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Book and movie comparison essay
Essay on character of the outsiders
The struggles in the outsiders
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Jay Mountain, Oklahoma, 1965 A local church on the top of Jay Mountain was set to flames by what appears to be a cigarette. Many children were trapped inside the burning church. Two boys by the names of Ponyboy and Johnny rushed into the fire and saved all of the kids. The investigation continues, but evidence has been uncovered that the boys are Greasers and were near the church because they were running away from possible charges of manslaughter.
On Sunday, two boys from the east side gang (Greasers), Ponyboy Curtis and Johnny Cade went missing. Neighbors say that on the day of their disappearance, Darry Curtis (Ponyboys brother) was seen slapping Ponyboy. Mrs. Smith a close friend of theirs that lived nearby said "I was actually shocked. Darry had never done something like that to Pony. He was always such a good lad.
Ponyboy from the novel “The outsiders” is very different from the Gang the Greasers In many ways. One example that Ponyboy is not like other greasers because he thinks deeper than the other members in his gang he notices the little things in life for example, “you know, Johnny said slowly, “I never noticed colors and clouds and stuff until you kept reminding me about them. It seems like they were never there before.” This means that when Ponyboy notices the little things he says them and has other People notice them too. Ponyboy has learned a lot throughout the story.
The most significant change from the book to the film was that in the book Dally was shot and died before he hit the ground while in the movie he looks up at Pony still alive and says his name, and this is significant because it adds more emotion to the scene causing Pony to be more upset with what all has happened. In the book, Johnny had just did and since Dally was like a big brother to johnny, he couldn't take it. He ran out of the hospital without a word. Later on he calls Darry from a payphone explaining that he was running from the cops for attempted robbery of a grocery store and was heading for the park. When he was after a while, the cops shot him under a street light and was dead before he hit the ground.
People always think one is better than the other, and this is why I think the book is better than the movie. Why the book seemed it had more events, and that some of the events in the movie didn’t match the book was by in the book they started on the corner of the street but in the movie it started with Ponyboy writing the theme. The movie also described Johnny and Ponyboy different than in the book. It said
I think that when Ponyboy says " “I lie to myself all the time. But I never believe me.” He means that he always tells himself that he is not who he really is, but in the end he realizes that he is who he is and that he should not resort to lying. I think this because when he says that he lies to himself, he is trying to tell himself he is different than who he is. He want 's to be like the rest of the greasers.
The church that Johnny and Ponyboy stayed in burnt down. Thus, Johnny died. Although they share a great deal of similarities the movie and novel are very different.
Johnny Cade and Ponyboy Curtis ended up in the fight, because the Socs were in there part of town and they were drunk. Ponyboy and Johnny were running away from home. The reason Ponyboy wanted to run away is because Darry, Ponyboy’s oldest brother hit him because he got home at 2:00 in the morning. Johnny and Ponyboy ended up in the fight with Bob Shelton, because they were walking home with Cherry Valance and Marcia from the drive in movies. Johnny is justified in what he did and is Not Guilty, because he killed Bob for revenge for what he did before, to save Ponyboy and protect him, and he killed Bob so Ponyboy would not be dead.
An important part of the book that wasn’t in the movie was a lot after Dally died, they didn’t have Pony getting sick, the court, Randy coming again to see Pony, or the teacher telling Pony to write a composition. In my opinion, the only one of the scenes that I think should have been there was the court. The court is significant because of the fact that then you know everything turned out alright for Pony. In general, I think that the movie didn’t quite capture the theme in the book and the lessons that Pony learns throughout
2. Read pg. 179-180 of chapter 12. Why does Ponyboy want to share his story? What difference does he think it will make?
Ponyboy and Johnny used to be not as close as now. Therefore, now, they become the closest friend. They become closer and share the same unforgettable experience, they have same situation and same social class. They also rely each other, console each other. Finally they became best friend.
GRABBER. In S.E Hinton’s novel The Outsiders, Dallas Winston and Johnny Cade are opposites, from their personalities to their way of life. Dally is tough, while Johnny is sensitive, yet the two are very similar. Johnny gives advice to stay the same and not change, while Dally thinks that staying tough is the only way to not get hurt. They die in different ways, but both grew up with abusive or neglectful parents.
The movie also missed critical events and that the author has included in her book, including Sandy, Ponyboy ’s talk with Cherry Valance about sunsets, the streetlight in which Dally died, the hearing of Ponyboy’s fate at court, and Sodapop’s horse Mickey Mouse. These events and occurrences were impactful to the story’s plot and its resoluting outcome. Although the ending in the book was very dramatic, the movie also has a similar ending, but less breathtaking and thrilling. Many people ought to know that these events were also a trait that each character
Ponyboy gets jumped and the rest of the gang saves him. This is important so we could see how the Soc’s and the Greasers act. This is a negative for Ponyboy because he got cut. Ponyboy and johnny meet cherry valance at the movie.
In the book, Outsiders, I noticed the most character development in Ponyboy Curtis. Although he didn’t realize many things until the end of the book, I think once everything registered within himself, he took everything that had happened to him in the past couple weeks as a lesson. One thing that Ponyboy finally grasped was that his oldest brother Darry actually cared for him. At first Ponyboy had always thought that Darry didn’t like him and that Darry would rather him be gone. However, after his friends repeatedly reassured Ponyboy that his older brother had been hard on him because he really loved and cared about him, Ponyboy slowly started to realize that, even though the two still fought a bit.