No, non-breast-fed babies aren't more likely to dislike their parents. Oxytocin is a hormone the mother secretes during labor-childbirth and nursing, and it's really what makes her bond to the baby rather than the other way around.

The baby bonds and attaches to the mom because she nurtures it, feeds it, cares for it, touches it, looks at it and talks to it, and she can do that either by breast- or bottle-feeding the baby. That's why babies attach to their caregivers, whether they be birth parents, adoptive parents, or even caregivers in orphanages. Babies' brains form these neural pathways as that feeding/nurturing is occuring that help reinforce their bonds to their moms/caretakers, but if mom is sick or, say, has bad post-partum depression or mental illness or is just not a hands-on, nurturing, attentive mom, the babies won't attach properly and that can indeed later result in disturbances between the child and its parents (and, for that matter, between the child and anyone else it later tries to have a relationship with). This bonding neural-development thing is why babies who are ignored and neglected in infancy fail to thrive and will not grow or develop properly through infancy.