I highly recommend a documentary I watched last night on Netflix, More Than Honey, directed by Markus Imhoof and released in 2012. Has anybody seen this? If you don't have Netflix maybe a local library has this video. The photography was amazing. This seemed to be a German production. The focus is on contrasting beekeeping styles between a 3rd generation Alpine beekeeper and a 2nd generation US commercial beekeeper that trucks his bees in for the almond crops in California, apples in Washington and then to North Dakota.
The Alpine beekeeper is focused on keeping his black bee genetics pure even though they are prone to swarm. The US beekeeper seems willing to sacrifice his personal connection with the bees for the sake of business. He does splits (brutal and hard to watch), watches his bees be sprayed with fungicides all the while knowing the consequences, and treats chemically.
The video contains excellent close ups of a queen hatching, mating in mid air and why, and laying eggs. We see waggle dances and explained, bees chewing nectar and placing the honey in cells as well as wax moths, varroa mites and a great example of European Foul Brood. There is segment of an older German lady grafting larvae into a frame of queen cups. It's great footage of her technique. She packages and mails her queens out to customers.
I can't emphasize enough the camera work. Simply beautiful.