Three delinquents turn into heros
Do heros exist? Yes in many cases heros are real and have had an impacted on many lives. In this book three brave teens showed many ways that they were true heros. These teens risked their lives for others, proved to the community that they were not what others thought, and helped each other when in need. S.E. Hinton is the Author of The Outsiders. Ponyboy, Dally, Johnny, Darry, and Sodapop are the main characters but only three of them are true heros. The Curtis brothers parents died so the older brother Darry gets custody. Ponyboy and his good friend Johnny end up killing a Soc who tried to kill Ponyboy. Johnny and Ponyboy run away to a old church and hide out there for about a week. Dally comes and finds them they all go into town to get food when they head back to the church they notice it is on fire. Ponyboy jumps out of the car to go help the kids that are trapped in there Johnny goes along. Once Dally, Ponyboy and Johnny get all the kids out Dally helps get Ponyboy out of the church, Dally smacked Ponyboy across the head and knocked him out because he was on fire. The roof caved in on Johnny and fell on to his back. Johnny. Ponyboy, and Dally were in the hospital. Ponyboy was the first to get out, then Dally but Johnny didn’t make it. Dally acted out and ended up getting himself killed. The three heros that are in the book are Ponyboy, Dally, and Johnny. They all risked their lives to help others, all of them proved to the community
An ‘outsider’ relates to a person who is ostracised, who does not belong to a particular group and is unaccepted. Director-writer Amy Heckerling portrayed several characters such as Tai and Cher as the outsider in her film in the same way S.E Hinton manifest Ponyboy Curtis and the gang, Greasers as the outcast of her novel ‘The Outsiders’. The Outsiders is a successful exploration and understanding of people who are unlike
The Outsiders message is about “Nothing Gold Can Stay.” It explains that nothing good can go on forever and nothing young can last forever. It tells you about how and why we should enjoy what we have and keep and cherish everything we have to its maximum limit. Why shouldn’t we cherish what we have? Why do we need more? Why can't we be equally treated with same amount of things such as money and houses? That is the real question. We have that to this very day. In The Outsiders, their lives are exactly like this. They have their awesome rich people lives and the poor have unhappy lives. Some of each gang just want to be normal, the same, or similar at least. But their money splits them up. All because of a little extra
If you had a chance to go to college with an scholarship would you go even if it means leaving your only family behind? Darry is the oldest of the Curtis brothers. At twenty, Darry is the “old man” in The Outsiders a novel written by S.E. Hinton. He has two little brothers named Sodapop and Ponyboy. The brothers are greasers, a class term that refers to the people on the East Side, the poor side of town. They are known for their long, greased hair. Darry is devoted to try and be a parent figure for his brothers. He sacrifices everything and does everything he can for his little brothers, the only family he has left.
The Outsiders. It is a well-known book and movie and is the focus of my essay. I have always loved this book and the movie and decided that this was the perfect opportunity for me to not only watch the movie but read the book. This book is a great piece of literature and luckily for this class is well based on crime.
It was only two gangs, three deaths, and many injuries, but the bloody, death defying, life changing brawl is what ended all of the chaos.In book The Outsiders by S.E Hinton Ponyboy learns a lot about being caring. In this novel two groups called the Socs and the Greasers fight each other continuously. This leads them to unexpected fights and deaths, causing things to not go as planned.Ponyboy is caring because he is thoughtful, trustworthy, and brave.
In the novel The Outsiders by S.E. HINTON the main character Ponyboy’s identity changes multiple times over the text. In the beginning of the story Ponyboy was introduced as a greaser, a greaser is someone who is usually poorer than the middle class and like to screw around and start gang fights and they are considered hoods as stated on pages 2-3, “We’re poorer than the Socs and the middle class. I reckon we’re wilder, too. Not like the Socs, who jump greasers and wreck houses and throw beer blasts for kicks, and get editorials in the paper for being a public disgrace almost like hoods.” this shows that even though the Socs are much more wild the greasers are still considered the bad crazy hood people. Ponyboy didn’t like being a greaser
Have you ever been seen as someone you aren’t? Maybe you’re super nice but people see you as shy, or maybe you’re brave but you’re seen as too scared, or maybe you’re even smart but people judge you by your social status and think you’re dumb. Johnny Cade from “The Outsiders” by S.E. Hinton was misinterpreted for all those things. People always thought he was a scared little puppy but he was so much more. It was a shame that Johnny’s life was taken away from him right when he started to discover himself. Johnny will always be remembered for his bravery, smarts, and care towards people because he changed people’s lives, maybe not always by his words, but by his actions as well.
It’s What’s inside that matters In the story “The Outsiders” by S.E. Hinton, the author carefully developed and sequenced each paragraph to help the reader’s understanding. However, without at least one of the chapters, the readers would be lost. One of those chapters would be chapter one because it says that they are the greasers.
The story The Outsiders, written by S.E. Hinton, was a popular novel because of how realistic it was. The novel was successful because it included famous people and items from the 1960s. These items allowed for people to read the story and make connections. One of the topics that was referenced in the book was Perry Mason. Perry Mason was a popular television series that made readers understand how Ponyboy viewed the courtroom.
Have you ever had two friends that are enemies? In the story, The Outsiders, by S.E. Hinton, Cherry Valance (her real name is Sherri) is a fashionable, fiery, red headed, emotional, understanding, and trustworthy friend. The story took place in the mid 1960’s in Tulsa, OK. Greasers and Socs are two very different, yet same groups, which most definitely do not get along. After Ponyboy and Johnny got jumped, Johnny killed Bob, a Soc who was also Cherry’s boyfriend. During Ponyboy and Johnny’s hiding out in an abandoned church, the church starts on fire, while the children are playing in there. Johnny and Ponyboy somehow made their way back in to save the kids. Johnny and Ponyboy both made it out alive. Unfortunately, however, Johnny gets out with severe burns and a broken back. While he is in the hospital, Cherry has a conflict with herself: she is asked by Ponyboy to go see Johnny in the hospital, but she says no because she doesn’t want to face the person who killed Bob. In the time of the trial, Cherry and other Soc’s testify and come clean about the night of the stabbing. Consequently, since they told the truth, Johnny, Sodapop, and Darry all got to stay together. Cherry Valance is an emotional, caring, and trustworthy friend.
Most people in the world are misunderstood at some point in their life. However, if other people’s perceptions of a person create a reputation, it can camouflage their real traits. Dallas (Dally) Winston is a victim of this. A character in the book The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, Dally is commonly known for being a tough ruthless guy who doesn’t care about anybody but himself. He’s a great fighter and is very confident, but because of his past, it seems his real qualities have been masked. Even though Dallas Winston’s friends misunderstood him to be a cold-hearted and tough person, his experiences and how he treats his friends reveals his loving, self-reliant, and dependable nature.
Fracis Ford Coppola’s “The Outsiders” (1983) is an adaptation of the novel of the same name by E.Hinton published in 1967. There are many theories that can be found throughout the movie, victim precipitation theory, differential association theory, strain theory and labeling theory are the most prevalent. The story takes place in Tulsa, Oklahoma and revolves around the story of a 14 year old Greaser named Ponyboy Curtis. The town is split into two conflicting adolescent groups, the Greasers and the Socs. The Greasers are of lower class standings with harsh upbringings, poor kids from the wrong side of town (north) and are considered delinquents. The Socs, are privileged kids living on the south side who have an easy life where everything
One of the hardest things to do in life is to get over the loss of someone else's life. In “The Outsiders” by S.E Hinton, Ponyboy and the rest of the gang experience the loss of close family and friends, and even enemies regularly. Weather that be through death or a simple goodbye. It can make being stuck in the past is a tremendous problem, especially when you're close to someone that passes away. Nevertheless the Greasers do an Unbelievably adequate job getting through the loss of people they are so close to, you would too if you had gone through it so many times. But some of the losses affect the gang more than others, and being stuck on the thought of someone leaves no room for growing.
I will do my extended analysis on the film, The Outsiders. The film’s release was in 1983, and the director was Francis Ford Coppola. The genre of this film is drama. The Outsiders would fall into the classification chart in two categories (realism and classicism). This film is realistic because it concentrates more on the content, plot, and themes than form, visuals, and appearance which is the formalism approach.
The Outsiders is about the Greasers and the Socs seeing their differences in a new way and learning that they aren’t as different as they think. The theme of “The Outsiders” is ‘crossing over the gap between the rich and the poor’. The author conveys this through character, symbols and events. S.E. Hinton shows the theme by everyone having their own personal suffering.