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  1. Cars. Cars represent the Socs power and the greasers’ vulnerability. Because their parents can afford to buy them their “tuff” cars, the Socs have increased mobility and protection. The greasers, who move mostly on foot, are physically vulnerable in comparison to the Socs.

  2. IMCDb.org: "The Outsiders, 1983": cars, bikes, trucks and other vehicles. Home page. Pictures provided by: modell, vilero. Display options: Also known as: Les inadaptés (Canada) Die Outsider (Germany) Rebeldes (Spain) Outsiders - kolmen jengi (Finland)

  3. The Socs (pronounced ˈsoʊʃɪz / so-shehs, short form of Socials) are a group of rich teenagers who live on the west side (in the book and the musical), or the south side (in the movie). They are the rivals of the greasers , and were described as having "money, cars, and futures," according to Ponyboy Curtis .

  4. Pony runs out the door and meets up with Johnny, expressing his anger at Darry's increasing coldness in the wake of his parents' recent deaths in a car crash. Running away from home, Ponyboy and Johnny wander into a park, where Bob and four other Socs surround them.

  5. 25 de mar. de 1983 · The Outsiders: Directed by Francis Ford Coppola. With C. Thomas Howell, Matt Dillon, Ralph Macchio, Patrick Swayze. In a small Oklahoma town in 1964, the rivalry between two gangs, the poor Greasers and the rich Socs, heats up when one gang member accidentally kills a member of the other.

  6. 21 de nov. de 2023 · In The Outsiders, a coming-of-age novel written by S.E. Hinton, the Socs (pronounced soashes) are a group of rich teenagers that live on the West side of Tulsa, OK.

  7. The cars of the Socs symbolize their material wealth, their upward mobility, and the many advantages they have over the greasers. Cherry Valance drives a red Corvette Sting Ray and Randy Adderson drives a blue Mustang.