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Review: ‘October Gale’ a thriller that quickly blows itself out

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Night falls, a storm rises and the plot contrivances multiply in “October Gale,” a two-hander that pairs Patricia Clarkson and Scott Speedman in a remote Canadian cottage.

Ruba Nadda, who directed Clarkson in “Cairo Time,” leans mightily on her lead actress’ wistful gaze and on another natural wonder, Ontario’s island-dotted Lake Joseph, in a film that begins as a languorous study in grieving and shifts with screeching abruptness into a crime thriller.

Clarkson plays a widowed physician returning to the vacation home she shared with her late husband, seen in fond-bordering-on-precious flashbacks. Though she hesitates dramatically before entering the cozy waterfront house, she’s a model of self-sufficiency as she gets the place in working order for the season. Then a conveniently handsome injured man washes up, almost literally, at her wide-open door, and she welcomes the sense of purpose she finds in tending to his gunshot wounds.

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As storytelling necessity will have it, they’re soon stranded on the rocky islet, asking each other, “How many bullets have you got?” Locked in a romantic standoff over black coffee and cribbage, they brace for the arrival of a character played by Tim Roth, who digs in with gleeful menace as a man with a profound appetite for revenge and a familiarity with “Love in the Time of Cholera.”

The action unwinds with the mechanical artifice of a creaky play, though Nadda creates a few strikingly cinematic moments — notably a long shot of Clarkson drifting on the water after her boat loses power. It’s a potent image of isolation in a story that quickly grows cluttered with empty intrigue.

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“October Gale”

MPAA rating: None

Running time: 1 hour, 31 minutes.

Playing: Laemmle’s Royal, West Los Angeles. Also on VOD.

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