In *The Beekeeper* directed by David Kappan, Jason Statham plays the role of a hunter, Adam Clay, a ex- operative who is out for vengeance after a phishing scam kills a well meaning landlady. This terrible act is the reason of change of Clay, the kindly beekeeper, into the vengeful killer); the setting is IT-crime and malleable humanity.
Simultaneously , in the framework of the evaluation of justice, the ethical conflict of the movie Leading, the image of nature’s cooperation inbeekeeping contrasts with the chaos in the theme of retaliation. Many emotions are conveyed by Statham and the stunts are realistic with action accompanied by powerful body impacts and natural surroundings.
However, there are a few drawbacks that the specialists and ordinary viewers know, one of which is that the film is boring in terms of script story telling, especially the dialogue which looks quite clichéd and unexciting to say the least to some people. However, *The Beekeeper* does a good job in illustrating the consequences of betrayal, loss with which the audience gets in front of them that makes them think about ethical values of that world. Thus, it is genuinely exciting, and it is at the same time an excellent opportunity to introduce people to the important lesson – in this case, the sorrowful price one has to pay for treason, against the backdrop of earthly sins in the form of honey.