These movies are not hated by most people even though posters on GAF dislike them
except for Spider-Man 3, which Raimi sorta disowned as thinking of as 'his' movie. But yeah, even that one is still well-liked compared to The Amazing Spider-Man (2). Brave soul that would confess to loving those two.
The oft-mention of Van Helsing warms my cold, rotten heart though. Though that too, was not actively hated either.
Chronicles or Riddick, Waterworld, and other David Twohy movies are were things get weird though. Similar deal to Last Action Hero and a lot of Paul Verhoeven and Carpenter movies that critics fucking hated and audiences since liked. I think Twohy and co. had the great misfortune of starting making (awesome) movies during the pretentious high of the movie critic (see the animated show The Critic for reference), before being replaced by the more sensible enthusiast critic and brand shill that we have today. Chronicles in particular reviewed poorly, but is awesome in scope and vision, even if not everything necessarily works well towards "what a movie should be", or was felt like at the time. (if only they could have imagined the blockbuster as it is now, ho boy. They would have praised right into the sun if they could have)
On the opposite end, the Star Wars prequels reviewed well initially, and then started their decade long down-spin as people were willing to call them the steaming pile of shit they are at the script level.
I suppose we have to go with really poorly reviewed, but that's hardly consistent and gaf is too, well, a bit too similar on tastes to use as an indicator of what people like or hate. But I suppose another "downspin" would be the Matrix sequels, which I unapologetically love, even if gaf doesn't.
Ang Lee's HULK is a good example of a movie that fits the thread though. Good call, since I'd have forgotten to mention it.
Halloween 3: season of the witch (1982) is a definite contender though. Now this movie actually is kinda bad (and reviewed worse), but it's a trip worth making anyway.
And technically, since it bombed at release, The Thing (1981) as well, though it obviously found an audience in the generation that grew up with it and many much more violent movies, so we won't count it.
Speaking of which, I actually liked Alien 3 because I originally saw the series in reverse order, and aside from the line about 'eating brains', which always sounded wrong to me (It's a producer line, basically, and completely misunderstands the xenomorph character), I appreciate it doing things differently and love it on account of its difference in characters, like Charles Dance's doctor.
And then I got all excited about a fourth Alien movie. Yeah.... that happened. So, by the time the prequels started, I was already thoroughly cured of any "it's gonna be great!" type expectations.