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Logan Lerman and Sarah Gadon in Indignation.
An assured take on a difficult work: Logan Lerman and Sarah Gadon in Indignation. Photograph: Alison Cohen Rosa
An assured take on a difficult work: Logan Lerman and Sarah Gadon in Indignation. Photograph: Alison Cohen Rosa

Indignation review – impressive debut captures Philip Roth’s vision

This article is more than 7 years old
Roth’s tale of a working-class Jewish boy learning about life and love in 1950s America is successfully translated to the big screen

The second adaptation of a Philip Roth novel in as many weeks, following Ewan McGregor’s American Pastoral, this represents a rather more assured take on the work of an author whose writing is notoriously difficult to bring to the screen. James Schamus, Ang Lee’s regular screenwriter, makes his directorial debut here with an elegantly muted, unashamedly talky period drama. The story focuses on Marcus (Logan Lerman), a bright working-class Jewish boy from Newark who struggles to fit into college life. The 1950s backdrop is handsomely evoked and the use of colour is particularly effective: the oppressive worry of Marcus’s father sucks the light tones out of his family home, while his damaged dream girl, Olivia (Sarah Gadon), exists in a world kissed in pale gold and peach.

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