Bee Movie 2 -
Vanessa Bloome (Renée Zellweger) is now the CEO of her own flower shop chain, “Bloome & Doom,” which thrives because Barry’s lawsuits forced humans to plant more flowers. Everything is perfect. Too perfect. Barry’s best friend, Ken (Patrick Warburton—still angry, still allergic), now works for the USDA. Ken crashes a flower auction and reveals terrifying data: global nectar output has dropped 94% in six months. Flowers are blooming, but producing zero nectar. Bees are starving. Crops are failing. The human world is 47 days from famine.
In the film’s wild centerpiece, Barry and Vanessa organize —a Macy’s-style event where moths carry lanterns, beetles roll pollen balls like soccer players, bats drop-pollen bombs (gently), and Mosi leads a thousand bees in a synchronized sky-dance. Ken, covered in antihistamines, drives a float. bee movie 2
Ken, begrudgingly, asks Barry for help. “You wanted to talk to the flowers, Benson? Go talk to them. They’re on strike.” Barry and Vanessa visit a massive sunflower field. Barry tries his signature charm. The flowers don’t respond. Finally, a single grizzled Dandelion (voiced by Margot Martindale ) speaks: “We didn’t evolve to feed your suburbs, bee. We evolved to reproduce. You took our nectar, gave us seeds, and called it a partnership. But you never asked what we need.” The Dandelion explains: flowers have unionized. Their demand? Pollinator diversity. For millions of years, beetles, flies, moths, and bats pollinated too. But bees monopolized agriculture. Now flowers refuse to produce nectar until other pollinators are given “fair work contracts.” Vanessa Bloome (Renée Zellweger) is now the CEO
Final Title Card: No bees were harmed in the making of this film. Several lawyers were. Bees are starving
Helena captures Mosi and hundreds of other non-bee pollinators, planning to freeze them in a cryo-lab beneath Yankee Stadium. Barry, Vanessa, Ken, and a reluctant Adam Flayman stage a heist. Barry realizes the flowers aren’t just asking for diversity—they’re asking for trust . So he does the unthinkable: he abandons the lawsuit.
Years after suing humanity, Barry B. Benson faces a new crisis: flowers have stopped producing nectar due to "pollinator burnout." To save the world’s food supply, he must team up with his estranged, adrenaline-junkie cousin from Kenya and the ghost of a dead lawyer.