

144 minutes of Evan Stone grunting in a toga. The gods have abandoned us.
Alas, Hercules has been banished from Mount Olympus for committing a series of acts that have offended the Gods. Not entirely his fault you see, for his evil and jealous stepmother Hera has placed a curse on the legendary hero which is the cause of his unfavorable behavior. Eventually, word gets around that Hera is the one who placed the curse on Hercules and she is forced by Zeus and the other Gods to remove the curse. Small problem for our hero Hercules, though is he now has to appease the Gods for all of his misdoings while under the curse. In order to redeem himself, Hercules must perform twelve labors successfully. So, Hercules and his clumsy sidekick Theseus set out to prove that Hercules is indeed a hero and not the zero that Hera has tried to set him up as being. Sounds easy enough doesn't it? But with Hera still on his tail determined to foul up Hercules' chance of redemption, Hercules soon discovers that becoming a hero isn't as easy as it seems.
Production
Sets that look borrowed from a community theater.
Costume
Togas clearly from a Halloween clearance bin.

Director
Jonathan Morgan
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Evan Stone would become one of the most decorated performers in adult film history, making this early 'epic' a fascinating artifact of his dramatic ambitions.
This arrived during the early 2000s boom of high-budget adult parodies, when studios briefly believed audiences wanted 2.5-hour mythological epics with actual plot.