The Outsiders Movie Vs Book

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The Outsiders: Book Vs. Movie On April 24, 1967, a remarkable book was published by eighteen year old S. E. Hinton. Themed on a greaser named Ponyboy who him and his gang are treated badly by the Socs, the book is about Ponyboy and his best friend Johnny on the run after Johnny kills a Soc. With help from one of their gang members, they sneak on a train to get to a church in the countryside. While eating at a restaurant, the old church catches fire with kids stuck in it, leaving Johnny and Ponyboy the ones to save the kids. While saving the children, a large, scorching piece of timber falls on Johnny, putting him in critical condition. While Johnny is in the hospital, a ‘rumble’ goes on in which the Socs and greasers fight in the vacant lot, …show more content…

The first scene many might notice, is that the book starts out as Ponyboy walking home by himself unlike the movie, along with the part of being attacked by the Socs in the first part of the book. This scene is one of the only scenes that happens in the book and not the movie. In the movie, it starts out with the greasers at the gas station Another part that is uniquely in the book, is the part where Johnny and Ponyboy pretend to be playing soldier in Windrixville so they do not get caught. In addition to those parts, there is one substantial subplot that does not take place in the movie, and that is Sodapop’s girlfriend. In the book, Sodapop has a girlfriend who had moved to florida because she was pregnant and not allowed to marry Soda, however, Sandy did not like Sodapop they way he thought she did."When Sandy went to Florida… it wasn't Soda, Ponyboy. He told me he loved her, but I guess she didn't love him the way he thought she did, because it wasn't him." (Hinton 165). Unfortunately, another story of him did not prevail, the story of his favored pet horse, Mickey Mouse. In the book, Soda was was mentioned far more than any other characters in the story, be that as it may, the movie failed to mention him as the book did, leaving him in the dust with the other characters. One other major difference from the book, is the fact that the reader is able to know what Ponyboy is feeling and …show more content…

Probably the first thing a watcher would notice is the setting and how more descriptive it is than the book. S. E. Hinton did not explain the setting as well as the movie, giving the movie an explicit setting. Another additional scene added was Dally robbing the bank. Since the book is in Ponyboy’s perspective, the reader is not able to know what happened when Dally had robbed the store. Fortunately, the movie gives a wonderful and descriptive mindset of the scene. The film shows Dally in the store ripping the papers and then robbing the money from the clerk. Dally makes a run for it, as the clerk pulls out a gun and starts shooting at Dally. By chance, the clerk misses, but Dally’s luck did not hold for long when the cops drove up and shot him multiple times. At the end of the cinema, Ponyboy writes the story out of his own free will. On the other hand, the book explains how Pony was asked by his teacher to write an essay for extra

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