Only for a few seconds at a time. The main character tries to get the dog to run away to avoid the dog being euthanized, but the dog refuses to leave. The dog is also then left at the location to be euthanized for a minute before the main character comes back.
*SPOILER* Throughout the movie the dog Lulu is supposed to euthanized at the end of the movie because she has just been through too much in the war but in the very end at the last second, it doesn’t happen.
In the beginning credits there are articles shown about dogs of war fighting for their country and giving their lives. Nothing graphic is shown but if ur like me it will get at your heart. The movie is PG-13 after all
No vomit, but There’s a possible triggering scene, when he is in a hotel and he has a migraine episode, he goes to the bathroom sink and it may look like he could v but he doesn’t. No gagging. Just some drool. That whole scene is safe but sometimes looks like it could happen but doesn’t.
Yes, Channing Tatum is violent (framed in a "cool" way) and has PTSD and a TBI. Lulu and Nuke both have PTSD which has manifested in aggression. Lulu's is present through most of the movie and is triggerable while Nuke's is discussed in the past tense and he is shown doing trained bite work. Neither dog is heavily anthropomorphized.
While there wasn't a character with it, there is a high pitched ear noise that plays loudly when the character has migraines. It is difficult for someone with misophonia to listen to.
Not sure why everyone is saying no when the entire movie is based on the premise of a suicide. The soldier with whom the dog worked - it is stated he had a drug problem and then crashed his car into a tree in a self-destructive (suicidal) act.
I have no clue why anyone is saying the fourth wall is broken. Not a single part of this movie involves any character conversing with nor making any reference to anything existing outside of the world of the movie. https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/BreakingTheFourthWall
Yes, there is a section where Channing Tatum's character pretends to be blind in order to get into a luxury hotel for free and it is played comedically. The treatment of Lulu could be interpreted as ableist, but personally, I think that would be a stretch.
In Dog (2022) starring Changing Tatum: A dog assumes that a person of color in a turban is a terrorist/evil and gets violent towards him because she was trained for the War in Iraq and Afghanistan. The man wearing a turban isn’t negatively portrayed by the narrative and/or stereotypical but this is his only scene in the film and the narrative doesn’t criticize the use of racism in the dog’s training.