"Bee Movie" Review

"Bee Movie," more like "BEE-utiful Meme-ovie," amirite? Okay, buckle up, buckle in, cuz we're about to BEEgin.

So, there's this little yellow-and-black fella, Barry B. Benson (AKA the Bee Seinfeld), who decides one day that flowers ain't his only love, nope! Enter human lady, Vanessa (100% not a bee), who Barry decides he's buzzin' for. Yeah, u heard me right. Bee likes human. This ain't your mama's animated movie, folks.

Suddenly, Barry's like, "Hold up, HUMANS be stealing our sweet, sweet honey?" Not cool, bro. So he does what any respectable bee would do - he sues them. Yup, Barry becomes the BEErrister (get it, barrister, but bee...I'll see myself out). Courtroom drama got nothing on this - it's like "Law & Order: Special Bees Unit" up in here.

Oh, and did I mention his BEEst friend, Mooseblood the Mosquito? Because apparently, when you're a talking bee, mosquitoes are your bros. Who knew, right? And there's a dude named Ken who seems a bit miffed about the whole bee-human love thing. Jealous much?

So, in conclusion, "Bee Movie"? More like "Bee Meme Movie" - it's got love, it's got law, it's got bees doing everything but the birds and the bees. Check it out, or don't, I ain't your boss. But remember, according to all known laws of aviation, this movie shouldn't be able to fly...yet it does. #BeelieveIt.

It is the product of one of the most intelligent and industrious of creatures, whose miniature society is one of the most sophisticated in the animal kingdom. It's been used in religious and Pagan celebrations, and it's medicinal qualities have been known for centuries.

It all begins in a field where worker honeybees suck nectar from flower blossoms, such as clover. They store it in their honey sack, then return to the hive where other worker bees suck it out and chew it, breaking down the nectar's complex sugars into two simple sugars called glucose and fructose. The bees then deposit the nectar into the cells of the wax honeycombs they've built. They fan it with their wings until most of the water content evaporates in the warm air of the beehive.