Inaccuracy to the source material is a perfectly fine reason to hate a movie. For myself, the differences were jarring to the point of making the film initially incomprehensible. They're not even differences at that point, because the only common point between the movie and mythology are the names they used... and even that's not 100% true. (Hercules is the Romanization of the Greek Heracles, whereas the original Greek names were used for everyone else.)
In fairness, I doubt you could make anything like an accurate Disney version of Hercules, but no attempt to do so was even made.
Alright, playing the game as presented now. Why the hate despite the differences:
1. The romance was very shallow. This is a function of the run time of the film, in part, but could have been alleviated by some kind of montage indicating that Herc and Meg had met more than three times. Without that sort of context, his final declaration of love is painfully naive sounding. It basically comes down to "I'm giving up godhood for a girl I've known a total of four hours."
2. The fight scenes felt severely lacking, especially towards the end. Hercules' dispatch of the Titans came across as "Oh, the prophecy is fulfilled, so now I guess we should be easy to defeat." He doesn't do anything particularly heroic, do anything any of the other gods couldn't have done, or have any kind of dramatic fight. He just beats them because he's the one that's supposed to and it was time for them to be defeated.
3. The movie cheats a bit. Herc has supposedly lost his power for 24 hours, so we expect him to have to defeat the cyclops (not a Titan, by the way) with his wits and heroism. Instead he takes a beating that should have killed a normal person ten times over, then clearly has enough super strength in him still to hog tie the cyclops. It felt cheap and uncreative.
4. Herc seems really eager to ditch his foster parents. No mention of them from the time he meets Zeus until the very end.
5. Phil's a bit rapey. Not as bad as Nessus, but still pretty bad.
6. Lastly, while I'm ignoring that they failed to make Hercules into a Greek myth, I'm not ignoring that they instead turned Hades into the Christian devil, complete with bargaining for souls and demon sidekicks.
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