Preview

Roles of Different People on Michael Oher in the Blind Side

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1381 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Roles of Different People on Michael Oher in the Blind Side
An Analysis of the Roles of Different People on Michael Oher in The Blind Side

The film The Blind Side was based off of the book written by Michael Lewis and was directed and written by John Lee Hancock. The movie premiered on November 20th, 2009. Warner Brothers Pictures produced the film for a general audience over the age of thirteen because of language, violence, drugs, and sexual references. This is a story of a young African American boy, Michael Oher, and his struggle through life to become a successful human being with the help of the people around him. The Tuohy family, teachers at Wingate, and his tutor, Miss Sue, all worked together to help make Michael the professional football player and writer he is today.
The first influence on Michael to become successful was the Tuohy family, the first member of which is Leigh Anne. Overall, Leigh Anne Tuohy had the biggest influence on Michael as a whole. She played many roles in his life from the time they met to the present. Leigh Anne starts out being Michael’s friend and invites him to stay in her home because she realized he is homeless. She then moves to the role of his mentor where she guides Michael in the right direction to start doing well in school and work hard in football practices. Leigh Anne eventually moves into the role of Michael’s mother. She takes him under her wing and buys him clothing, provides him a room of his own, helps him get a driver’s license, a truck, and ultimately adopts him. At the first football game at Wingate, Leigh Anne stands up for Michael when a father from the other team bullies him. She says, “Hey..crotchmouth! Yeah, you! Zip it, or I’ll come up there and zip it for ya!” and “Yo, deliverance. You see number 74? Well, that’s my son” (The Blind Side). From this moment on, Michael became another member of the Tuohy family. Leigh Anne plays the role of his defender as well. She protects him against his football coach, teachers and neighborhood bullies. His coach is



Cited: The Blind Side. Dir. John Lee Hancock. Warner Brothers Pictures, 2009. DVD.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Michael did not come from a theatrical family. His father was a porter at the Billingsgate fish market. His mother was a charlady (cleaning lady). Michael's father liked to gamble. His mother worked as a cleaning lady to give her sons a better life.…

    • 748 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Because of their distressing condition, the brothers are forced to move back home with their parents. They cannot take care of themselves anymore. Michael is now estimated to have a mental age of 10 and is said to giggle all the times. While factory worker Matthew, whose 19-year-old daughter Lydia is expecting a baby, behaves much like a toddler. After their behavior started to change, the brothers were eventually diagnosed with terminal leukodystrophy.…

    • 708 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Heat by Mike Lupica

    • 438 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Also, I will be answering question number 8. In the beginning of the story, Michael was very scared and nervous at all times. He acted this way because if the government found out about his father, he would be sent back to Cuba and be separated with his brother. At the end of the story, however, Michael feels a lot more happy and relieved to do what he wants. The truth about his father’s death comes out, but his coach takes him into his household temporarily. Now, he isn’t keeping all of his feelings bottled up and…

    • 438 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Michael deals with students who are affected by poverty, drugs, absentee parents and domestic violence. Jenny seeks out Michael in his office one day, distraught, explaining she had been in a verbal altercation with another student. Jenny explained she was under a lot of pressure and stress and did not want to get into a fight. After a brief discussion with Jenny, Michael learned that she was dealing with much stress at home and was six weeks pregnant. Jenny also asked that he tell no one. She was uncertain whether or not if she planned on keeping the baby or not (Herlihy & Corey, 2006, p. 251). Jenny states that her mother is not understanding and she is not sharing this information with her. Michael is the father of two daughters of his own, and feels for Jenny. Michel recognizes that he has personal feelings associated with this situation that reflect on his own morals, values and beliefs on teen pregnancy (Herlihy & Corey, 2006, p. 252). Michael is against teens raising babies, does not want to imply she should abort the fetus and is concerned with his obligation to inform her parents as she is a…

    • 1625 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The book had part of its plot based on Michael’s life, and the other on the growth of the game and left tackle. The talk about how Jose theismans arm was broken in two places because hs left tackle did not protect his blind side, and maybe his am breaking in two hinted to the 2 story lines. The movie simply merged Michael’s poor past into football and turned him into a star to cater to a wider audience and be a feel good inspirational movie, while the book gave insight on actual football, the growth of the game, and Michael Oher’s upbringing. In the movie, they completely removed Michael’s life in hurt village, or explain how the projects came to become hurt village. They also took out many of the minor characters like Zach, and all the other little details like how Michael wanted to play basketball like M.J., and how his father went to prison. They also never brought up any details about Oher’s brothers and sisters in the movie. As you can see, they left out major chunks of the book from the movie, completely removing the end of it which talked about his life before meeting the…

    • 1612 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    ethics play in the lives of five different men: Judah Rosenthal, a successful ophthalmologist; Clifford…

    • 1630 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    This trails a sense of belonging by dignifying the protection of family relationship. Blind side has also explore the concept of belonging, the main character Michael oar is depicted as an isolated human being with no reliable relationships with family or friends, walking down an isle of darkness, the close up shot between his physical appearance symbolises his lifestyle. In one scene displays an vital aspect of belonging and the sense of acceptance in a family relationship. Leanne: Michael this is your family you have to protect them for those guys!, the use of camera angles focuses of Michaels and Leanne body language whilst the background display the football players surrounding the two characters showing the significance of belonging in a family…

    • 427 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Living in foster care was not always the best either, Michael found out fast the people who was a foster parent to help and the ones that was in it just for the government checks. The 15 or so children were separated into different government homes, a few of the younger kids where adopted. Foster care was hard on the kids, Michael seemed to have had the hardest time though. He felt like no cared about him so therefor he became a runner. Hoping if he ran away to find a family member that no one would find him or the government would just give up, after a few times the did give up. So Michael stayed with his mom and sold newspaper to sport himself. Thought out the years in foster care Michael realized that he wanted a better life then what he had. Michael did not want his mother’s failures to become his failures.…

    • 1156 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It was his mother and family, who stood with him during these tough times and gave him expectations that were not lowered no matter what he did. He was taught to remember his actions and learn from them and went back home to a household with a mother who he knew he could rely on. But he too was too close to falling down the same path of the other Wes Moore. He too was skipping out on school and doing other activities, but his mother never backed down from what she wanted of him, a young man that she could depend on and that wouldn't get his head in a dark path. So, she put him in the only place that would shield him from the truths and problems that comes with poverty, Military School. In military school there were no drugs, no bad influences, and no skipping out from it, and people who expect even more of what his mother did.…

    • 779 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    This movie-The Blind Side talks about how Michael Oher achieved his self-esteem during his adolescent time. Between the plots of the movie, we also included some development theories such as Erik Erikson’s psychosocial cognitive theory; Maslow’s hierarchy needs theory and also the operant conditioning theory that associated with Michael’s development.…

    • 1847 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mattie Michael - The most important character in the novel. Mattie moves to Brewster Place late in life, after her son abandons her and forces her to lose her home. Mattie quickly becomes a surrogate mother to several of the women in the housing complex, offering love and support to women who, like her, have only one another to rely on.…

    • 942 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cathdral

    • 652 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In addition to his uneasiness with the blind, the narrator is uncomfortable with his wife’s relationship with the blind man. The wife and Robert, the blind man, have maintained a close relationship via tape recordings mailed back and forth, and the narrator finds this unsettling. Despite the narrator’s feelings about the visit, Robert shows up, and the three of them dine together, and Robert and the narrator get to know each other.…

    • 652 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cathedral Motif

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The narrator has many misconceptions built up in his head about the blind.”I remembered having read somewhere that the blind didn’t smoke... I knew only that much about blind people” (4). It was all he knew and all he really cared to know. There is a sense of discomfort imposed on the narrator with the blind man in his presence. Mainly because he doesn’t understand how someone without such a powerful sense can be so in-tuned with life. He was…

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lewis excelled with foreshadowing “When Tom Lemming Walked Into the Football Meeting room at the University of Memphis, looking for Michael Oher, the ghost of Lawrence Taylor was waiting”(N.P.). This alluded to the future when Michael would become the most sought out offensive linemen but it gave an insight of what people in the realm of football thought of Michael instantly without knowing him. Lewis exceeded expectations by working with real life quotes to develope the charters” “It was really unusual to see a kid with those kinds of defects that wanted an education” he said. “To want to be in this environment. A lot of kids with his background wouldn't come within two hundred miles of the place””(N.P.). By including this real life quote the author added to the tone of how people categorized Michael. Lewis did well with displaying how Leigh Anne felt about Micheal without flat out saying it “The next day, Afternoon, Leigh Anne left her Business she had her own interior decorating outfit- turned up at Briarcrest, picked up the kid, and took off with him”(N.P.). This exhibits how Leigh Anne felt about Michael she cared for him just like he was her own son. People treated Michael diffrent because of how he appeared but not the Tuohy's they treated him just like a member of the…

    • 569 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Raymond Carver Cathedral

    • 315 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Raymond Carver in his story described the narrator conflict with the blind man. The narrator views changed and transformed at a later stages. In the beginning the narrator feared the blind man, he was worried. Towards the end of the story, his views changed, he accepted the fact that Robert is a blind man.…

    • 315 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays