him and Wilson admitting it and apologizing.)
As far as Wilson's feelings for Amber, I am sort of on the fence. I think it is possible for someone to fall deeply in love in a short period of time, and Wilson is a serial dater/marryer/divorcee, so it's likely that he's the type to fall fast, fall hard, and get tired of it all in a few years. Wilson's grief was, to me anyways, genuine (and RSL's performance was wonderfully convincing).
The negative part of me does, however, glare at the screen and ask why all the drama for someone who has only been around a short while.
Oh and how he kept insisting that House had Amber on the brain because he wanted to bone her.
He kinda did want to bone her. ;-) That wasn't the reason he went through what he did to save her, though.
Oh that and the incredibly manipulative expression on his face, when he went back into House's office to ask him to do the DBS, and how unconcerned he seemed to be, about House's health and safety, during the procedure itself.
Yeah, that bothers me terribly too. One minute he was telling House to rest and the next minute he was telling him to do something that could kill him. He was choosing someone he dated for 4 months over the man he's been friends with for, what, 10 years? The man had a fractured skull, concussion, bleeding from his ear, and a heart attack yet Wilson felt it was OK to ask him to submit to a DBS. Wilson manipulated House constantly (and successfully) once he found out it was Amber. Walking away from House at the end was just a horrible thing to do. (I'm still waiting for an apology for all of this. He admitted in Saviors that he handled the aftermath of Amber's death badly, but he never admitted to or apologized for putting his friend in mortal danger to save her. I'm crossing my fingers - though I doubt it will happen - that House's breakdown involves telling Wilson just how much he's hurt him and Wilson admitting it and apologizing.)
As far as Wilson's feelings for Amber, I am sort of on the fence. I think it is possible for someone to fall deeply in love in a short period of time, and Wilson is a serial dater/marryer/divorcee, so it's likely that he's the type to fall fast, fall hard, and get tired of it all in a few years. Wilson's grief was, to me anyways, genuine (and RSL's performance was wonderfully convincing).
The negative part of me does, however, glare at the screen and ask why all the drama for someone who has only been around a short while.
Oh and how he kept insisting that House had Amber on the brain because he wanted to bone her.
He kinda did want to bone her. ;-) That wasn't the reason he went through what he did to save her, though.