Summary

  • The Russo Brothers want to title the Hercules remake "HADES" and tell the story from the villain's perspective.
  • Hercules is ripe for a live-action remake, with the standout scene being the CGI Hydra battle.
  • Disney should focus on honoring Hercules first before exploring a darker Hades story for a potential villain spin-off.

The Russo Brothers want to title the upcoming Hercules remake film 'Hades' and tell the Hercules story from the villain's perspective, according to a report by The Direct. This is an encouraging development and would introduce a goldmine of creativity and cinematic merit to Disney's humdrum recycling of IP.

Hercules, of all classic Disney animations, though, is the one that actually deserves a remake, which would benefit enormously from a live-action realization of the hand-drawn classic (imagine Gladiator 2 with a great plot, brighter colors, and none of the melodrama).101 Dalmatians and Cinderella both got their live-action remakes before their villain spin-offs. Hercules, above all, deserves the same treatment.

russo-brothers-avengers-return
'We’re Pretty Good About Shutting That Down' The Russo Brothers Are Fighting To Keep Avengers: Doomsday's Secrets

The MCU is heading into more mainline Avengers films, and the filmmakers behind the project have planned ahead to dodge a common franchise flaw.

The Russo Brothers Want A Live-Action Hades Film As Opposed To A Hercules Remake

Hades in Hercules Cropped
Hades in Hercules

Consider this: maybe Hercules is already a Hades film. The charismatic and zinging underworld god steals the opening scene of the film, schmoozing attendees of baby Hercules' Olympian baby shower with the pizzazz of a Hollywood talent scout (and boy, does he know how to pick 'em). He was in danger of being upstaged by Danny DeVito's Philoctetes, but Hades still reigns as the film's standout support character.

The Russo Brothers understandably want to take some artistic license with Disney's Hercules story and give it the villain feature treatment. Admittedly, the Russo Brothers have done villains quite well historically, namely with Thanos, one of cinema's all-time great antagonists. But, as far as Disney's history is concerned, the studio has generally followed a particular set of standards and practices when debuting a villain-centric live-action spin: a traditional remake first, and then a villain spin-off.

For instance, Maleficent was a successful but critically middling follow-up for Disney, fleshing out Cinderella's villain and lending a malicious perspective to an overtly flowery classic tale. It was a decidedly 'meh' sideshow that detracted from the glory of its source material. 101 Dalmatians entered the fold with 2021's Cruella, which was received fairly well critically with a 75% Rotten Tomatoes score, but otherwise played out like an elaborately-scripted feature-length fashion show with a couple of show-stealing models.

That is precisely the danger that Disney is appropriately wary of with Hercules without first submitting a bona fide modernization of the original work. It should be acknowledged that the Russo Brothers, while fantastic directors of Marvel films, are not bulletproof (see: The Electric State). Let's say Hades' release garners terrible, or even so-so reviews, negatively affecting brand value and ticket sales. What would that mean for Disney when they inevitably seek to produce a traditional live-action remake? Nothing good. For this reason alone, Hercules deserves to go the distance once again.

However, Hercules Simply Is Ripe For A Live-Action Remake

Hercules-Hydra

There's a particular fight scene in Disney's Hercules which incorporates CGI into the film's conversely hand-drawn animation. In the book The Art of Hercules: The Chaos of Creation, according to IndieWire, the film's head of CG said they decided to computer-generate the Hydra monster due to complexity and dimensionality. He said they "wanted to push the boundaries of what a multi-headed beast could be."

This scene always stood out among the rest of the film, not only for its stylistic and technical departures, but for its heightened sense of scale, especially when those heads start being lopped off and multiplied. The Hydra fight scene will be the crown jewel of live-action Hercules, and it just wouldn't be satisfying unless we saw it from Hercules' perspective as he stares into the towering faces of insurmountable odds.

Hercules

The original film used CGI to accurately depict that immense scope when animating the Hydra battle. Now, the live-action Hercules (and we're sticking with 'Hercules' here, not Hades) will definitely feature real humans and practical sets and effects. But, the movie will surely take advantage of modern technology to realize those big fight scenes between gods, monsters and Herculean labours. Given the original film used burgeoning innovative tools to bring its boundless set pieces to life, it would be fascinating to see what the Disney Imagineers could drum up for a new spin on the most spectacular fight in the movie.

After All, Hades Doesn't Have A Musical Bone In His Body

Imagine seeing Disney's Hercules in theaters for the first time in 30 years and not hearing 'I Can Go The Distance', 'Zero To Hero', or 'I Won't Say I'm In Love'. Sure, villains can sing too, but Hades isn't that guy. This is the issue with swapping Hades in place of Hercules for a live-action re-imagining: Disney's Hades is a heartless bag of cynicism with a soul as lost as the wayward criers in River Styx.

Hercules has the heart that people need. After that, give them what they might want with Hades. The blue-flame-for-hair villain's own feature film will be dark and broody and full of spectacle in its due time. That will be fun, but first, Disney must hold firm. Honor the classic hero by letting him shine somewhere he's longed to be over the last three decades, where a great, warm welcome will be waiting for him.

Rating block community and brand ratings Image
Hercules Disney Movie Poster
Hercules
Display card tags widget Display card community and brand rating widget Display card main info widget
Release Date
June 13, 1997
Runtime
93 Minutes
Display card main info widget end Display card media widget start Display card media widget end
  • instar53727358.jpg
    Tate Donovan
    Hercules
  • instar47751137.jpg
    Josh Keaton
    Young Hercules
  • instar45931243.jpg
    Roger Bart
    Young Hercules (singing)
  • instar51411213.jpg
    Danny DeVito
    Philoctetes

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming
Checkbox: control the expandable behavior of the extra info