Happy Endings: All 4-Legged ‘DOG’ Actors Adopted by Their Trainers

Tissue (box) alert! In the new movie “DOG,” a troubled military dog named Lulu travels with Army Ranger Briggs (Channing Tatum) to the funeral of her former handler, who also happened to be Briggs’ former commander.

But could it be that you’ll need all those tissues because you’re laughing so hard, you’re crying? “Dog” is described as a “buddy comedy.” Plenty of wacky misadventures befall the pair on their road trip, and hilarity ensues. Huh.

A not-as-surprising surprise about “DOG” is that Lulu is actually played by three different Belgian Malinois: Britta, Lana 5 and Zuza. The dogs were obtained from an Amsterdam facility that trains military dogs rather than from a rescue, unfortunately. It’s too bad some production companies don’t follow Bill Berloni’s lead and instead find their animal actors from shelters and rescue organizations (and then find them forever homes!). It’s so disappointing when filmmakers like Quentin Tarantino obtain dogs from breeders when homeless four-legged thespians are so widely available.

The really good news is that after the filming of “DOG” was completed, there was a triple happy ending: All three Lulu portrayers were adopted into loving homes. Those homes happen to belong to the three trainers who worked with Britta, Lana 5 and Zuza. It helped that the COVID pandemic shutdown occurred while the film was in production, giving the dog trainers nine extra months to further bond with their trainees.

“They’re such high-energy, aggressive dogs that they each got assigned to a trainer, and the trainers all said at the very beginning, ‘There’s no way we’re taking these dogs home, so we have to figure out when the movie’s over what we’re going to do, who we’re going to adopt them out to,’” Reid Carolin, who co-directed “DOG” with Tatum, told MovieMaker. “It’s a real cool, happy ending for each of the dogs, and they’re best friends with their trainers.”

Britta, who appears the most often in “DOG,” now lives with her trainer in Montana. Carolin told MovieMaker Britta was calm, with a very expressive face.

Lana 5, who plays Lulu when she gets belly rubs and is carried on Tatum’s shoulders, is living with her trainer in South Carolina. Zuza, who plays Lulu when she’s being aggressive — although Zuza is really simply high energy and goofy, Carolin told MovieMaker — now lives with her trainer in California.

Lulu is played by three dogs instead of one because of the character’s various personality traits, Carolin explained.

“So when you’re doing a movie that requires this much nuance in the performance of a dog, you don’t want to ask a dog to go outside of their natural temperament for a couple of reasons,” he told MovieMaker. “One, it’s just not good for time and being on a movie set and all the practical reasons, and two, it’s not good for the dog.”

If a movie about a troubled military dog rings a bell, you might be thinking about “Max,” a 2015 tearjerker about a Belgian Malinois military dog traumatized by the death of his handler in Afghanistan.

“DOG,” rated PG-13, is now playing only in theaters. Here’s the official trailer.

Photo: MGM/YouTube

Why Hero Military Dog Conan Probably Won’t Receive a Purple Heart

Ever since he helped take down ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Bagdadi in October, hero dog Conan has received plenty of well-deserved accolades.

Conan is a Belgian Malinois who has served over 50 missions with the U.S. military’s Delta Force. He was injured during the Oct. 27 raid in Syria when he stepped on live electrical wires while chasing al-Bagdadi into a tunnel. Fortunately, the hero dog recovered from his wounds.

In a Photoshopped tweet three days after the raid, Donald Trump is seen putting ribbon with a paw-print medal around Conan’s neck.

AMERICAN HERO! pic.twitter.com/XCCa2sGfsZ

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 30, 2019

There was some confusion over whether Conan was male or female, but apparently he’s a male.

?UPDATE: Two defense officials have now contacted us to say Conan is *for sure they say* a BOY. One official said they triple checked.

I guess the important thing here is that Conan, boy or girl, is a good dog who did excellent work with the US military.

The end. https://t.co/bSQJifnMxx

— Elizabeth McLaughlin (@Elizabeth_McLau) November 26, 2019

Fun fact: Conan wasn’t named after Conan the Barbarian, but Conan O’Brien the Comedian.

That dog is clearly the better “Conan” — I wish her a speedy recovery! https://t.co/7BVIaybve6

— Conan O’Brien (@ConanOBrien) October 29, 2019

During Conan’s visit to the White House last week, Trump called him a “tough cookie” at a news conference. “The dog is incredible,” Trump said. “We spent some good time with it. So brilliant, so smart.” Trump presented Conan with a special medal designed by U.S. Special Operations — but not a Purple Heart.

Despite Conan’s heroism, it is unlikely that he will receive a Purple Heart, the U.S. military’s highest honor. This award is given to members of the military who “are wounded by an instrument of war in the hands of the enemy and posthumously to the next of kin in the name of those who are killed in action or die of wounds received in action,” according to the Military Order of the Purple Heart website.

Since World War II, the U.S. military has only awarded the Purple Heart to two-legged heroes.

“The use of military decorations is limited to human personnel who distinguish themselves in service to the nation,” Defense Department spokeswoman Eileen Lainez said in 2010, according to the American Kennel Club (AKC).

Many veterans think dogs should also be awarded this honor for their service.

“Do I believe Conan should receive a Purple Heart for actions on target?” former Army Ranger and Purple Heart recipient Michael Bollinger, a former Army Ranger, told the New York Post. “Absolutely. They’re out there with us every step of the way.”

For over a decade, Ron Aiello, founder of the United States War Dog Association, has been urging the Department of Defense to establish an official medal for military dogs who distinguish themselves in service to the U.S.

“They say they can’t do that,” he told the AKC. “We utilize these dogs and they are recognized as a large asset to our military. But we can’t honor them.”

The last military dog to officially be honored with a Purple Heart was Chips, the most decorated dog of World War II.

“For ‘singlehandedly’ wiping out a machine-gun nest in Italy, a dog named Chips was awarded the D.S.C., the Silver Star and the Purple Heart,” TIME reported in February 1944.

All the press Chips was getting caught the attention of the commander of the Order of the Purple Heart, according to Military.com. The commander complained to President Roosevelt and the War Department that giving the Purple Heart to a dog demeaned all the men who had received one.

Chips was allowed to keep his medals, but the Army’s adjutant general, Major General James A. Ulio, ruled that no other dogs would receive the Purple Heart, TIME reported.

The most decorated dog in U.S. military history was Purple Heart recipient “Sergeant” Stubby, who saved hundreds of lives during World War I by sniffing out mustard gas and barking to alert the troops when he heard artillery fire.

More recently, a Belgian Malinois named Cairo helped his fellow Navy SEALs take down Osama bin Laden in a 2011 raid. Cairo did not receive a Purple Heart for this heroic feat, and that’s a shame.

Photo: Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead

Police Dog Opens Gate to Save Partner from Attack

When a Colorado police dog named Lex saw his partner being brutally attacked on the other side of a fence by the trespassing suspect he was attempting to apprehend, the 3-year-old Belgian Malinois didn’t just sit there and do nothing.

During a foot pursuit of the male suspect in Shaw Heights early on Aug. 6, the deputy had jumped over the fence, leaving Lex behind. So Lex, who’s obviously a very smart as well as very heroic K-9 officer, quickly figured out how to use his paw to open the latch in a gate.

“Then Lex came to the assistance of the deputy and the suspect was apprehended,” the Adams County Sheriff’s Department said in a statement.

The injured deputy was taken to a hospital and treated for his injuries. He’s now recovering at home. The suspect was booked into the Adams County Detention Facility.

“Our deputies view canine Lex as a hero for saving the day,” said Adams County Undersheriff Harold Lawson in the statement. “We appreciate everyone in the K-9 Unit and their hard work to keep us safe.”

Lex has been a K-9 officer with the Adams County Sheriff’s Office since February 2015. The hero dog is certified in narcotics and police patrol through the Colorado Police Canine Association and National Police Canine Association.

Nice work, Lex!

Photo: Adams County Sheriff’s Department

Retired Hero Military Dog ‘Major Mike’ Shot Dead by Bicyclist

Mike, a 10-year-old Belgian Malinois, earned two Bronze Stars for his work as a bomb-sniffing dog during two tours of duty in Iraq with his partner, Army Ranger Matthew Bessler. Because of his successful detection of thousands of pounds of explosives, saving the lives of hundreds of people, Mike was promoted to the rank of major.

When they both retired, Bessler adopted Mike, and his partner became his service dog at their home in Powell, Wyo.

“I raised him and trained him as a puppy,” Bessler told the Billings Gazette. “The ability he has to sense some of the issues that I have with seizures, with my PTSD, my TBI (traumatic brain injury) and severe anxiety disorders, how he can calm me down just by him being in my presence. He can help take the focus and help change the focus of what’s going on with me and help me calm down or relax me.”

Mike, who also suffered from PTSD,  was the only known combat dog who transformed into a service dog, Bessler said.

“Michael is a brother,” he told the Washington Post in July. “He needs me just as much as I need him.”

Bessler said that when his depression led to thoughts of suicide, Mike would climb into his lap so he couldn’t move. Or he’d drop one of his beloved tennis balls in Bessler’s lap and refuse to budge until his dog dad threw it.

“When you can escape yourself for a minute, and stop being selfish and think about the things you have, in my world, it’s that dog,” Bessler told the Washington Post.

While Bessler was away on a hunting trip Oct. 10, an unidentified 59-year-old man riding a bicycle on Bessler’s street told police he was “attacked by a German shepherd-looking dog,” the Powell Tribune reports. The alleged attacker was Mike.

The man, who had no injuries, claimed he got off his bike and used it as a shield, but Mike kept trying to bite him. So he pulled out a revolver he happened to have with him and shot Mike with what he said was birdshot. The “attacking” dog was 5 to 10 feet away from him at the time he was shot — in the rear end.

Afterward, the man said Mike ran away. He didn’t think he had killed him.

There were no eyewitnesses to the shooting. A neighbor told Bessler she hadn’t heard any barking at the time. She found Mike, limping, on Bessler’s property.

“If Mike were to go toward somebody or feel there was a threat, he would start barking first,” Bessler told the Billings Gazette. “If the guy was actually fending the dogs off with a bicycle, (Mike) would have really been barking, and there was no barking. All there was was just a shot.”

Park County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Lance Mathess told the Powell Tribune the bicyclist said he was “genuinely in fear of his life and well-being, and the dog was ‘definitely in full attack mode and not backing down at all.’” (How strange, then, that Mike was shot at least 5 feet away from him, and in the rear.)

The bicyclist changed his initial story, in which he claimed he was attacked by a pack of dogs, including a puppy and Yorkshire Terrier. He later said only Mike had been threatening him.

Bessler thinks the fact that Mike was shot in the rear — two pellet marks went into his heart, killing him — is “inconsistent with a dog that’s attacking somebody,” he told the Powell Tribune.

“He would never attack someone,” he said. “The only time he ever protected property was when somebody stepped on to my property and looked into the back of my truck.” He said Mike would rarely get out on the street.

“He was very laid back. He would lean up against people, he liked being petted, he played ball,” Bessler told the Billings Gazette. “He was happy. He was a happy-go-lucky dog.”

From years of chewing on rocks due to anxiety, Mike’s teeth had been worn down to non-threatening nubs.

“I believe the gentleman just shot the dog on my property,” Bessler told the Powell Tribune. “I don’t buy his story.”

The bicyclist is not facing any charges, Park County Sheriff Scott Steward told the Powell Tribune. The sheriff didn’t seem to think there was anything disturbing or illegal about the man having a revolver.

“A lot of people, when they walk or ride bikes around here, they’ve got pepper spray, a gun or a stick,” Steward said. “And that’s because dogs come out and chase bikes (and) people.”

But Bessler, who grew up in Powell, said he was “flabbergasted” over why someone would be carrying the type of weapon the bicyclist was carrying.

“I think that a person that mounts a Judge, a .410 shot, onto their handlebars, has pretty premeditated intentions that they want to shoot a dog,” he told the Billings Gazette. “If he’s passed my house multiple times and he needs to mount a firearm to the handles of his bicycle, he doesn’t have intentions of just shooting snakes.”

The Park County Sheriff’s Office is reportedly following up on a few inconsistencies in the bicyclist’s story.

Bessler told the Billings Gazette he would like “to take a civil avenue to go after him — the gentleman that shot him — because Mike was a retired military officer. I mean, it’s not just a wrongful use of force.”

He said that even if the bicyclist’s claims are true, “I’m disgusted with the fact that the guy hasn’t even shown his face to say, ‘I’m sorry this happened.’”

After a necropsy is completed to determine how Mike died, Bessler hopes his hero dog can be given a funeral with military honors.

The “RIP Major Mike” GoFundMe campaign has been launched to raise expenses for a military funeral for Mike. As of this morning, about $4,200 of the $6,000 goal has been raised. Any extra donations will be given to a program that supports war veterans.

Photos via TwitterGoFundMe.com

Four Years Later, Soldier Reunited with Abandoned Bomb-Sniffing Dog

Four years ago, U.S. Army Specialist Tyler Roberts and his partner, a 2-year-old bomb-sniffing Belgian Malinois named Donna, were deployed to Afghanistan.

“She was excellent. You could unclip her from the leash and she could find something a mile away,” Roberts told FOX31. The team found hundreds of pounds of ammonium nitrate, a chemical compound used in improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

Roberts and Donna formed a bond that Roberts didn’t want to end with their tour of duty.

But after her tour with Roberts ended in September 2011, Donna and 11 other dogs in the Tactical Explosive Detection Dog (TEDD) program were bought by a private company.

Roberts, who retired from the Army in 2013, did what he could to find his former partner.

“I tried to follow her career so that I could adopt her after she retired, but I could never get a straight answer as to her whereabouts,” he told USA TODAY.

In early 2014, the unidentified company that had bought the TEDDs left them at Mt. Hope Kennels in Chester, Va. The company told the kennel’s owner, Greg Meredith, the dogs would only be staying there a couple of months at the most.

Seventeen months later, Donna and the other TEDDs were still languishing in the kennel. Meredith paid about $150,000 out of his own pocket for their care. He couldn’t try to find homes for the dogs because they were considered government property.

Two months ago, the company contacted Meredith and told him it no longer wanted the TEDDs because they were now too old. The company told Meredith to dispose of the dogs as he saw fit.

“They’ve been abandoned. This is not the life that they deserve, nor is it how this country should take care of its soldiers,” Meredith told NBC12 last month.

He contacted two nonprofit organizations, Mission K9 Rescue and the United States War Dogs Association, which are partnered with the kennel and dedicated to finding homes for retired military dogs. If the organizations couldn’t track down the TEDDs’ former handlers, they would find them forever homes with other families.

“Our goal is to reunite all of the handlers and soldiers with their war dogs. We love to make that happen for them,” Kristen Maurer, president of Mission K9 Rescue, told USA TODAY.

Her organization met its goal with Roberts and Donna. Yesterday the two were happily reunited in a Thorton, Colo., park.

“I owe her my life and I intend to spoil her for the remainder of hers,” Roberts told USA TODAY.

He told FOX31 Donna has accepted a brand-new mission: chasing tennis balls.

Mission K9 Rescue has received hundreds of adoption applications for the other 11 TEDDs abandoned at the kennel. For information about adopting retired military dogs, visit the Mission K9 Rescue website.

Mission K9 Rescue has created the “Mt. Hope K9 Warrior Rescue” account on GoFundMe.com to raise money to reimburse Meredith for his generosity and help keep his kennel in business. To make a donation, click here.

Photo via Twitter

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