Killing Bee Poster

Killing Bee 2005

★ 4.01 votes84 min📅 2005-04-23

Director Norihisa Yoshimura unleashes a nightmare on screen with *Killing Bee (2005)*, a pulse-pounding horror film where Japanese students on a field trip find themselves trapped in a nightmare of mutant killer bees.

Director: Norihisa Yoshimura

Cast

Saki Kagami
Saki Kagami
Nana Kasai
Nana Kasai
Natsume Sano
Kotono Shibuya
Kotono Shibuya
Miku Ueno

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Killing Bee (2005) about?

*Killing Bee (2005)* follows a group of Japanese students on a field trip who stumble upon a swarm of mutant killer bees. These bees aren't just dangerous—they're intelligent, targeting the girls with deadly precision. As the venom takes hold, the students realize they're in a fight for survival against an enemy that turns human bodies inside out.

Who directed Killing Bee?

Norihisa Yoshimura directed *Killing Bee (2005)*, bringing a sharp eye for horror and tension to this mutant-bee nightmare.

Who stars in Killing Bee?

The film stars Saki Kagami, Nana Kasai, Natsume Sano, Kotono Shibuya, and Miku Ueno as the students fighting for survival against the killer bees.

Is Killing Bee (2005) worth watching?

For fans of low-budget horror that punches above its weight, *Killing Bee (2005)* delivers on visceral scares and a tight 84-minute runtime. While it may not reinvent the genre, its mutant-bee premise and gory set pieces make it a guilty pleasure—if you can handle the chaos.

How long is Killing Bee?

*Killing Bee (2005)* runs for 84 minutes.

🎥 Trailer

About Killing Bee (2005) — A Field Trip Turned Nightmare of Mutant Bees and Explosive Horror

Director Norihisa Yoshimura unleashes a nightmare on screen with *Killing Bee (2005)*, a pulse-pounding horror film where Japanese students on a field trip find themselves trapped in a nightmare of mutant killer bees. These aren't ordinary insects—they're an unnatural, hyper-intelligent swarm with venomous stings that turn the human body inside out. As the venom courses through their veins, the girls are hunted one by one, their desperate survival instincts colliding with a terror that's as relentless as it is grotesque. The film blends visceral body horror with a claustrophobic atmosphere, turning a simple field trip into a fight for survival.

With a runtime tight enough to keep tension high, *Killing Bee (2005)* delivers a compact yet shocking dive into the worst-case scenario of nature gone wrong. Yoshimura's direction cranks up the dread, using the bees' eerie intelligence and the girls' mounting panic to craft a horror experience that lingers long after the credits roll.