During the battle between Horus and a minotaur, Horus breaks off both horns but in the next shot only one horn is broken off.
When Horus, Hathor and Bek are walking in the red desert, Hathor's left earring has only one item dangling from it and two on the one in her right ear. Later she has two items dangling from both.
After Hathor and Horus get out of Set's pyramid, Hathor puts her left hand to the side of Horus' head. When the camera is looking at her two of her fingers are on Horus' ear. But when the camera is looking at Horus, all of her fingers are below his ear. This happens repeatedly.
When Horus, Hathor and Bek are walking in the swamp, the water level comes to just under the knees for all three. Since Horus and Hathor are bigger, if the water level is below their knees it should be at least waist-level for Bek, but it comes to just under his knees as well.
When Horus, Hathor and Bek are walking in the swamp, Hathor throws her flask to Bek to get her fresh water but the flask gets smaller when it is in the air and in Bek's hands - then when he tosses it back, it gets larger again. Of course, it should be about twice the size when Bek has it and smaller when Hathor has it.
When Horus, Seth, and Bek are at the top of the tower' the step's rise is appropriate for Bek and the two 12 foot tall gods.
While walking in the swamp, all three characters have the water covering the same length of their legs (below their knees). Since Horus and Hathor are way taller than Bek, the later should be sunk at least at waist height to accurately match their sizes.
The giant snakes raise clouds of dust and sand as though they were large tubes of meat being towed across the desert. Snakes don't move like this, for individual belly scales take it in turns to stand stationary, while the others ripple forwards clear of the ground. This can be clearly seen in the wildlife documentary Planet Earth II (2016) where racer snakes chase iguanas that kick up sand with their feet, but the snakes seem to just glide at speed since they never disturb the sandy surface.
There are several technological anachronisms that do not fit the primitive Egyptian setting. This movie is not set in history, it is set in mythology in a fantasy imagining of an Egypt that never was.
In Thoth's Library where Horus assaults Thoth, all of the Thoth's doppelgangers draw their swords with their left hand. Then there is a flipped shot showing Thoth holding the sword in his right hand for the next cut. However, all of the doppelgangers are holding their sword in the left hand in all of the remaining shots. You can also follow how the fern (along with everything else) jumps from left to right and back again on the table in this scene.
Horus places Bek and Zaya in the tomb intended for his father Osiris, but the two only just fit, showing the hole could not have been created originally for a far taller god.
Living thousands of years ago in ancient Egypt, the slave Zaya has shaved legs and armpits.
Characters use a telescope, which was technology unknown until the Renaissance. Furthermore, if both lenses are convex, which they appear to be, it's a Newtonian telescope and should have produced an inverted image.
No camels are seen, such as in Land of the Pharaohs, only horses. Set was the god of foreigners and horses, reflecting the Hyksos invasion, noted in the Book of Genesis by the time of Joseph, when horses and bronze were military advancements, so horses should have been the exception not the rule.
Iron, similarly, does not appear directly in the Bible until the events of Kings Saul and David thanks to the Hittites, thus would have been unknown in this time, such as in the movie The Egyptian.
Iron, similarly, does not appear directly in the Bible until the events of Kings Saul and David thanks to the Hittites, thus would have been unknown in this time, such as in the movie The Egyptian.
Before the final showdown with Set, Horus says that the main objective is getting Ra's spear back. Despite the spear being within reach at the top of the obelisk during the fight Horus ignores it completely and dives to grab Bek without it.
Pointed here as a mistake, the fact that Horus chose to save Bek than catching his eye cannot be considered so, as the alleged power to fly was not given by having both eyes, as he explained to the mortal in the sequence.
Hathor tells Bek that she can command any man to do her bidding, unless his heart belongs to another woman. Later, Horus tells Hathor that her commands don't work on him because his heart belongs to her. But that would mean that she CAN command him, since his heart belongs to her and not another woman.
It is never explained how Hathor came to be constantly chased by demons. She mentions being tempted by them, but no other information is ever provided.
Hathor can not necessarily command Horus. It speaks to other men's hearts belonging to another woman. It does not specify that she can command him just because he loves her. There is no action in the movie where she commands him and he does something against his will. Logic is not correct.
Horus referred to the snakes of Astarte and Anat as "pets" to which Bek replies "Cats are pets" - an ancient Egyptian would never say that- to them the cats are sacred creatures.
Set's accent changes between standard British and Gerard Butler's Scottish, which usually occurs when he is yelling.