Man vs. Bee 2 (2025)

🎬 Man vs. Bee 2 (2025)
👉 Rowan Atkinson, Claudie Blakley, Jing Lusi

Some rivalries never die — especially when one of them buzzes. Man vs. Bee 2 takes the absurd, laugh-out-loud chaos of the first series and raises the stakes, proving once again that no feud is too small to turn into total disaster when Trevor Bingley (Rowan Atkinson) is involved.

Last time, Trevor was a bumbling housesitter whose simple job in a luxury mansion turned into full-blown destruction, all thanks to a single bee that refused to be caught. From smashed furniture to burned meals and priceless art reduced to rubble, Trevor’s war with his winged enemy left behind nothing but mayhem — and a trail of belly laughs.

Now, in this new installment, Trevor is determined to put the past behind him. He’s trying to rebuild his life, win back the trust of his family, and maybe even prove he’s capable of holding down a responsible job. But when fate — or rather, one very persistent bee — buzzes back into his world, chaos follows close behind.

What begins as a harmless encounter quickly escalates into another epic showdown. Trevor, armed with his uniquely disastrous creativity, unleashes increasingly ridiculous schemes to end the buzzing menace once and for all. But as his efforts grow bigger, louder, and more catastrophic, the collateral damage piles higher: neighbors, bystanders, and even city landmarks may not escape unscathed.

Claudie Blakley and Jing Lusi return to add heart and grounding to the madness, as those closest to Trevor wrestle with the impossible question: is he the unluckiest man alive… or his own worst enemy?

With Rowan Atkinson in peak physical-comedy form — every flailing gesture, exasperated glare, and explosive pratfall perfectly timed — Man vs. Bee 2 delivers pure slapstick mayhem in the grand tradition of Mr. Bean and Johnny English. It’s a reminder that the simplest premises can unleash the wildest comedy when filtered through Atkinson’s genius.

Fast, frantic, and outrageously funny, this sequel proves that when it comes to Trevor Bingley versus one determined insect, size doesn’t matter — but destruction definitely does.

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