like a movie and a book. The tiny, miniscule, portion emerged is the movie, and the hidden one ten times the size is the book. Thought the book and the movie adaptation of “The Outsiders” there are some similarities between the two. While they may have some similarities they pale in comparison to the stark differences between the different ways the characters are developed. In the first place, one of the examples of how the characters are more developed in the book than the movie is within…
The Outsiders is about a story written in 1960s by the main lead, Ponyboy Curtis. Through narration, the story was told in a first person perspective. The story evolves between two groups of people, the lower-class group of Oklahoma youths called greasers and the upper-class youth from the west side of town called Socials, Socs for short. One night, some of the Socs were unhappy with some of the greasers when they befriended their girlfriend, Cherry Valance and Marcia at a drive-in. Later that…
The two best friends; Ponyboy and Johnny, both have similarities and differences. Ponyboy and Johnny had a huge impact on the book. The storyline would be complete different if Ponyboy and Johnny were not included. There are a few similarities between the two boys, one being they were both not into fighting. They fought because they had to. Ponyboy stated, “Why do I fight? I thought, and couldn’t think of any good reason for fighting except self defense.” (pg. 120) Ponyboy didn’t fight just…
gang, but he “was a good fighter and could play it cool, but he was sensitive and that isn't a good way to be when you're a greaser” (88). Ponyboy knows that Johnny could fight if he needed but Johnny says “fighting’s no good. . . .” (148). He believes that fighting does not answer the problems the greasers and the Socs have. Before Johnny died he wrote a note in Gone With the Wind and left the book for Ponyboy. His philosophy on fighting is the opposite of the average greaser, and instead of…
extended family of the Curtis brothers in The Outsiders. The main characters present in The Outsiders are young men ranging from fourteen year-old to twenty year-old. They are very few adults or female characters in the novel. The Greasers’ parents are dead, indifferent, apathetic or abusive. Most of them have to learn to live with poverty and violence The Greasers share the feeling that they don’t belong anywhere. As we have seen previously, The Outsiders, does not only tell the story of the…
The Outsiders Compare and Contrast The Outsiders is one of the most popular books written in the 1960’s by SE Hilton. This book is known for the amazing story behind two social groups. The Outsiders is a very descriptive book that lets you picture everything in your mind. The book had an amazing impact that later years a movie was made into a motion picture melodrama by Francis Ford Coppola in 1983. The movie purpose was to give us a better explanation and perspective about the book. The movie…
What’s The Difference? In the book, The Outsiders by S. E. Hinton, Greasers and Socs don’t exactly see eye to eye with each other. They have their differences, but doesn’t everyone? This leads me to believe that they are not much different from each other and that it could be argued that these two groups don’t have many attributes that could set them apart from each other. In the book, some of the greasers and socs get along in the beginning of the story. One example is Johnny and Cherry. They…
Hinton explains how developing in this types of cities can enhance or destroy the relationships most important to yourself in The Outsiders, That Was Then This is Now and Rumble Fish. Hinton tests the effects of morality, loyalty and evaluation and how it affects what is valued most in ones life. S.E. Hinton clearly has a recurring theme of loyalty and morality between confused adolescents, in poverty and violence infected urban areas and how it can make or break important relationships in your…
people in the face of hardship. S.E. Hinton, the author of The Outsiders, displays evidence supporting this idea through the characters within the wealthy East-side gang known as the “Socials” and the self-described “hoodlums” within the far poorer West-side gang known as the “Greasers.” The Greasers and Socials, like all other people, are more alike than different, their economic statuses notwithstanding. Throughout the novel, Johnny Cade, a Greaser who faces physical abuse at home, and Bob…
on the floor, some audience members leave a little disappointed. They see all the details that the movie got wrong, big or small. Many movies fail to completely fulfill their original book’s ideas and plot lines. The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton is no exception to this rule. The Outsiders movie was far different from the book in many ways including deleted scenes, added scenes and different character descriptions. First of all, in the movie, there were many deleted scenes. The book’s exposition…