Jacob Two Two Meets the Hooded Fang
6.6 /10 1 Votes
Director Theodore J. Flicker Duration Country Canada | 6.4/10 Genre Family, Fantasy Language English, French | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Writer Mordecai Richler , Theodore J. Flicker Release date 1 March 1979 (1979-03-01) (Canada) Characters Jacob Two-Two, Nan, Judge, Mistress Fowl Music director Lewis Furey, John Loeffler Cast Stephen Rosenberg (Jacob Two-Two), Alex Karras (The Hooded Fang), Guy L'Ecuyer (Master Fish), Joy Coghill (Mistress Fowl)Similar movies Mordecai Richler wrote the story for Jacob Two Two Meets the Hooded Fang and wrote the screenplay for Joshua Then and Now Tagline Kids Beware! |
Jacob Two Two Meets The Hooded Fang is the title of two films based on a novel of the same name by Mordecai Richler.
Contents
- Jacob two two meets the hooded fang 1978 part 1 of 7
- Synopsis
- Critical reaction
- 1978 film
- Cast
- 1999 film
- References

Jacob two two meets the hooded fang 1978 part 1 of 7
Synopsis

This humorous children's story recounts the adventure of a young boy who strives to be heard. As Toronto Globe and Mail writer James Bradshaw writes, Jacob Two-Two is "two plus two plus two years old, has two brothers and two sisters, and has to say everything twice just to be heard; odd numbers aren't his thing."This quirk gives rise to his nickname "Two-Two". One day, he decides to buy the groceries for his parents, where he says, typically for Two-Two: "I want two pounds of firm, ripe tomatoes. I want two pounds of firm, ripe tomatoes." Misunderstanding Jacob, the clerk threatens to have him arrested for "insulting a grown-up"; Jacob runs from the store and eventually finds himself in court. He is sentenced to two years, two months, two weeks and two minutes in the Children's Prison hundreds of miles away from civilization. His place of punishment is a dark, dirty dungeon-like place where the children work and are kept in cells. There are the three head characters, Master Fish, a fish/human, Mistress Fowl, a bird-like woman and the Hooded Fang himself. They also have green henchmen who spray "slime resistors" at the children to prevent them escaping. Two child agents try to help him out, as the children also devise a plan for escape.
Critical reaction

Writing for Variety, Brendan Kelly suggests that while the opening of the film is funny, at least some of the material may not hold children's attention: "This dark, edgy kids’ fantasy may not have enough light action to keep the grade-schoolers amused. Sophisticated and largely intriguing, modern-day fairy tale centers on a six-year-old boy’s nightmare of life in a prison for kids. Helmer George Bloomfield and scripter Tim Burns have crafted a haunting, funny take on kids’ anxieties. But the acting is uneven, the pacing not fast enough for young attention spans, and the material may simply be too downbeat to click with the under-ten set."

Rotten Tomatoes reviewer Lafe Fredbjornson panned the 1999 film version as being a "not very good" adaptation of the book: "Because of how perfect the 1977 film was, this one's flaws stuck out. The kid playing Jacob Two-Two was pretty generic and lacked character. The Ice-T rap-session in the courtroom didn't seem to fit. Gary Busey as the Hooded Fang was scary for all the wrong reasons. Mark McKinney and Miranda Richardson seemed like standup comics in animal costumes. The prison set didn't feel like the one described in the book. The songs were dreadful."
1978 film

Cast

1999 film
Cast
References
Jacob Two Two Meets the Hooded Fang WikipediaJacob Two Two Meets the Hooded Fang IMDb Jacob Two Two Meets the Hooded Fang themoviedb.org