Arab Times

Acting chemistry boosts dark ‘Count of 3’

K-9 featured in ‘Rescued by Ruby’ euthanized

- By Jocelyn Noveck

‘O n the Count of Three’ is marketed as a “darkly comic” movie. Well, there’s dark comedy and there’s darker comedy, and then there’s comedy like this - so dark that you wonder if the two words can realistica­lly co-exist in one sentence.

So it’s not clear in which genre to place this edgily confident if bumpy and unsettling directoria­l debut from talented comedian Jerrod Carmichael, a buddy movie that begins with said buddies pointing loaded guns at each other with the intention of firing at the same time (hence the disturbing title.)

Clearly things won’t be going perfectly to plan, because then there’d be no more movie left. But, just a warning: The sense you might get right then and there of “I’m really not sure I can watch this” will likely stay with you for the full 86 minutes, even as you acknowledg­e the considerab­le acting chemistry generated by Carmichael, directing himself, and Christophe­r Abbott.

So, back to that scene. It comes a few hours into the bleak winter’s day covered by the film. Without divulging too much, Val (Carmichael) and Kevin (Abbott) are longtime friends, but very different trajectori­es have brought them to this dreary parking lot. Val is working at a landscapin­g supply store and his best prospects seem to be a promotion to floor manager. He begins this work day by taking all his allotted smoking breaks, not a good sign.

Val decides to go visit Kevin, and suddenly they’re inadverten­tly presented with an opportunit­y to break Kevin out of the institutio­n he’s in. Thus begins a day in which they both seek to right the wrongs committed against them, and perhaps some they’ve committed themselves.

The script by Ari Katcher and Ryan Welch makes a game effort throughout to toggle between humor and pathos, levity and despair, with occasional hits and some misses, too. What’s consistent is an unnerving unpredicta­bility - we really don’t know how this day will resolve itself - and the authentici­ty of the lead actors, who make us care even as we struggle to accept some of the plot elements. Without these sharply calibrated performanc­es, the film would flounder.

Each man is given unresolved conflicts, some more compelling than others. Val, in a relatively restrained performanc­e by Carmichael - who, through his comedy, certainly has experience taking humor to bleak places - has serious issues with his estranged father (J.B. Smoove of “Curb Your Enthusiasm.”) He also has to face up to his inability to be a responsibl­e partner to a trusting girlfriend, Natasha (“Carmichael Show” colleague Tiffany Haddish, underused in a small role).

Action

As for Kevin, played more broadly by Abbott, he has deep anger at a man, now serving his country in the military, who bullied him in younger days. Worse, there’s the creepy doctor who molested him in his youth.

Not surprising­ly, Carmichael proves a director who is nothing if not confident and comfortabl­e with the UNcomforta­ble. He keeps the action moving - at a few moments, the film even feels like an action pic. A climactic scene has an apocalypti­c feel and harks back visually to one of the most famous buddy films of American cinema, though the buddies were named Thelma and Louise.

But it’s the acting that keeps the film afloat. Carmichael is a multifacet­ed talent, and one wonders what he’ll do next - especially if next time his name is on the script, as well.

“On the Count of Three,” a United Artists Releasing release, has been rated R by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America “for violence, suicide, pervasive language and some sexual references.” Running time: 86 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.

MPAA definition of R: Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanyi­ng parent or adult guardian.

Also:

PROVIDENCE, R.I.: A Rhode Island dog whose inspiring story of going from shelter dog to lifesaving police K-9 became the subject of a recent Netflix movie has been euthanized.

State Police said Sunday K-9 Ruby was put down Friday following a “sudden, acute, and untreatabl­e illness.” She was 11 years old.

Col. Darnell Weaver, superinten­dent of the state police, expressed gratitude for K-9 Ruby’s years of service.

“K-9 Ruby dedicated her life to serve the citizens of Rhode Island and make a positive impact on every person she ever interacted with,” he said in a statement. “She became a symbol of hope for all shelter dogs, showing the world what a shelter dog can do when just given love and the chance to shine.”

Ruby served with the Rhode Island State Police for 11 years and was handled by Corporal Daniel O’Neil, Weaver said.

Part Australian shepherd and part border collie, Ruby was one of the first shelter dogs trained to serve with the Rhode Island State Police. She participat­ed in numerous search-and-rescue missions and made many public appearance­s during her career.

Ruby gained notoriety in 2017 when she located a teenage boy who was severely injured while hiking in the woods. The boy turned out to be the son of the animal shelter volunteer who had fought to keep her from being put down.

“She was a total knucklehea­d,” shelter volunteer and dog trainer Patricia Inman had told The Associated Press of Ruby, who had been returned by five families for being too rambunctio­us before O’Neil adopted the then-eight-month-old in 2011.

Ruby earned national recognitio­n for the rescue - the American Humane Hero Dog organizati­on named her the nation’s “Search and Rescue Dog of the Year” - and her story was made into the 2022 Netflix movie “Rescued by Ruby.”

“She had a full, happy, and wonderful life, not only as a trooper, but as part of a loving family,” Weaver said. “She worked right until the end and never gave up doing what she loved most — making people smile.”

Ruby lived with O’Neil and his family and will be honored privately, police said.

“She was given a chance and she’s been doing everything she can to pay it back,” O’Neil said earlier this year. “You have this dog that was given up on, and she’s changed so many people’s lives.”

Despite her lauded search-and-rescue career, Ruby’s mischievou­s spirit was irrepressi­ble: Three years ago, she bolted near a state park, turning up safe and sound after a 19-hour search. More recently, she returned from a bathroom break with a live skunk writhing - and spraying — in her jaws. (AP)

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